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US Chamber of Commerce Digital Empower Summit focuses on innovations for business and social good

The second annual Digital Empowers Summit in Washington, D.C., sponsored by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation, brought together representatives from business, the technology sector, government and community organizations to highlight tech innovations for both business and social good.

The May 10 summit featured panel discussions on the future of work; health, wellness and accessibility; smart cities; and supply chain diversity and ethics. I participated in a panel on digital citizenship, a focus area that has evolved for Microsoft over the last 15 years. My fellow panelists were Lauren Culbertson, public policy manager at Twitter, and Nneka Norville, senior director for corporate responsibility at BET Networks. Our talk was moderated by David Almacy, founder of CapitalGig LLC. The panel, “Cyberheroes to the Rescue! Truth, Internet Activism, and Integrity in the Social Network Era,” allowed each company to share its work in helping to promote positive, productive and people-focused online communities worldwide.

For Microsoft, the summit offered another opportunity to discuss our work to advance digital civility – safer, healthier and more respectful online interactions among all people. This effort stems from our earlier work in digital citizenship and online safety. Research that we conducted between 2010 and 2012 in computing safety served as a springboard for our current research in digital civility. We’re entering the fourth year of our digital civility campaign and will again release survey findings – this time from respondents in 25 countries – on international Safer Internet Day 2020. The studies poll teens and adults about their exposure to more than 20 online risks across four categories: behavioral, reputational, sexual and personal/intrusive.

Our most recent findings based on research in 22 countries showed, for example, that:

  • Digital civility, as measured by the Microsoft Digital Civility Index, is on the rise in several countries, including Belgium, France, Germany and the U.S.;
  • Unwanted contact remains a common risk among online users, although its prevalence declined in the latest report;
  • Behavioral risk types are defined by bullying, while sexual risks are driven by receiving unwelcome imagery and messages, and
  • Now more than ever, teens across the globe are turning to their parents and other trusted adults for help with online risks.

These results and other related studies underscore the need for continued awareness-raising of and engagement in online safety issues, as well as common sense online habits and practices – new digital social norms – that everyone can get behind. Microsoft’s Digital Civility Challenge is a good place to start. We’re asking people to pledge to live by four basic tenets for life online, and to tell us on social media that they’re taking part. Use the hashtags #Challenge4Civility and #Im4DigitalCivility and commit to:

  • Live the Golden Rule and treat each other with respect and dignity online and off
  • Respect differences
  • Pause before replying to something or someone you may disagree with, and
  • If it’s safe and prudent to do so, stand up for yourself and others online.

(Click here to read the full Digital Civility Challenge.)

To help advance digital civility, I mentioned during the summit panel a pilot program that we created for teens in the United States. Our inaugural Microsoft Council for Digital Good, although ended last year, established a group of youth ambassadors from 12 U.S. states, who remain active on these issues today. I reunited with some of them earlier this week in D.C., when the first lady of the United States held an event at the White House, commemorating the one-year anniversary of her Be Best initiative. Be Best focuses on children’s well-being, online safety and preventing opioid abuse. The first lady spent time with each of our 15 council members last summer as she promoted her initiative and they shared their council assignments and creative works.

For more about the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation and the Digital Empowers Summit, see the Chamber website. For additional information about online safety and digital civility, visit our website, webpage and resources page, and connect with us on Facebook and Twitter.

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How OneNote’s Immersive Reader filled the gaps in a rural high school in Senegal

Hello, fellow educators! I’m Ibrahima Diagne, an English teacher and MIE Expert at Medina Yoro Foulah High School in Senegal. I’ve been an educator for four years now, but it was only a few months ago that I discovered the power of OneNote, and particularly the Immersive Reader feature, to inspire my classroom.

Both students and educators at Medina Yoro Foulah face a unique set of challenges. The school was housed in a temporary shelter when I joined the faculty. The permanent structure was finally finished in October of 2017, but despite that improvement, we still face a critical lack of resources. We have a library, a computer room and science labs, but we lack proper books (including a basic dictionary), computers, lab equipment and consistent internet access.

