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SIGHCI at ICIS 2006 Kent Foster - Higher Education Faculty Programs US Subsidiary - Microsoft Corporation jkfoster@microsoft.com. Microsoft Research - History. Founded in 1991 Internationally recognized research teams Staff of 750+ in over 55 disciplines
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SIGHCI at ICIS 2006Kent Foster - Higher Education Faculty ProgramsUS Subsidiary - Microsoft Corporationjkfoster@microsoft.com
Microsoft Research - History • Founded in 1991 • Internationally recognized research teams • Staff of 750+ in over 55 disciplines • Investing over $6B in R&D in Research and product development • Strengthening the Ecosystem • Curriculum Repository • more than 1,000 curriculum resources • averages 14,000 downloads per month • Since 1997, awarded more than 100 fellowships • $1.2 million to 24 Ph.D. fellows • $1 million to five new faculty fellows last year alone
Names And Notables • Jim Gray, 1998 ACM Turing Award • Butler Lampson, 1992 ACM Turing Award • C.A.R. Hoare, 1980 ACM Turing Award • Gary Starkweather, Inventor of the laser printer • Jim Blinn, Graphics pioneer • Michael Freedman, Fields Medal winner • Gordon Bell, Father of the VAX • Rick Rashid, creator of the MACH kernel
Microsoft Research Microsoft Research Lab Locations External Research Groups Technology Learning Labs Institute Future • Redmond (1991) • San Francisco (1995) • Cambridge (1997) • Beijing (1998) • Mountain View (2001) • Bangalore (2005)
Why Think Global? Sources: IDC, UN
Incubate Ideas & Products • A “Safe House” for Incubating products and Ideas • Windows streaming media, Windows CE, TabletPC, eBook, Smart Personal Objects Technology • Ecommerce, Datamining, IIT (natural language and speech technologies, etc. • Critical role in MSFT growth • Driving software engineering technologies and practices • Developing future systems, high speed networking, wireless and data mining • Pioneering research in software that allows computers to see, hear, speak and understand
Research Initiatives Pervasive Computing Technology Solutions Digital Inclusion Computational Sciences Championing CS
What value could be delivered to emerging markets? • Information as a utility • Communication and transaction infrastructure • Education platforms, apps, tools • Grants and investments in development projects • Business skills and training
IT for Under-Served Communities • Akhtar Badshah • Senior Director, Microsoft Community Affairs Among his responsibilities, Dr. Badshah manages Microsoft Unlimited Potential (UP), a global program to promote digital inclusion and increased access to technology skills training in underserved communities. Microsoft’s UP program is designed to help narrow the technology skills gap; aid global work-force development; and create social and economic opportunity by providing technology skills through community technology centers (CTCs). UP offers a comprehensive approach to broadening digital inclusion by bringing together critical components, including training grants, software donations, community learning curricula and a global support network called telecentre.org.
External Research & Programs • Collaborate with leading research universities, government agencies, professional organizations and industry partners • Enhance the teaching and learning experience • Create joint research institutes and host academic summits, workshops and symposiums • Award annual fellowships and internships
New Faculty Fellowship 2005 • 110 Nominations, 20 Semi-finalists, 11 Finalists, 5 winners • 5 Fellowships, $100K x 2 years (cash) • Winners have gained more prominence since being nominated • Microsoft will award five (5) fellowships in Spring 2007. Subbash Khot Georgia Tech Frédo DurandMIT Radhika Nagpal Harvard Dan Klein Berkeley Wei Wang UNC
Request For Proposal Largest RFP program in the IT Industry 7 RFPs in FY06 alone – provided academics > $4 million
Collaboration Model Accelerate Reach Institutes Projects Validate Directions Workshops RFPs Explore Ideas Supporting programs – Faculty Summit, Ph.D. fellowships, New Faculty Awards, Ecosystem engagements
Workshops and Conferences February 22-25, 2007 Disney Wonder Cruise Ship www.msadgd07.net
How to Find MSR • Microsoft Research http://research.microsoft.com/default.aspx • External Research & Programs http://research.microsoft.com/ur/us/default.aspx • Research Funding Opportunities http://research.microsoft.com/ur/us/fundingopps/default.aspx • Fellowships http://research.microsoft.com/aboutmsr/jobs/fellowships/default.aspx • Internships http://research.microsoft.com/aboutmsr/jobs/internships/default.aspx • Human-Computer Interaction at MSR http://research.microsoft.com/research/detail.aspx?id=2
MS IT Intern Program • Since 2001, main entry path into Microsoft IT for college hires • Students typically in senior year (sometimes juniors), doing real work (entry level duties) • Intern support system (manager, mentor, coach) and networking opportunities • Ex-interns in MACH (Microsoft Academy of College Hires) upon return as full time employee • Possible participation in rotation program upon return as full time employee
Typical IT Intern Positions • Program Manager • Application Developer • System Analyst • Business Analyst • Software Test Engineer • Product Manager • Support Analyst • Ops Analyst • Build Engineer • Messaging Service Manager • Support Engineer • Technologist • Business Manager • Project Coordinator • Network Analyst • Service Manager • System Engineer
Intern Program – Typical Majors & Timeframes Majors: • Computer Science • Business Administrations • Computer Engineering • Information Technology • Informatics • Managed Information Systems • Industrial Engineering • Computer Information Systems • Information Systems Most common Microsoft IT internship timeframes: • January – June • July – November/December Less common internship timeframes: • May-August (returning interns and international interns) • April – September (Drexel) • September – March (Drexel)