Top developer projects fighting on the front lines of COVID-19
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Media attention has focused on the front-line heroes who are waging war against the pandemic, including the doctors, nurses, police officers, emergency medical technicians, and grocery store cashiers. But thousands of information technology professionals are also among the front-line troops in this battle.
IT pros are creating many of the applications used to gather and share critical data about the disease spread, or about financial help that individuals and organizations can tap to carry them through this unprecedented period.
Here are some of the interesting development projects going on around the world right now—and how you can get involved.
The U.S. Digital Response (USDR) is a coalition of volunteers, mostly technologists, looking to help solve the challenges that governments and government services face in the midst of the crisis.
Nearly 5,000 people have volunteered to help, and USDR is currently orchestrating over 150 projects with state, city, county, and local governments, said M. Jackson Wilkinson, the co-lead for the Real-Time Covid team at USDR. He oversees a team of 15, and among their efforts are CovidTracking, CovidActNow, PPE Coalition (personal protection equipment), and others.
“We typically dive into tricky internal data challenges to assist the governments of large cities and states. We try to quickly engage, get a handle on the problem, figure out a plan to close the gap, and hustle toward a solution.”
—M. Jackson Wilkinson
Sometimes that’s building complete applications. Other times it’s getting existing processes automated. And other times it’s just a few Zoom calls to provide guidance.
Virtually all of USDR projects arise from state or local government agencies reaching out for help, Wilkinson said.
There are all sorts of ways that software developers can make contributions to projects such as those helped by USDR, Wilkinson said. These include writing code, doing design work, conducting rapid user research, managing projects, or just basic data entry and cleansing.
This year’s hack:now was a 36-hour global online competition for students to advance innovative and technical solutions aimed at tackling challenges caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Held April 24 and 25, 2020, the event was cosponsored by Postman, an API development platform, and Cal Hacks, a nonprofit organization consisting of students who are passionate about fostering a culture of hacking.
The online hackathon was designed for the student community to work together and create solutions to trace, contain, and spread awareness about COVID-19, said Abhinav Asthana, CEO and co-founder of Postman. Toward those goals, the hackathon focused on three tracks:
Beyond the technical skills students learned and refined, the collaboration mindset and focus on the common good “will both influence these young developers’ careers and encourage continued efforts in this pandemic.”
“[The hackathon work] builds a strong foundation for many projects to be used in production.”
—Abhinav Asthana
No doubt the most desired information about COVID-19’s toll each day is the statistics on number of cases, death, recoveries and testings—nationwide, on an individual state basis, and globally.
All of that information is readily available on the Coronavirus Tracker, maintained by Domo. It offers up-to-date information on the spread of disease, summarized by confirmed cases, geography, testing and treatment, projections, and economic impact. Domo, a cloud computing business services provider, says it maintains the Coronavirus Tracker as a public service.
The highly detailed COVID-19 charts are compiled from information gathered every 10 minutes from the World Health Organization (WHO), the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), John Hopkins University, Worldometer, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), the COVID Tracking Project, Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED), The New York Times, the Wikipedia compilation of world testing, SafeGraph, Foursquare, Thumbtack, and data from the Amazon Web Services (AWS) Data Exchange.
Ben Schein, Domo’s vice president of data curiosity, explained how it came to be.
“Our team developed this interactive COVID-19 tracker over a weekend, building on Domo’s ability to rapidly bring together disparate new data sources and new data types and make it available at scale to anyone.”
—Ben Schein
One of the goals was to give a broader context to the evolving pandemic, Schein explained. This included adding data on such things as economic impact, individual mobility, foot traffic, hospitalization, and COVID-19 testing.
Coronathon India, held in March and April, was another online contest designed to raise awareness about COVID-19 and develop weapons to be used in the fight against it. Some 3,000 people from India’s technology, business, and healthcare communities came together to build projects to minimize the pandemic’s impact on India.
Over a period of four weeks, more than 40 projects were developed to help track the spread of the disease, where hotspots of infection were developing, and how testing and tracing efforts were going. Hackathon organizers noted that COVID-19 poses an especially grave danger to India, due to the country’s high population density and the “abysmally low number of hospital beds per 100 people.”
Many of the developed projects came from software professionals and involved ways to better compile and analyze data about COVID-19 cases, or apps for tracking the movements of individuals known or suspected of being positive for the disease. Other projects involved social media tools for educating people about the disease symptoms and approved precautions against it.
In collaboration with the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, the US Department of Energy, and many others, IBM helped launch the COVID-19 High Performance Computing Consortium. The consortium is throwing an unprecedented amount of computing power—6 systems with more than 330 petaflops, 775,000 CPU cores, 34,000 GPUs, and counting—to help researchers better understand the disease, its possible treatments, and potential cures.
According to Dario Gil, director of IBM research, the consortium represents a true “Who’s Who” of supercomputing. Partners include the Lawrence Livermore National Lab, the Argonne National Lab, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the Sandia National Laboratory, the Los Alamos National Laboratory, the National Science Foundation, NASA, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and several leading technology companies.
Through this program, researchers at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the University of Tennessee screened 8,000 compounds “to find those that are most likely to bind to the main ‘spike’ protein of the coronavirus, rendering it unable to infect host cells,” Gil said.
They then recommended the 77 most promising small-molecule drug compounds that could now be tested.
“This is the power of accelerating discovery through computation.”
—Dario Gil
Graph data science is an important part of the efforts to track the spread of COVID-19 and the movements of those who may have been infected. In response, database vendor Neo4j launched the Graphs4Good project, which uses the vendor’s graph database to research COVID-19.
The advantage of using graph data technology in the fight against COVID-19 is that it can connect large datasets from multiple sources, allowing analysis on a much larger level.
Graphs4Good “has helped several organizations tackle pandemic-related initiatives from contact tracing, to curtailing the spread of misinformation,” said Amy E. Hodler, director of AI and analytics programs at Neo4j.
Current market conditions demonstrate the blind spots of thinking about data in rows and columns, she added.
“Organizations are beginning to consider the importance of the relationships between data points, which are potentially far more valuable for predictive accuracy than flat, tabular descriptors.”
—Amy E. Hodler
IBM is encouraging developers to join in the fight with its Call for Code program. It offers cash prizes, connects developers with experts and open-source resources, and helps deploy applications where they are most needed.
Now in its third year, the 2020 Call for Code Global Challenge is currently asking developers worldwide to build solutions for COVID-19. A second track this year looks at issues related to climate change. Both the COVID-19 track and the Climate Change track are open for submissions though July 31.
Response to the initial call was swift. “We’re already receiving overwhelming support and some exciting early ideas,” said Willie Tejada, general manager and chief developer advocate at IBM. In a single day, over 1,000 developers registered.
“First responders, at-risk individuals, and coders are reaching out to us to share their experiences and brainstorm solutions.”
—Willie Tejada
Together with Call for Code’s creator, David Clark Cause, and in partnership with the United Nations Human Rights Council and the Linux Foundation, “we’re asking developers, data scientists, and problem solvers to answer the call.”
From supercomputer analysis to major data management projects to individual developer efforts, the coronavirus pandemic is inspiring an unprecedented response from IT professionals and tech companies that want to join the fight on the front lines.
Technology pros who want to join the fight should look first in their own state. For example, the COVID-19 Technology SWAT Team in New York is looking for tech volunteers. But you can also do volunteer to do contact tracing in Michigan; and this site matches volunteers with nationwide COVID-19 projects related to healthcare, education, and small-business support needed due to the lockdown and virus’s economic fallout.
The next step: Find your niche, and use your skills to make a difference.
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Top developer projects fighting on the front lines of COVID-19
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