Complicating things further, my students come from an agrarian community. Most have never used a computer before, and many have daily responsibilities working on their family farms once school is over. It’s not uncommon for parents to interrupt my lesson because they need their child to help with the day’s tasks. As a result of this double-duty, my students understandably aren’t able to prioritize homework.

There is hope, though! By creating a custom reading-comprehension lesson plan, Microsoft’s OneNote, and its Immersive Reader feature, have brought new possibilities within reach for myself and my students.

What Worked in My Classroom

There are two parts to the reading-comprehension process I’ve implemented: vocabulary knowledge and text comprehension. To understand text, the reader must first understand the vocabulary used in the text. If the words don’t make sense, neither will the story. Children can draw on their prior vocabulary knowledge, but they’ll improve only if they’re continually taught new words.

To learn new words in any language, there’s no simpler, better tool than Immersive Reader. Here are few ways that Immersive Reader made a difference in my classroom.

Reading the text

OneNote’s Immersive Reader reads texts aloud to familiarize students with the pronunciation of a native speaker. This is crucial in our classroom, where there aren’t many opportunities to otherwise hear a native speaker. The students were quickly captivated, and at the end of the lesson, I heard them repeating some English words that’d stuck with them.

Vocabulary in context

We are advised to teach vocabulary within context. It’s never as simple as just translating the words from one language to another. The teacher should be able to explain his or her meaning by making gestures that will help students bring to mind the definition in French. Immersive Reader’s easy-to-use Picture Dictionary includes gestures designed to guide students to the right word, saving me the wild gesticulating!

Information transfer

In this step, we transfer sentences from the text to a table in OneNote. Sometimes, we’ll use a French sentence, and the students will have to find the English equivalent in the text. Students can use the translation option to preview what the sentence looks like in English. Immersive Reader won’t give them a direct translation of the text, pushing the students to recall their vocab knowledge to fully comprehend the original text.

These seemingly simple tools and techniques have helped inspire my students and enliven my classroom. The results are beginning to positively change the community, too. The first generation of students who left for university are returning and, thanks to their advanced education, are able to support their parents financially. Consequently, I’m receiving fewer visits from parents who want to pull their children from class.

There is still a ways to go, and educators will always face unique challenges related to educational resources, but expanding the opportunities for our students depends on our ability to “hack the classroom” and apply new tools in fresh ways.

I hope you find my learnings around OneNote’s Immersive Reader useful in your own classroom.

Ready to unlock limitless learning for your students? Check out our tools for educators. Already experiencing the difference in your classroom? Share your changemaker story with us!

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Xbox’s ‘Game of Thrones’ giveaway reveals new Iron Throne console

Last week, we announced a new Game of Thrones sweepstakes featuring custom House Targaryen and Night King designed consoles, and you didn’t think we’d just stop there, did you? We’re thrilled to unveil this giveaway will also include a third prize – an Iron Throne designed custom console! The fight to rule from the Iron Throne started nearly a decade ago and launched countless wars, battles and betrayals. It’s almost time to see who will reign victorious over the Seven Kingdoms, and it’s only right we made an epic custom console to honor this moment in television history.

Just like the Iron Throne that sits in King’s Landing, the console features the swords of enemies that surrendered to Aegon the Conqueror. This is only the third custom design created for the newest member of the Xbox One family – the Xbox One S All-Digital Edition. Built for disc-free gaming and entertainment, the Xbox One S All-Digital Edition comes bundled with Minecraft, Sea of Thieves and Forza Horizon 3. This Iron Throne console is truly fitting of the king or queen of Westeros!

Open until May 22, fans just need to RT our official Twitter post or “like” the official Facebook post announcing the giveaway. At the end of the giveaway, only three fans will be able to game with House Targaryen, the Night King or the Iron Throne at their side. What new heights will your gaming reach with “Game of Thrones” at your side? For full giveaway rules, see here.

