This is veering off-topic in relation to Bob's original post, but in any
case:

I think choosing to participate in ICTD research is really a matter of
personal interest. I suspect that the people you refer to as "high caliber"
are ones who were high performers in CS undergrad, which generally is theory
heavy in that graphics, algorithms, and programming languages are subject
areas of focus, so it's natural that they would be drawn to those fields.

ICTD, including telemedicine, is extremely interdisciplinary, where
successful projects involve fields ranging from ethnography and psychology,
HCI, etc., for project design, to techincal skills for implementation work
in extremely resource-constrained environments. On top of that, it's a very
new field, so bringing all of that together is a daunting task in working
towards a PhD thesis, especially in CS, and from what I've seen requires the
initiative and dedication that come with strong personal interest in the
field.

And for the record, at least at the University of Washington, where I'm a CS
undergrad, there do exist high-caliber professors and students working on
ICTD issues. For reference: http://change.cs.washington.edu/

Regards,
Sunil


On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 5:54 PM, David Farber <dave at farber.net> wrote:

>
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
> From:
> Date: December 4, 2008 8:08:03 PM EST
> To: dave at farber.net
> Subject: PLEASE ANONYMIZE - Re: [IP] Re: amazing and appalling at the same
> time
>
> PLEASE ANONYMIZE - thanks
>
>  From: "Bob Frankston" <Bob19-0501 at bobf.frankston.com>
>> Date: December 4, 2008 5:08:12 PM EST
>> To: <dave at farber.net>, "'ip'" <ip at v2.listbox.com>
>> Subject: RE: [IP] amazing and appalling at the same time
>>
>
>  Telemedicine should be too boring to write about.
>>
>
> Perhaps that is the problem. I worked in a lab with graduate-level
> computer scientists in health informatics. None of the students were
> what I would describe as high caliber. Those students worked on
> 'sexier', more 'hardcore' PhD topics, like graphics, algorithmics, and
> programming languages. I could not be dragged kicking and screaming to
> work on 'telemedicine', and I suspect most high caliber CS researchers
> would be the same.
>
>
> PLEASE ANONYMIZE - thanks
>
>
>
>
>
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