Awards | SIGMOBILE
Prashanth Mohan, Venkat Padmanabhan, and Ramachandran Ramjee, received the ACM SIGMOBILE Test-of-Time Paper Award (opens in new tab) for their paper Nericell: Rich Monitoring of Road and Traffic Conditions using Mobile Smartphones, published in ACM Sensys 2008. Nericell pioneered the use of…
In the news | Neue Zürcher Zeitung
Die Universität von Washington arbeitet mit Microsoft daran, DNA als Speichermedium der Zukunft zu entwickeln. Rechenzentren könnten auf die Grösse von Spielwürfeln schrumpfen, Daten jahrhundertelang lesbar bleiben.
In the news | Chicago Tribune
If you thought we had a few years before the world turns into a real-life “Black Mirror” episode, think again. Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry’s latest exhibit, “Wired to Wear,” makes it very clear that the future of fashion…
In the news | Microsoft Tech Community
First published on MSDN on Nov 07, 2018 | Last year SQL Server 2017 and Azure SQL Database introduced query processing improvements that adapt optimization strategies to your application workload’s runtime conditions. These improvements included: batch mode adaptive joins ,…
Cool innovations are happening in how virtual reality researchers are resolving natural locomotion challenges and how they relate to story space, as well as in liberating users from the small, object-free player settings of today, to allow them to safely…
In the news | PCMag
The data stored in a warehouse-sized datacenter today would fit into 'a space roughly the size of a few board game dice.'
In the news | GeekWire
DNA data storage holds the promise of putting huge amounts of information into a test tube — but who wants to carry test tubes around a data center all day? Researchers from Microsoft and the University of Washington are working…
In the news | Microsoft Innovation Stories
Researchers from Microsoft and the University of Washington have demonstrated the first fully automated system to store and retrieve data in manufactured DNA — a key step in moving the technology out of the research lab and into commercial data…
In the news | Engadget
Microsoft and researchers from the University of Washington have successfully automated the process to translate digital information into DNA and back to bits.