Fans can also pre-order Season 8 of Game of Thrones on Xbox with Microsoft Movies & TV and receive an exclusive Iron Throne avatar with their purchase. For those who pre-order the “Game of Thrones” Seasons 1-8 Complete Series digital bundle, you’ll get the Iron Throne avatar plus two additional avatars. Full details here.

Don’t forget to tune in to the “Game of Thrones” series finale on May 19 to see what prophecies come to life, which characters will give their lives to their cause, or whom – if anyone – is left as the new ruler of the Seven Kingdoms.

Your favorite characters have killed, schemed, risen back from the dead and much more in their quest to ascend onto the Iron Throne. Don’t miss out, these custom consoles are the ultimate prize for gamers and “Game of Thrones” fans around the world!

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How AI is helping kids bridge language gaps

How did you learn to talk?

Probably something like this: Your infant brain, a hotbed of neurological activity, picked up on your parents’ speech tones and facial expressions. You started to mimic their sounds, interpret their emotions and identify relatives from strangers. And one day, about a year into life, you pointed and started saying a few meaningful words with slobbery glee.

But many children, particularly those diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, acquire language in different ways. Worldwide, one in 160 children is diagnosed with ASD. In the United States, it is one in 59 children — and approximately 40 percent of this group is non-verbal.

YouTube Video

Learning from superheroes and puppies

Lois Jean Brady and Matthew Guggemos, co-founders of Bay Area-based iTherapy who are speech pathologists and autism specialists, are tackling the growing prevalence of autism-related speech challenges with InnerVoice, an artificial intelligence-powered app whose customizable avatars stimulate social cues. The app animates avatars of superheroes, puppies, stuffed animals and people to help young children who have difficulties with language and expression pair words with meanings and practice conversation.

iTherapy received a Microsoft AI for Accessibility grant in 2018. The program provides grants as well as technology and expertise to individuals, groups and companies passionate about creating tools that make the world more inclusive. iTherapy is using the grant to integrate the Azure AI platform to enhance its generated speech, image recognition and facial animation.

A young boy at the iTherapy clinic uses InnerVoice chat bot to describe his photo of a Teddy bear.A five-year-old student using Zyrobotics to learn to read at Ranch Santa Gertrudes Elementary. 

“I think for sure that the AI component was the missing link,” says Guggemos of the app. “How do you use words, and what do words mean? What does a symbol represent? How do you use AI to develop problems that require language to solve?”

How a hippo helps teach speech 

AI is also proving an exciting development in speech and language improvement for Zyrobotics, an Atlanta-based educational technology company that was the first beneficiary of the AI for Accessibility program in 2018. Zyrobotics is using Azure Machine Learning to help its ReadAble Storiez educational tool interpret when a student needs assistance.

YouTube Video

ReadAble Storiez uses an avatar of a hippo to help students with learning disabilities such as dyslexia and other challenges such as stuttering, pauses and heavy accents.

Ayanna Howard, the company’s founder and professor in robotics, was first motivated to create ReadAble Storiez when watching a teacher use Zyrobotics’ Counting Zoo app with a child. When the teacher turned to her and said, “Can you have this app do more than just read with him? I think it’s fantastic that it helps improve his math – could it also help him improve his reading?”

Howard also found teachers mentioning the challenges of dyslexia in the classroom. “I was like, ‘Oh, what happens if you have a reading disability?’ I then learned that signs of dyslexia in children aren’t picked up until much later, typically when schools start standardized testing. I realized we needed an intervention much earlier and that we could do that with Counting Zoo.”

Learning models that don’t take individualized challenges into account, or don’t address the speech patterns of kids, “tend to fail,” Howard says. ReadAble Storiez employs a custom speech model and a sophisticated “tutor” to convert speech to text and measure accuracy, fluency and the child’s reading improvement.

‘It blew my mind!’

Howard is pleased with the program’s early success. “While they were reading a book, kids were correcting themselves,” she says. “As a technologist, you say your stuff works, but I’m sitting there with the kids and I’m blown away, ‘It really does work!’ It’s thrilling to see that what works in the lab actually works in the real world, in the child’s environment. The [avatar] would provide feedback, and a child would be like, ‘I didn’t say a word right. Can I try again?’ It blew my mind. That was the affirmation. Our solution was on track and on target.”

