The Borneo Post

Microsoft VP wants to help you unplug

- August 5, 2018 By Hayley Tsukayama

YUSUF Mehdi’s a-ha moment came when he was cleaning out his garage.

The corporate vice president of Microsoft’s Modern Life and Devices team used part of a threemonth sabbatical to tackle some low-tech chores around the house. Untethered from his phone, the tasks sparked a newfound appreciati­on for the value of focusing on one thing and just getting it done.

It may not be the greatest tech idea to come out of a garage, but it meant something to Mehdi. “Looking back, I had almost never been prouder,” the 26year Microsoft veteran said in an interview with The Washington Post. “It made me think about the preciousne­ss of time.”

He returned to work with a vow to think more deeply about how Microsoft could help people waste less time with the products it sells - and start to redefine its understand­ing of productivi­ty.

This week, Microsoft began selling the Surface Go, a 10-inch tablet that Mehdi says embodies how the company has been thinking about how technology should evolve to fit people’s lives. The Surface line has not been a big seller as compared with products from other tech giants; it has been the company’s testing ground for hardware that is, in Mehdi’s words, the “purest expression” of Microsoft’s products.

Microsoft is also shoring up those instincts with a more unusual tool for the tech industry: surveys. A Microsoft report found that 59 per cent of Americans say their portable devices make them feel like they have to be “always on.” Nearly as many, 53 per cent, said that having mobile devices “forces” them to do work on the go.

Apple and Google have both announced tools to help people cut down on smartphone screen time. This week, Facebook revealed its own settings that let people monitor how much time they’re spending on both Instagram and Facebook.

Microsoft, too, has introduced Windows features designed to help people focus and cut down on unnecessar­y notificati­ons.

From the hardware side, the approach is a little more subtle. Hardware makers, after all, don’t have quite the same incentive to fight for every second of attention as a social media company. But they are there, Mehdi said. An LTE chip in the Surface Go is supposed to make it easy to hop on and off the Internet. The smaller size is supposed to make it easier to use and to tuck away. Even little details, such as the inclusion of fabric on the Go’s optional keyboard, are small tweaks to make the tech feel a little more comfortabl­e, a little warmer and a little more human.

The question is whether the changes Microsoft’s made to its products will actually translate into a better experience for the people it’s trying to reach. The Surface line, after all, hasn’t helped Microsoft crack the list

All tech companies need to think broadly about how will this technology land. How does it benefit people? Have we thought about the second order effects of landing with people? The more that we do that, the more we’ll get better, and provide better outcomes. — Yusuf Mehdi, corporate vice president of Microsoft’s Modern Life and Devices team

of the world’s top-five tablet makers. It doesn’t have the reach of Apple’s laptops or Google’s Chromebook­s. Even other devices that run Windows, from companies such as Lenovo, have a greater market presence.

Mehdi said he’s not sure if Microsoft and the Surface Go have the answer - in fact, he’s very clear that the company is not claiming victory over wasted screen time. But it is, he said, the responsibi­lity of technology companies to take this moment and think about how the things they make affect the lives of the people that buy them.

“All tech companies need to think broadly about how will this technology land,” Mehdi said. “How does it benefit people? Have we thought about the second order effects of landing with people? The more that we do that, the more we’ll get better, and provide better outcomes.” — Washington Post.

 ??  ?? (Clockwise from top right) Using century-old minerals processing methods, chemical engineerin­g students at Michigan Tech have found a way to economical­ly recycle lithium ion batteries. • Shoppers in an Apple store in lower Manhattan in New York City. Apple has just become the first American public company to cross US$1 trillion in market value. • Sandia National Laboratori­es researcher Hongyou Fan prepares to interrogat­e a vial of golden supercryst­als on the X-ray scattering instrument to his right. Researcher­s at the lab have encouraged gold nanopartic­les to self-assemble into unusually large supercryst­als that could significan­tly improve the detection sensitivit­y for chemicals in explosives or drugs. • The US Department of Homeland Security is testing face and face/iris recognitio­n systems to acquire and match images from a diverse volunteer population within a realistic time constraint. • Syrian refugee Alaa Masalmeh’s son speaks with his father Oudai Alhomsi in Germany, via video-chat app on a smartphone in Amman, Jordan. — Newswise/AFP/Reuters photos
(Clockwise from top right) Using century-old minerals processing methods, chemical engineerin­g students at Michigan Tech have found a way to economical­ly recycle lithium ion batteries. • Shoppers in an Apple store in lower Manhattan in New York City. Apple has just become the first American public company to cross US$1 trillion in market value. • Sandia National Laboratori­es researcher Hongyou Fan prepares to interrogat­e a vial of golden supercryst­als on the X-ray scattering instrument to his right. Researcher­s at the lab have encouraged gold nanopartic­les to self-assemble into unusually large supercryst­als that could significan­tly improve the detection sensitivit­y for chemicals in explosives or drugs. • The US Department of Homeland Security is testing face and face/iris recognitio­n systems to acquire and match images from a diverse volunteer population within a realistic time constraint. • Syrian refugee Alaa Masalmeh’s son speaks with his father Oudai Alhomsi in Germany, via video-chat app on a smartphone in Amman, Jordan. — Newswise/AFP/Reuters photos

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