in 2007 After a postdoctoral fellowship in philosophy, he founded an automated reasoning project, the ANU Centre for Information Science Research and the Cooperative Research Centre for Advanced Computational Systems. McRobbie was a 1988 Fulbright Scholar in Computer Science from The Australian National University to the Argonne National Laboratory. From 1990 through 1996 he was a professor at the Australian National University. He had a growing interest in international research collaborations. In 1996 he and Kilnam Chon proposed what became
Asia Pacific Advanced Network at a symposium held at
Tsukuba, Japan. In 1997 he became the first vice president for information technology at Indiana University. The
network operations center for the
Abilene Network was established at IU under his direction, and the Pervasive Technology Laboratories were established with a $29.9 million grant from the
Lilly Endowment in 1999. McRobbie was principal investigator of a project sponsored by the US
National Science Foundation to connect US and Asian
national research and education networks called
TransPAC. The state-funded $5.3 million I-Light project connected all campuses of the IU system with
fiber-optic communications (further expanded in 2010). In 2003 he became the vice president for research of IU. In 2005, the TransPAC2 project was funded as a follow-on to TransPAC. He was chairman of the steering committee for the Indiana Metabolomics and Cytomics Initiative (METACyt), which was the largest outside funded project in the history of
Indiana University Bloomington. McRobbie served as interim
provost and vice president of academic affairs of the
Bloomington campus in 2006. He increased external funding by securing millions of dollars in grants for life science initiatives. On a July 2006 trip through China he established a cooperative research program with
Tsinghua University in
Beijing. By September 2006, the then president of Indiana University,
Adam Herbert, announced he wanted to leave office before July 2008. On March 1, 2007, McRobbie was selected as IU's 18th
president and took office on July 1, 2007. He served on the board of directors for
ChaCha (the Indiana-based
search engine). Some press were critical of a deal that used IU librarians as "guides", although McRobbie resigned from the board before becoming president of the university. McRobbie has served on the board of trustees for
Internet2 since 2009, and was named chair of the board starting in 2012. In 2012 he announced a new
supercomputer called Big Red II at IU. Although other universities operate larger computers, by some measures this
Cray XK7 was expected to be the largest for use by a single US university and not a consortium or national resource. The original Big Red computer was installed in 2006. On August 14, 2020, McRobbie announced that he planned to retire at the end of June 2021 after 14 years as the head of the university and that a search committee was being formed to find his replacement. ==Personal life==