"Project I-Campus"

Published: 7 October 1999 y., Thursday
Microsoft has unveiled a partnership with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in which the No.1 software maker will donate $25 million to the school for technology research grants. "Project I-Campus" will be based at MIT and involve MIT faculty and students and Microsoft researchers. The program is the largest educational research donation ever made by Microsoft. The funds will be awarded by a committee of Microsoft executives and MIT professors and administrators. The grant is the latest in a growing number of collaborations between schools seeking additional funding and corporations eager to expand their products and technology into classrooms and research laboratories. "Microsoft views education as one of the great frontiers where information-based services and advanced technology can improve people_s lives," said Richard Rashid, vice president of Microsoft_s research division. Three Microsoft executives will sit on the six-member committee that awards the grants, giving the Redmond-based software giant a say over what research is funded. Funds won_t be funneled to projects that support only Microsoft products. The alliance will begin by researching how information technology can improve three MIT programs, including a graduate-level engineering course taught simultaneously in Singapore and at MIT. The project also is expected to focus on developing tools to aid student learning from a distance, Web-based virtual museums and "global classrooms." Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates has made education a top philanthropic goal. Gates pledged last month to donate $1 billion for college scholarships for minority students. The "Gates Millennium Scholars Program" will provide 1,000 scholarships each year for 20 years to Asian-American, African-American, Hispanic and Native American students.
Šaltinis: Bloomberg News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Choice boxes - join the conversation across Europe

The need for energy that does not come from oil, equality between the sexes and more spending on education are just some of the things people have requested using the Parliament's choice boxes. more »

Inflation, Monetary Policy and the Economy: the Challenge for Schools and Colleges

This week marks the launch of the tenth Interest Rate Challenge, the competition designed to give 16 to 18 year old students across the UK the opportunity to take on the role of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee and set monetary policy for the UK to meet the inflation target of 2.0%. more »

Battery swap boosts electric cars

One California company unveiled a solution - a prototype energy station that swaps electric vehicles' empty batteries for fully charged ones. more »

Minor damage to the space shuttle

NASA officials have confirmed that the space shuttle Atlantis was hit by a piece of debris that nicked part of its heat shield. more »

Space shuttle Atlantis lifts off

Atlantis carried a seven-member crew that was scheduled to perform five spacewalks to install and repair instruments and replace positioning gyroscopes on the telescope, which orbits 350 miles above Earth. more »

The smart soccer pitch

Artificial grass maker Ten Cate is developing an intelligent pitch in the Netherlands. more »

Downturn could 'harm' environment

Russian scientist Olga Speranskaya has taken on one very tough job - to help clean up the vast network of toxic chemical sites in the former Soviet states. more »

Ideas move Europe on spring day

European politicians will be visiting schools around Europe as part of ‘spring day’ 2009. more »

Scientists develop dream recorder

The current experiments show a subject an image and then reconstruct that image based on scans of the brain's visual cortex. more »

Children of immigrants: Yes to new language, No to segregation

The children of people who come to live in Europe will have to learn the language of the country they enter from pre-school age. more »