The Natural Capital Project
Microsoft and The Natural Capital Project are transforming the way we evaluate the services that nature provides.
We’re excited to announce that Claude in Microsoft Foundry has new capabilities to support healthcare and life sciences customers.
Microsoft and The Natural Capital Project are transforming the way we evaluate the services that nature provides.
Our Microsoft CityNext Health solutions team was pleased to host a San Francisco event, attracting 40-plus clinical and IT executives, including medical directors, chief medical/information officers, clinicians and other healthcare leaders.
Learn how you can use modern tools to interact with patients in more ways and places to help them be healthier.
The manufacturing industry has always embraced change.
As we work to make our cities great places to live, the exchange of ideas is critical. And that’s exactly what the 2015 Asia Pacific Cities Summit (APCS) & Mayors’ Forum is all about.
Auckland, New Zealand, has big plans for our city’s transportation infrastructure. We can’t afford to think in half-measures, because Auckland continues to grow at a dramatic pace.
As an emerging nurse leader, I am constantly searching for new ways to improve nursing practice and promote safe, high-quality patient care.
In our conversations with global manufacturing companies, we continue to hear how the manufacturer’s paradigm is changing.
Alex Romillo of Health Choice Network discusses how mHealth technologies help chronic disease patients better manage their conditions.
For the Orange County Sheriff's Department (OCSD), protecting more than 3 million citizens requires minimizing risk. The OCSD has historically relied on separate, paper-based processes across its management of commendations and complaints, traffic collisions, and other processes.
It is a beautiful thing when a plan comes together, but execution is another story. With a lot of moving parts, projects can often become over-complicated, unorganized, and mismanaged.
An increasing number of insurance carriers are looking to the internet of things (IoT) as a source of data and insight that can help with new product development, risk identification and pricing, and even new value-added services that support policyholder retention.