Austin American-Statesman

Microsoft is reorganizi­ng research efforts around AI

Company wants to position itself better in emerging field.

- Nick Wingfield ©2016 The New York Times

Microsoft said Thursday that it was reorganizi­ng part of the company to better position itself as one of the significan­t players in the emerging field of artificial intelligen­ce.

The company has created a new organizati­on that combines its research group, one of the largest in the technology industry, and a number of products that rely on artificial intelligen­ce, including its Bing search engine and Cortana virtual assistant. The new artificial intelligen­ce and research group at Microsoft will have more than 5,000 employees.

Microsoft also said that one of its top executives, Qi Lu, has left the company to recuperate from a serious bicycling accident that occurred several months ago. Once he recovers, Lu will continue to act as an adviser to Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s chief executive, and Bill Gates, its co-founder, Nadella said in an email to company employees Thursday.

The creation of a new group at Microsoft with a focus on artificial intelligen­ce was already planned, but the departure of Lu — a respected computer scientist who spent a decade at Yahoo — affected the shape of the new organizati­on. In addition to Microsoft’s Office products and other applicatio­ns, Lu oversaw Bing, which is part of the new artificial intelligen­ce and research group.

“Microsoft is really betting the company on AI,” said Harry Shum, the Microsoft executive vice president who will oversee the new group.

Technology companies are making deep investment­s in artificial intelligen­ce, seeing it as a key ingredient in the emergence of everything from self-driving vehicles to devices that can identify faces. Microsoft has been particular­ly vocal in the past year about the importance of artificial intelligen­ce to its future.

It is investing heavily to improve virtual assistants like Cortana that can answer verbal questions and proactivel­y perform tasks and it plans to weave more intelligen­t functions into all of its products, including Skype and Office.

The company is sometimes criticized by investors for not producing enough commercial successes from its vaunted research organizati­on. The structure of the new organizati­on will tighten the link between its researcher­s and products already on the market today.

“We see need to accelerate the cycle from developing research technology to eventually shipping technology to our customers,” Shum said.

‘We see need to accelerate the cycle from developing research technology to eventually shipping technology to our customers.’ Harry Shum Microsoft executive vice president

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