Brady, who came up with the idea for InnerVoice after studying and writing a book on apps for people with autism, reflects on the impact it has made. She cites an example of working with a student who is non-verbal and used the app to communicate with an avatar of himself.

“He would take a picture of an apple, and an avatar would read it as ‘apple,’ and then he would write it down, ‘apple.’ Until then, I hadn’t even thought of that strategy.”

A mother uses InnerVoice to work on communication skills with her young daughter. A mother uses InnerVoice to work on communication skills with her young daughter.  

Brady and Guggemos imagine the benefits of AI-assisted communication beyond their target audience. They are working with people with dementia, head injuries and strokes. “Many communication apps just talk for you,” Brady adds. “Ours spans many aspects of communication for everybody — even English-language learners. Why wouldn’t I try that? It provides a model. There’s a coffee cup on the table, take a picture of it. How do you say that?”

Howard dreams of Zyrobotics helping to close the gap between mainstream learners and students with learning disabilities. To start, this fall Zyrobotics will introduce ReadAble Storiez to classrooms in the Los Nietos, California, school district, where learning disabilities track high. The company will also apply AI to its suite of STEM Storiez, a series of nine interactive and inclusive books that help children ages 3 to 7 engage with science, math, engineering and technology.

The AI for Accessibility program has been instrumental in getting Zyrobotics off the ground with ReadAble Storiez. “If we hadn’t gotten the grant, we’d be in phase zero,” Howard says. “We run on grants to ensure we provide access to learning technologies for all students. We need to be out there for kids that need us.”

The grant gave Brady and Guggemos the technology to take InnerVoice to the next level. “Our kids need this technology,” Brady says. “It’s not a luxury. We want to keep adding the best stuff. Microsoft really propelled us forward in that arena.”

Top image: A young boy at the iTherapy clinic uses InnerVoice chat bot to describe his photo of a Teddy bear. 

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Bing Maps now gives suggestions based on your recent searches

Can’t find the place you searched for last week? No problem! Now you’ll see search suggestions on Bing Maps for your recent searches.

To try it out, start by searching for something on the map.

Bing Maps Autosuggest - Start typiing

Next time you click in the search box on the map, you’ll see suggestions for your most recent searches.

Bing Maps Autosuggest - Airport

Not the search you were looking for? As you start typing, we’ll look across your recent searches and present suggestions that match your search.

Bing Maps Autosuggest - Suggestions

Want to view or delete your search history? Just go to https://account.microsoft.com/privacy/ and sign in to manage your search history.

– The Bing Team

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SK Telecom and Microsoft sign MOU for comprehensive cooperation in cutting-edge ICT

The two companies agreed to combine their strengths to jointly promote IoT business, AI technologies and services, media and entertainment services, and new ways of working

Park Jung Ho, CEO of SK Telecom (left), and Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft (right), at a recent meeting.
Park Jung Ho, CEO of SK Telecom (left), and Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft (right), at a recent meeting.

SEOUL, KOREA – May 13, 2019 – SK Telecom (NYSE:SKM) and Microsoft Corp. signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on May 7 for comprehensive cooperation in leading-edge ICT, including 5G, artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud.

Under the MOU, SK Telecom and Microsoft will combine their technological capabilities in areas such as 5G, AI and cloud to jointly promote Internet of Things (IoT) business including smart factory; AI technologies and services; media and entertainment services; and new ways of working for ICT companies under the SK Group umbrella.

To promote smart factory IoT business operations, the two companies established a business strategic partnership in February 2019 to launch Microsoft Azure with Metatron, SK Telecom’s self-developed big data solution. SK Telecom and Microsoft will work together to further upgrade the service and implement joint marketing activities.

By putting together the capabilities of SK Telecom’s AI platform NUGU with Microsoft’s Cortana digital assistant, the two companies will work together to offer new AI-powered products and services, including consumer solutions such as smart speakers and other offerings for the enterprise.

