2020 CALL FOR CODE® GLOBAL CHALLENGE-IBM

2020 CALL FOR CODE® GLOBAL CHALLENGE

COVID-19 image

From its inception, Call for Code has tackled society’s most pressing issues. More than a month ago, IBM participated in a health hackathon, and the ideas generated there addressed many of the most pressing needs we face today – from testing kits to drug discovery and supply chain. We were inspired to see what developers could create in just one weekend to help respond to COVID-19. We realized we can and should do more through the amazing ecosystem and infrastructure we’ve created through Call for Code.

Just last week we announced that the Call for Code Global Challenge would expand to address both climate change and COVID-19, and we’re already receiving overwhelming support and some exciting early ideas. In a single day, we received over 1,000 registrations from developers. First responders, at-risk individuals, and coders are reaching out to us to share their experiences and brainstorm solutions. Together with Creator David Clark Cause and in partnership with United Nations Human Rights and the Linux Foundation, we’re asking developers, data scientists, and problem solvers to answer the Call.

On COVID-19

In a very short period of time, COVID-19 has revealed the limits of the systems we take for granted. I’m personally inspired by a message we received from an elderly, at-risk individual in the UK who is quarantined and struggling with a lack of grocery delivery options because local stores are overwhelmed with orders. How can we connect folks like this with local volunteers and digital payments to keep them safe and fed during this crisis? We think these are the kinds of problems that tech and community cooperation can address very quickly.

We recognize the urgency to act — to identify, build, and deploy solutions — so we have created an accelerated timeline for the COVID-19 Call for Code track. The initial submission deadline is Monday, April 27, and we’ll announce the three top solutions on Tuesday, May 5, at the IBM Think Virtual Conference. Our goal is to work quickly to partner with those teams to get their innovations out in the field, while keeping the track open through July to continually source and showcase more solutions until we announce our global challenge winners in October.

Today we’re publishing three COVID-19 starter kits (see here): quick-start guides that explain the individual problems people and communities are facing, to help you start creating applications tied to easy-to-understand use cases in just minutes.

Crisis communication: In times of crisis, communications systems are one of the first systems to become overwhelmed. Chatbots help respond to tens, even hundreds, of thousands of messages a day. COVID-19 has prompted many people to seek answers about symptoms and testing sites as well as the current status of schools, transportation, and other public services. Using Watson Assistant, this Call for Code starter kit has designed a virtual assistant pre-loaded to understand and respond to common questions about COVID-19, scan COVID-19 news articles using Watson Discovery, and respond to COVID statistics inquires with data from trusted sources.

Remote education: It’s imperative that learning and creating can continue when educational institutions have to shift the way they teach in times of crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Providing a set of open source tools, backed by IBM Cloud and Watson Services, will enable educators to more easily make content available for their students.

Community cooperation: There is a growing interest in enabling communities to cooperate among themselves to solve problems in times of crisis. In the COVID-19 crisis, we have already seen problems with the local supply of food, equipment, and other supplies. Mobile, web, and cloud services enable rapid deployment of applications that can empower cooperation in the community.

The kits include a description of the starter solution, an architectural diagram, and a tutorial with starter code and reference materials. My thanks to our partners like Altran for their participation and support, and we look forward to continuing to collaborate with our returning Call for Code supporter, Bank of China.

Tarush Verma, Client Leader and AVP at Altran, a global innovation and engineering consulting firm, said “Altran will help fight this pandemic by creating innovative solutions for the Call for Code Global Challenge including chatbots and other applications based on the new COVID-19 developer starter kits.”

Link

https://developer.ibm.com/callforcode/blogs/useful-data-sets-for-call-for-code-2020

Useful data sets for Call for Code

You can use Google Dataset Search. With the Dataset Search tool, you can locate data sets through keywords such as a country or city, or a category such as medical or agriculture. There are additional filters you can apply such as how recently the data set was updated, the download format (for example, JSON or image), usage rights (commercial or non-commercial), and whether the data set is free. Dataset Search is a great tool for data sets where metadata (such as https://schema.org/ tags) have been supplied with the data set. However, there are data sets that do not yet have metadata in the form that Google Dataset Search uses so that’s when you go to locations where there are many data sets. Of course, some data sets can be found using both methods.

Ways to find data sets: Go to locations where there are many data sets

Many governments and institutions such as the United Nations and the World Economic Bank provide data sets. Following are some examples:

https://covid19-hpc-consortium.org/

Anand Mahindra tweets about why banana leaves are used as plates at their canteens

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Shared less than an hour ago, the tweet has already won applause from many on Twitter. The post has collected over 10,000 likes and more than 1,800 retweets – and very much counting.

