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October 20, 2005 8:47 AM PDT

Microsoft ponies up for academia

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Microsoft has created a $1.2 million fund for academic research that focuses on putting computing into the hands of those less familiar with technology and with little access.

Under the company's Digital Inclusion program, academic researchers worldwide can use funds to find ways to make computing more affordable, accessible and relevant, the company said Thursday. The software giant is particularly interested in projects that focus on applications for mobile devices, bringing connectivity and "culturally relevant" computing applications to people in areas without existing networks.

Microsoft's funding program is the latest effort by an industry player to bolster academic research in the field of technology.

Proposals for the Digital Inclusion program will be accepted Nov. 7 through Jan. 13, with funding announcements on Feb. 10.

The software giant also debuted on Thursday its Inspire program to help finance doctorate degrees for people who emphasize computing technology and seek to improve conditions in developing regions via education, health care and economic development. The application deadline is Feb. 1; recipients will be notified in April.

The Inspire program will also include visiting researchers and lecturers. Microsoft will match universities in developing countries with researchers and lecturers from developed countries who can teach basic computer science.

"Many significant challenges remain to be solved in the push toward digital inclusion on a global scale," Rick Rashid, senior vice president of Microsoft Research, said in a statement. "We hope these programs will encourage more researchers to pursue approaches in computing technology that advance these goals."

See more CNET content tagged:
academic research, computing, researcher, Microsoft Corp.

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Microsoft Developers Network...
by james.grimes October 20, 2005 11:55 AM PDT
Microsoft already does this for technology students. Except it is thru the academic alliance between individual colleges and Microsoft's developers network; and then charges the college $$ to help fund the program so that the students can get free copies of Windows (many of the versions to include XP, SERVER 2K3, 2K, 98, 95, 3.1, NT, etc.), parts of the Office Suite (Access, Visio), and MY SQL (if left out any software titles, sorry aobut that)! So whats the difference here?
Reply to this comment
xp is free.. what are you talking about.....
by October 20, 2005 3:28 PM PDT
I use the eval stuff... its legal
Microsoft Developers Network...
by james.grimes October 20, 2005 11:55 AM PDT
Microsoft already does this for technology students. Except it is thru the academic alliance between individual colleges and Microsoft's developers network; and then charges the college $$ to help fund the program so that the students can get free copies of Windows (many of the versions to include XP, SERVER 2K3, 2K, 98, 95, 3.1, NT, etc.), parts of the Office Suite (Access, Visio), and MY SQL (if left out any software titles, sorry aobut that)! So whats the difference here?
Reply to this comment
xp is free.. what are you talking about.....
by October 20, 2005 3:28 PM PDT
I use the eval stuff... its legal
little access?
by October 20, 2005 3:26 PM PDT
is that the academic version?
Reply to this comment
M$ Access (and other software)
by james.grimes October 23, 2005 3:53 PM PDT
nope. its all full with all the bells and stuff as the version off the shelf at your favorite big box store.
little access?
by October 20, 2005 3:26 PM PDT
is that the academic version?
Reply to this comment
M$ Access (and other software)
by james.grimes October 23, 2005 3:53 PM PDT
nope. its all full with all the bells and stuff as the version off the shelf at your favorite big box store.
(8 Comments)
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