Microsoft Research Blog

WorldWide Telescope Powers “Cosmic Wonder” at Adler Planetarium 

May 24, 2013
Microsoft Research’s WorldWide Telescope (WWT) has brought spectacular images and engaging, informative tours of the night sky to countless personal computers—including, we hope, yours. But WorldWide Telescope also offers a powerful tool for planetariums, large and small, providing two things they never had before: views…

Recent Posts

  1. WorldWide Telescope Powers “Cosmic Wonder” at Adler Planetarium 

    May 24, 2013

    Microsoft Research’s WorldWide Telescope (WWT) has brought spectacular images and engaging, informative tours of the night sky to countless personal computers—including, we hope, yours. But WorldWide Telescope also offers a powerful tool for planetariums, large and small, providing two things they never had before: views…

  2. New Ways to Visualize Your Data 

    May 23, 2013

    Posted by Rob Knies If you are feeling hungry, you go to the kitchen. If you’d like to take a swim, you head to a swimming pool. If you want to catch a movie, you’re bound for a theater. And, Danyel Fisher says, if you’re…

  3. Sharing a Glimpse of the Future of Technology 

    May 21, 2013

    Posted by Rob Knies It’s not often that people get a chance to peek into the future, but that will be the case May 21 in Washington, D.C., when Microsoft Research hosts its biennial D.C. TechFair.During an afternoon open house held at the Microsoft Innovation…

  4. Realizing Practical Benefits from Research 

    May 20, 2013

    In the age of big data, the challenge is no longer how to collect or store vast quantities of data—it’s how to make sense of it and use it for practical benefit. Scientific researchers, governmental agencies, nonprofits, and businesses of all sizes are among those…

  5. Watts Named A.D. White Professor-at-Large at Cornell 

    May 15, 2013

    Posted by Rob Knies John Cleese, the acclaimed Monty Python actor, spent time as an A.D. White Professor-at-Large. So did renowned primatologist Jane Goodall. And Oliver Sacks, noted author and neurologist. And epic novelist Toni Morrison. And short-story writer Eudora Welty.Add to that esteemed list…

  6. A Trekkie’s Dream Come True 

    May 14, 2013

    Posted by Rob Knies Do you speak Klingon? If not, that could all be about to change—thanks to Bing Translator’s just-released Klingon machine-translation system, developed in part by Microsoft Research.For more details, see the post over at the Bing Translator Team Blog.The language, familiar worldwide…

  7. How technology can bridge language gaps 

    May 14, 2013

    Speech-to-speech translation promises to help connect our world Among the futuristic gadgets in the classic TV show Star Trek, none seemed more useful than the universal translator, a handheld gizmo that helped foster understanding among intergalactic civilizations. Well, we needn’t travel beyond the solar system to…

  8. eScience Takes the Stage at Latin American Workshop 

    May 13, 2013

    Big Data: these words are on the lips of researchers everywhere these days. But it’s more than a catch phrase—it’s a reality in the burgeoning world of eScience, as investigators strive to make sense of the seemingly endless flow of new information. Nowhere is the…

  9. Kati London of FUSE: Playful and Surprising 

    May 7, 2013

    Posted by Rob Knies Many people talk to their plants. But what if those plants were able to talk back?That’s the premise behind Botanicalls, a project to enable communications between plants and people. A sensor network provides the flora the ability to call and text…

  10. Putting Your Work ID Badge to Work 

    May 1, 2013

    Posted by Rob Knies Steve Hodges and his colleagues in the Sensors and Devices group at Microsoft Research Cambridge spend their time pursuing novel sensing technologies and new devices that make it easier for people to interact with computer systems and digital content. The team’s…

  11. Helping the Low-Literate Learn to Navigate Through User Interfaces 

    April 30, 2013

    Posted by Rob Knies For several years, researchers from Microsoft Research India’s Technology for Emerging Markets (TEM) group have been studying how to design applications for economically poor communities such as those found in India. In particular, Indrani Medhi, a researcher at the India lab,…

  12. CHI 2013: an Immersive Event 

    April 29, 2013

    Springtime in Paris this year sees the Association for Computing Machinery’s 31st Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI) in full swing from April 27 through May 2, welcoming experts and students from more than 60 countries. A large contingent of researchers from Microsoft…

Explore More

  • Events & conferences

    Events & conferences 

    Meet our community of researchers, learn about exciting research topics, and grow your network

  • Podcasts

    Podcasts 

    Ongoing conversations at the cutting edge of research

  • Microsoft Research Forum

    Microsoft Research Forum 

    Join us for a continuous exchange of ideas about research in the era of general AI