Moreover, the two companies will work together to create a new level of customer experience in the field of media and entertainment.

SK Telecom will adopt Microsoft 365, the company’s intelligent and secure solution to empower employees, to create a modern workplace and promote a new way of working among employees. Eventually, SK Telecom will expand Microsoft 365 to other ICT companies under the SK Group umbrella. In addition, the two companies will provide new value to customers by combining Microsoft’s modern workplace devices and solutions, such as Surface and Office 365, with SK Telecom’s unique products and services.

“SK Telecom is pleased to join hands with Microsoft as collaboration with global leading companies like Microsoft is essential to gain leadership in the 5G market, where competition is already fierce,” said Park Jung-ho, President and CEO of SK Telecom. “SK Telecom will work closely with Microsoft to create an unprecedented value by combining the strengths and capabilities of the two companies.”

“Through the strategic partnership with SK Telecom, we will play a key role in shaping the future and accelerating the digital transformation of the telecommunications industry with our world-class network and technology,” said Jason Zander, executive vice president, Azure, Microsoft. “This will be a deep and multifaceted partnership that strengthens the power of cloud and AI to deliver innovative new services to customers.”

About Microsoft

Microsoft (Nasdaq “MSFT” @microsoft) enables digital transformation for the era of an intelligent cloud and an intelligent edge. Its mission is to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more.

About SK Telecom

SK Telecom is the largest mobile operator in Korea with nearly 50 percent of the market share. As the pioneer of all generations of mobile networks, the company has commercialized the fifth generation (5G) network on December 1, 2018 and announced the first 5G smartphone subscribers on April 3, 2019. With its world’s best 5G, SK Telecom is set to realize the Age of Hyper-Innovation by transforming the way customers work, live and play.

Building on its strength in mobile services, the company is also creating unprecedented value in diverse ICT-related markets including media, security and commerce.

For more information, press only:

SK Telecom Public Relations/Media Contact, skt_press@sk.com or sktelecom@bm.com

Microsoft Media Relations, WE Communications for Microsoft, (425) 638-7777, rrt@we-worldwide.com

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Microsoft for Startups joins FounderFuel to propel Canadian AI startups

Microsoft for Startups and FounderFuel, Montreal’s largest startup accelerator, announced today that they would be working together to accelerate the growth of Canadian AI startups. Starting this month, qualified startups in the FounderFuel cohort will receive access to Microsoft business and technical experts as well as access to free Azure cloud and powerful development tools.

Image result for founders fuel logo

Founder Fuel helps early stage companies go to market, raise capital and make connections with entrepreneurs, investors, and industry leaders in Montreal and across Canada.

Isaac Souweine, General Manager of Founder Fuel said “We are proud to start this new relationship with Microsoft, which has always played an important leadership role in the tech industry. Our mission is to help startups grow and develop into successful businesses and Microsoft is well positioned to help us in those efforts through both technological support and mentorship. Additionally, we believe Microsoft’s support for FounderFuel startups is a sign of the importance of Montreal as a leading tech hub.”

Through this relationship, Microsoft experts will be available to mentor FounderFuel startups through the course of the program. Additionally, eligible startups in the program will receive preferred access to free Azure cloud, go-to-market benefits and the opportunity to sell alongside Microsoft.

Adam Nanjee, Managing Director of Microsoft for Startups Canada said, “This new partnership is an important step in our efforts to deepen our support for startups in Montreal and Canada overall. FounderFuel plays a vital role in helping startups succeed in Montreal, one of the world’s foremost centers of AI development and we look forward to working with them to provide startups with the mentorship and technological resources they need to succeed.”

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Military Spouse Technology Academy to be offered in San Antonio

May 8, 2019

Today we’re announcing the second phase of the Military Spouse Technology Academy (MSTA), which trains military spouses in technical and soft skills that equip them for careers in the technology industry. Following the successful completion of the pilot cohort on March 1 — which graduated 100% of its 19 participants in the Tacoma, Wash., area — the academy will also be offered at a new location in San Antonio, Texas, beginning this fall.

