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Some suggestions:

Help build better tools for researchers. * Julia (julialang.org) is very promising and could use talented developers to help build the ecosystem. * Numba (http://numba.pydata.org/) looks amazing and should build on the existing strength of SciPy.

Contribute to open-source projects related to medical research; a few favorites in the imaging space: * PLUS (https://www.assembla.com/spaces/plus/wiki) * OpenIGTLink (http://openigtlink.org) * XTK (http://goxtk.org) * NiPy (http://nipy.sourceforge.net/nipy/)

Contributing to an open-source project would give exposure to the problem space while leveraging existing skills and not taking a huge initial risk (school or paycut). If you wanted to make this a full-time pursuit, such contribution could be leveraged: many labs would love to hire a talented programmer. However, expect a ~30-50% haircut (in hospital or university labs you will have a hard time cracking $50k to start and $70k on the high end).

I am familiar with open-source projects in a number of other medically-relevant research areas. If you are interested in some specific area, shoot me an email and I'll see what I can think of.




Those do indeed look like some incredible projects.

If I had more time (and judging by the docs better linear algebra skills) I might certainly be interested in these.

I hope that some smart hackers do take you up on this.


Nice roundup of some bio-medical open-source projects.

As someone who works at an academic lab, though, I think you are being a bit pessimistic regarding the pay scale.




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