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About Microsoft Research

Microsoft Research Overview

March 2008

In 1991, Microsoft Corp. became one of the first software companies to create its own computer science research organization. Microsoft Research has developed into a unique entity among corporate research labs, balancing an open academic model with an effective process for transferring its research to product development teams. Today the world-renowned scientists of Microsoft Research make up one of the largest, fastest-growing and most highly respected software research organizations in the world — one that will help define and redefine the computing experience for millions of people for decades to come.

From the beginning, fostering rapid and smooth technology transfer through deep relationships with Microsoft product groups has been a top priority for Microsoft Research. Soon after its creation, Microsoft Research established a dedicated technology transfer team to help bridge the long-range research and near-term product development functions within Microsoft. The technology transfer program managers focus on building strong, collaborative partnerships between researchers and product teams to help fulfill a shared vision: seeing their innovative work reflected in improved software products for Microsoft customers. The benefits of this successful partnership can be seen throughout virtually every product Microsoft has delivered, from Microsoft Windows 95 to Windows Vista and the 2007 Microsoft Office system. Technologies developed within Microsoft Research are also licensed externally through the company’s IP licensing program.

Open collaboration has been a top priority for Microsoft Research from the beginning as well. Throughout its history, Microsoft Research has published more than 3,500 peer-reviewed publications. Many of these papers have been recognized with best-paper awards and are considered milestones in the field of research. In addition, Microsoft researchers work with scientists around the world to identify the greatest computer science challenges, develop solutions, and continually explore possibilities for the future of computing.

Building a Global Think Tank

Today Microsoft Research has more than 800 researchers, including some of the world’s finest computer scientists, sociologists, psychologists, mathematicians, physicists and engineers, working across more than 55 areas of research. Although most of its researchers are based at Microsoft’s Redmond, Wash., headquarters, Microsoft Research has expanded globally to ensure it can attract the richest pool of talent. Microsoft Research currently operates labs in five worldwide locations and recently announced plans to open its sixth lab, Microsoft Research New England.

  • Microsoft Research Cambridge. Established in 1997, Microsoft Research Cambridge in England was Microsoft’s first research laboratory to be established outside the United States. Today the lab’s researchers, mostly from Europe, are focused on the following areas of research: programming languages, security, information retrieval, machine learning, computer vision, operating systems and networking.

  • Microsoft Research Asia. The Asia lab, located in Beijing, was founded in 1998 and is Microsoft’s basic research facility in the Asia-Pacific region. Researchers in the Asia lab focus on the following six areas: next-generation user interface, next-generation multimedia, digital entertainment, wireless and networking, Web search and data mining, and theory studies.

  • Microsoft Research Silicon Valley. The Silicon Valley lab was established in August 2001 on the Microsoft campus in Mountain View, Calif. The lab’s research work focuses on distributed computing and includes Web search, datacenter-scale computing, concurrent programming, computer architecture, security and privacy.

  • Microsoft Research India. The India lab opened in 2005 and is located in Bangalore. Researchers in this lab focus on multilingual systems, technologies for emerging markets, digital geographics, cryptography and security, mobility, networking and systems, rigorous software engineering, and algorithms.

  • Microsoft Research New England. The New England lab is scheduled to open in July 2008 in Cambridge, Mass. The lab will pursue new interdisciplinary areas of research that bring together core computer scientists and social scientists to better understand, model and enable the computing and online experiences of the future.

Collaborative Research

Microsoft Research collaborates with the world’s foremost researchers in academia, industry and government to move research in new directions across nearly every field of computer science, engineering and general science. Through global and regional initiatives, Microsoft aims to accelerate research and discovery and ultimately help researchers and scientists address some of the toughest, most urgent societal and technological challenges.


For more information, press only:

Julie Woodbury, Waggener Edstrom Worldwide, (503) 443-7000, juliew@waggeneredstrom.com

Rapid Response Team, Waggener Edstrom Worldwide, (503) 443-7070, rrt@waggeneredstrom.com

For more information about Microsoft Research:

http://www.research.microsoft.com

 

 
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