MSTA is the latest program to demonstrate Microsoft’s dedication to supporting the military community. It was built atop the success of the Microsoft Software & Systems Academy (MSSA), which launched in 2013 with the mission of providing important technical skills to transitioning service members and veterans.

Military spouses make up a highly educated, talented and hard-working group. Forty-five percent have a four-year degree or higher, but the demands of being a military spouse — frequent relocations, their spouse’s unexpected deployments and the challenge of sometimes living in remote areas — mean that they face high under- and unemployment rates.

At the same time, the technology industry continues to face a talent shortage.

For these reasons and more, Microsoft introduced MSTA, a 22-week onsite program that offers the opportunity for well-paying, long-term and meaningful careers in tech.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LYF4Mh4Bxk]

“We’re proud that the first Military Spouse Technology Academy graduates have accomplished their training goals,” said U.S. Marine Corps Major General (Ret.) Chris Cortez, vice president of Microsoft Military Affairs. “Now, we’re taking MSTA to San Antonio, based on its large military community, the city’s support for military spouses, and the many companies in the area that have committed to considering employment opportunities to hire these resilient and industrious graduates. Military spouses have a lot of potential. They’re going to be great employees.”

From MSSA, which has helped more than a thousand transitioning service members garner well-paid careers in the technology industry; to YouthSpark4MilKids, which provides immersive STEM workshops specifically for middle school children of military families; to MSTA, which is specifically tailored for military spouses, Microsoft endeavors to empower every person on the planet to achieve more.

MSTA empowers military families and the regions and industries that support them

Reflecting Microsoft’s ever-broadening commitment to this community, the new San Antonio location will offer the Texas-based military spouse community a chance to develop technology skills necessary for today’s digital economy. MSTA will also give local organizations a chance to hire motivated and skilled tech talent.

Microsoft works closely with Hiring Our Heroes — a nonprofit initiative of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce that connects service members, spouses and veterans to meaningful employment — to support the military community through MSTA and MSSA. San Antonio is one of Hiring Our Heroes’ Military Spouse Economic Empowerment Zones, which boost prospects for military spouses through a vibrant and robust network of employers.

“MSTA is the first of its kind for military spouses,” said Elizabeth O’Brien, senior director of the Military Spouse Program at Hiring Our Heroes. “Military spouses face unique challenges, but I will tell you we are masters of solutions as well. The program that Microsoft created is a perfect example of how companies can partner for innovative change to support military spouse employment.”

Jacqueline Widdis, an MSTA graduate and a program manager at Microsoft, had a 19-and-a-half-year full-time employment gap before starting the program. “MSTA has, quite frankly, changed my life,” Widdis said. “I knew what I had to offer a company, but I couldn’t get past that portal to show or even interview with a company to say, ‘This is what I’m capable of.’ Now, I feel empowered to take control of my own career, find out what my next steps are and walk in that direction.”

MSTA graduates benefit the companies that hire them

Jessica Jacobs, an MSTA graduate who now works at Boeing, found MSTA’s sense of community to be very valuable. “The most challenging thing about being a military spouse is juggling your household and your own personal aspirations,” Jacobs said. “MSTA can benefit organizations by teaching military spouses the fundamentals for IT. MSTA has empowered me to go after my dreams at all costs.”

MSSA and MSTA play a key role in funneling a unique pipeline of savvy and skilled talent from the veteran and military community into roles at some of the world’s most prominent companies. Our hiring-partner program is a group of more than 450 companies committed to hiring these graduates, who are often mission-oriented, adaptable and instilled with a sense of teamwork aimed at problem-solving. As a hiring partner, companies gain access to candidates with the drive, discipline, training and capabilities to succeed in a fast-paced and increasingly digital world.

Learn more about our upcoming cohorts in Tacoma and San Antonio, and see how to become a hiring partner to take advantage of the unique mix of skills cohort graduates have to offer.

