Hey Saleema!

Thanks for setting this up for me. It was great to meet with everyone and to 
have lunch with you and James.

If anyone should request the slides, there are two relevant slide decks online, 
from which the talk was put together...

http://research.microsoft.com/~toyama/talks/2008%2010%20University%20Talk%20(Toyama).ppt
http://research.microsoft.com/~toyama/talks/2008%2001%2010%20TECS%20Pune%20-%20Toyama%20-%203%20Text-Free%20UI.ppt

You and I didn't have too much chance to talk, but I'm back-and-forth a lot, as 
you know, so maybe next time.

Thanks!
Kentaro

From: dub-bounces at dub.washington.edu [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of Saleema Amershi
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2008 10:32 AM
To: dub at dub.washington.edu
Cc: 'Natalie Linnell'; 'Kentaro Toyama'
Subject: [dub] Wednesday @ dub: Kentaro Toyama from MSR India talks on 
"Human-Computer Interaction in Global Development"


Hello Dubers!



I'm very pleased to announce that this Wednesday, Kentaro Toyama, the assistant 
managing director of Microsoft Research India (MSRI), will be speaking at DUB 
on "Human-Computer Interaction in Global Development."  In this talk, Kentaro 
will discuss several ongoing projects from MSRI's Technology for Emerging 
Markets Group which he leads in Bangalore, India. Since the opening of MSRI in 
January 2005, Kentaro and his team have done some amazing work applying both 
social-science research and technology innovation towards meeting the needs of 
people in emerging markets and in underserved communities throughout India and 
other developing regions worldwide. He is also a great speaker, so please come 
join us! Details below.



Note that DUB will be held on Wednesday at our usual location in MGH 420. See 
you there!



Thanks,

Saleema







-------------------------------------------------------------------

*Where:* MGH 420 (directions below)

*When:* November 19th, 12-1:20PM

*Who:* Intros by Natalie Linnell (CSE), Talk by Kentaro Toyama (Microsoft 
Research India)

Food will be provided!





TITLE:

Human-Computer Interaction in Global Development



ABSTRACT:
In the young field of "information and communication technology for 
development" (ICT4D), the goal is to apply new computing and communication 
technologies for global socio-economic development. How do you design user 
interfaces for an illiterate migrant worker? Can you keep five rural 
schoolchildren from fighting over one PC? What value is technology to a farmer 
earning $1 a day?

Ideas and methodologies from human-computer interaction research are critical 
to this work, and in this talk, I'll discuss relevant projects from the 
Technology for Emerging Markets group 
(http://research.microsoft.com/research/tem<http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fresearch.microsoft.com%2Fresearch%2Ftem&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNHxXX9sJiLiP-MDTsbqveaxBDMe2w>)
 at Microsoft Research India. We have a multidisciplinary team of researchers 
exploring solutions in agriculture, education, healthcare, microfinance, and so 
forth, in the hopes of identifying new ways for technology to support the 
growth of the world's poorest communities.



BIO:

Kentaro Toyama is assistant managing director of Microsoft Research India (MSR 
India)<http://research.microsoft.com/india>, which opened in Bangalore in 
January, 2005; he played a critical role in establishing the lab and is 
responsible for helping guide its direction and growth. In addition to his 
responsibilities to MSR India overall, Kentaro leads the Technology for 
Emerging Markets<http://research.microsoft.com/research/tem> research group as 
a principal researcher, and is a co-founder of the IEEE/ACM International 
Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development 
(ICTD)<http://research.microsoft.com/workshops/ictd2007>.

Before being named assistant managing director of MSR India, Kentaro spent 
seven years in MSR Redmond, Washington, U.S.A., and in Cambridge, U.K., working 
on computer vision, multimedia and geographic information systems. Kentaro 
earned his Ph.D. in computer science at Yale 
University<http://cs-www.cs.yale.edu/homes/toyama/> and received a bachelor's 
degree in physics from Harvard University. During the autumn of 2002, he took 
personal leave from Microsoft to teach mathematics at Ashesi 
University<http://www.ashesi.edu.gh/> in Ghana.







SPEAKER SCHEDULE

You can see the entire speaker schedule for the quarter here:

http://dub.washington.edu/events/meetings/. You can also subscribe to the 
Google Calendar feed by either searching for "dub group" within Google Calendar 
or adding designusebuild at gmail.com<mailto:designusebuild at gmail.com> 
<mailto:designusebuild at gmail.com> in the Google Calendar interface.

Please send me a mail (samershi at cs.washington.edu<mailto:samershi at 
cs.washington.edu> <mailto:samershi at cs.washington.edu>) if you are 
interested in giving a talk or have a suggestion for a speaker.



SEMINAR LOCATION

We are meeting in room 420 (on the 4th floor) of Mary Gates Hall (MGH). MGH is 
located north of Drumheller Fountain (see map below).
South Central Campus Map
[cid:image001.gif at 01C94CC1.F951B350]






--
Saleema Amershi
PhD Student
Computer Science and Engineering
University of Washington
http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/samershi

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