People are praising this initiative on Twitter.

“I haven’t seen too many philanthropist businessmen. Good to have people like you in our nation,” says a Twitter user. “Wow! This is really nice. All should think of such innovative ideas to keep small businesses alive,” says another. “Eco friendly and also good to eat in banana leaves for health and sustainability,” says a third. “Great gesture sir. You’re real entrepreneur,” says another.

In September last year, Anand Mahindra was applauded for changing plastic bottles to “re-fillable” bottles in all the boardrooms of his organization. He had been prompted by a Twitter user to make the change and Mahindra promised to bring about the change and fulfilled it.

Anand Mahindra tweets about why #banana leaves are used as plates at their canteens

Anand Mahindra has given his Twitter followers yet another reason to love and praise him. The business tycoon, who enjoys a 7.6 million-user following on Twitter, is known for sharing some quirky, inspiring and motivating content. He’s also famous for his #WhatsAppWonderbox tweets and often replies to his followers who reach out to him. His recent tweet, however, has tweeple showering him with appreciation for a wonderful initiative.

In a tweet, the Mahindra Group Chairman has mentioned how their canteens have now replaced plates with banana leaves.

“A retired journalist, Padma Ramnath mailed me out of the blue & suggested that if our canteens used banana leaves as plates, it would help struggling banana farmers who were having trouble selling their produce,” he tweeted. Lo and behold, the idea has been executed.

Corona Heroes: Bhopal doctor lives in car to keep his family safe, wins praise from Shivraj Singh Chouhan, Twitter

Dr Sachin Nayak, a #CoronaHero, is winning Twitter over and has also won praise from Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan.

The image shows Dr Sachin Nayak.

A doctor in Bhopal is winning tremendous praise online after a picture of him living in his car was shared on Twitter. A tweet posted by All India Radio’s Akashvani Samachar Twitter handle details how Dr Sachin Nayak, working in JP Hospital in Bhopal, has been staying in his car in order to protect his family. The picture shared with the tweet shows Nayak reading a book in his car set up with a few basic necessities including a mattress. Nayak, a #CoronaHero, is winning Twitter over and has also won praise from Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan.

In a tweet posted in Hindi, Chouhan tweeted, “I and the entire Madhya Pradesh appreciate warriors like you who are fighting the war against #COVID19. If we all continue ahead with this resolve, we will be able to win this war sooner. Sachin ji, we salute your spirit,” he tweeted using hashtags #CovidWarriors #IndiaFightsCarona.

The tweet, since being shared on April 7, has collected over 6,500 likes and more than 1,000 likes so far. People have post a ton of appreciative comments on the tweet about this doctor’s act.

“Such people are our heroes, nothing can repay their sacrifices,” says a Twitter user. “Proud of you,” says another.

Nayak also replied to the tweet:

Meet Robot : “Cloud Ginger” by its maker CloudMinds

Meals were served, temperatures taken and communications handled by machines, one of them named “Cloud Ginger” by its maker CloudMinds, which has operations in Beijing and California.

Medical workers walk by a police robot after travel restrictions to leave Wuhan.

Long maligned as job-stealers and aspiring overlords, robots are being increasingly relied on as fast, efficient, contagion-proof champions in the war against the deadly coronavirus.

One team of robots temporarily cared for patients in a makeshift hospital in Wuhan, the Chinese city where the COVID-19 outbreak began.

Meals were served, temperatures taken and communications handled by machines, one of them named “Cloud Ginger” by its maker CloudMinds, which has operations in Beijing and California.

“It provided useful information, conversational engagement, entertainment with dancing, and even led patients through stretching exercises,” CloudMinds president Karl Zhao said of the humanoid robot.

“The smart field hospital was completely run by robots.”

A small medical team remotely controlled the field hospital robots. Patients wore wristbands that gathered blood pressure and other vital data.

The smart clinic only handled patients for a few days, but it foreshadowed a future in which robots tend to patients with contagious diseases while health care workers manage from safe distances.

– Checkup and check out –

Patients in hospitals in Thailand, Israel and elsewhere meet with robots for consultations done by doctors via videoconference. Some consultation robots even tend to the classic checkup task of listening to patients’ lungs as they breathe.

Alexandra Hospital in Singapore will use a robot called BeamPro to deliver medicine and meals to patients diagnosed with COVID-19 or those suspected to be infected with the virus in its isolation wards.