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New self-paced learning tools make quantum programming more approachable

With the most recent Quantum Development Kit release, we’ve focused on empowering our users to get engaged with quantum development. The new release: 

  • Makes it easier to learn quantum computing with the quantum katas notebooks. 
  • Adds more consistent and concise Q# syntax. 
  • Refactors to focus on helping users find what they want and contribute their code. 

Building upon the Jupyter Notebook integration that we shared with you last month, we now extend the support to our quantum katas – self-paced tutorials on quantum computing. Today’s update means that new Q# developers can experience our self-paced learning tools without having to install the Quantum Development Kit. With this update, we’ve made quantum programming approachable for people with any level of experience.

Quantum katas in jupyter notebookQuantum katas in jupyter notebook

You can try out the kata notebook yourself hosted online, or you can also find a list of other kata notebooks for you to try at our open source Quantum Katas repository.   

Q# makes it easy to think in terms of quantum algorithms and quantum applications. As we continue to evolve the world’s first high-level quantum programming language to meet the needs of scalable quantum program development, we’re also taking the opportunity to make it even easier to express quantum algorithms in Q#.   

With this release, we are adding new capabilities to the Q# language itself.  For example, we added an operator “w/”, a new way to express array creation as a modification of an existing array.  We have also added a shorthand way to express specializations of quantum operations (e.g.: Controlled and Adjoint) and new shorthand, (e.g.:, “w/=, +=)  for common statements. These changes not only improve the developer’s ability to express quantum algorithms, but they will also lead to more efficient code generation on quantum devices. 

Visual Studio and Visual Studio code users will also now see the familiar light bulb icon that recommends fixes for build problems.   

jupyster lightbulb in quantum katasjupyster lightbulb in quantum katas

We have optimized the layout of our libraries to enable the exciting growth that we are seeing from our team and the larger quantum community. As more developers contribute their ideas and Q# code, the new layout helps developers learn and re-use code faster. Learn about these and other new features in the Quantum Development Kit update release notes.

Finally, please take a look at our developer blog this week as we publish a series of more in-depth blogs about each of these new capabilities.    

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A Microsoft employee’s personal and global impact on rare disease

Adult hugging childAdult hugging child

The summer of 2009 was a nightmare for my family. Our 3-month-old son Sergio was ill, and doctors could not diagnose his condition. Our family went on a long journey to find an answer. Two years after his symptoms began, in 2011, we learned that he had Dravet Syndrome.

Neurologists were working to find a diagnosis and Sergio was being treated while they searched. At nine months of age, he was given a drug that was contraindicated for what ultimately was his condition. Soon after receiving it, he started to have dozens of seizures per day.  We stop counting the seizures, and wondered why, in the age of computers, neurologists don’t use computers and data to improve the diagnosis process.

This event changed my life. I founded the Dravet Syndrome Foundation in Spain in 2011 after learning of Sergio’s condition, and later, Foundation 29. I spent seven years trying to find a cure. Unfortunately, finding a cure for a rare disease is very challenging. Instead, using resources available to me as a Microsoft employee, and with foundation volunteers, created a diagnostic program for children with Dravet Syndrome, called Dx29. To date, it has provided diagnoses for more than 700 patients worldwide. It is now available for clinicians to use free of charge.

The Long Wait for a Rare Disease Diagnosis

Patients live an average of 4.8 years for a rare disease diagnosis. In the meantime, they contend with the risk of medical errors and severe side effects.  Patients visit an average of 7.3 specialists, with 40% of patients reporting that a delayed diagnosis had a significant or very marked impact on their condition. It is estimated that 6-8% of the world is affected by a rare disease, meaning that improvements in diagnosis procedures could impact 460-620 million people.

The Need for Clinical Data Integration

The conventional diagnosis process is not designed for the complex biology behind rare diseases. It usually starts with a clinical consultation. A physician requests a genomic test, sending along the biological samples and the symptoms (phenotypes) already identified. The sequencing is performed and bioinformaticians (often manually) analyze the large amount of data produced. To carry out this complex analysis, they use the symptoms identified by the physician to guide their search.

The physician’s and bioinformation’s data are not integrated, so these professionals are disconnected. Those conducting the gene filtering have partial phenotypic information but are unable to collect more data because only physicians have full access to patients and their records. The genetic report the physician receives would likely be different if more patient information was available during gene filtering. Clinical decisions made based on the genetic data could be different with more data. How can bioinformaticians check if a given gene variant in the patient is producing a concrete phenotype? How is the patient information put in the hands of bioinformaticians? There is an information gap issue.

Satya Nadella Empowers Employees to Help

At the 2017 Microsoft employee hackathon in Spain, one of my best friends, and Microsoft colleague, Sacha Arozarena, suggested we create a bot to diagnose patients with rare diseases. After just three days of intensive work, our prototype was able to suggest symptoms and navigate the user to a potential diagnosis. It was still a proof of concept, but we won the Spanish hackathon. The most important achievement of this work was the connections the prototype created for us.

That same month, I heard Satya Nadella discuss his son’s medical condition while he presented at Microsoft Ready, so I sent him an email asking for help. He replied within five minutes, connecting me with Microsoft’s Research team. Through this connection, I learned about Microsoft’s efforts in several areas:  a new Genomics team, a team working on medical natural language processing, and the company’s investments and efforts towards bringing artificial intelligence to health science.

Using the Cloud and AI to Speed Diagnosis

One year ago, colleagues and I founded Foundation 29, a non-profit organization with the mission to improve the lives of patients with rare diseases through faster, better diagnosis. The foundation is developing solutions to facilitate diagnosis, with the intention of distributing them to every physician in the world. Dx29 is the name of this effort. The goal is to reimagine and democratize diagnosis.

The tool we developed uses Artificial Intelligence (AI) to close the information gap. The gene filtering of most routine low-level cases can be automated with AI, allowing bioinformaticians and specialists to focus on the most challenging cases where human intervention is required. Physicians can drive automatic genetic analysis simply by identifying symptoms in the tool. The physician’s role comes back to the center of the process, focusing on the patient and doing symptom identification and differential diagnosis.

Dx29 does not make a diagnosis, but enhances the physicians’ skills. It gives physicians a tool that augments their capabilities by hiding the complexity of genomics and allowing them to focus on clinical diagnosis, something they are already experts on.

The process starts by performing automatic symptom identification and codification from medical records. It then allows physicians to navigate the complexity of gene identification by simply selecting identified symptoms in the tool.  In the final step, once enough symptoms have been matched with the genetic information, Dx29 presents a ranked list of potential conditions for the physician to further evaluate and decide how to proceed. The foundation did the first medical tests last December with promising results. Our goal is to make the tool available to the medical community this spring and find a business model to secure the continuity of the project.

Thanks to Microsoft and Global Organizations

Dx29 is possible because of help from Microsoft and its employees. It is impossible to list all Microsoft employees who joined forces to collaborate on this initiative. Foundation 29 and in particular, Dx29 are honored by the privilege of working with Microsoft software engineers, product groups, and consultants. Architects from Microsoft Services, data engineers, data scientists and the legal department provided us with advice on privacy and data protection.

I am proud to work for a company that empowers employees to achieve more. A lack of diagnosis is not only a stressful situation for patients and families, but also for healthcare professionals. Without a diagnosis, an appropriate treatment is not possible. With all the help received so far, Foundation 29 aims to empower physicians with the right tool to provide an accurate diagnosis.

I would like to thank the following organizations for their contributions to the development of the Dx29 tool and its pilot:

  • Centro de Investigación Biomédica en red de Enfermedades Raras (CIBERER), Madrid, Spain
  • Hospital La Paz de Madrid, Madrid, Spain
  • NIMGenetics, Madrid, Spain,
  • Idibell, Barcelona, Spain
  • The Global Commission on Rare Diseases

Rare disease patients are exceptions in clinical routines, but they drive the medical community towards precision medicine. Precision medicine should not be limited to exceptional cases, but spread to all patients, improving the standard of care for all.

Time is ticking. I know I won’t be able to find a cure for Sergio and he will have to live with Dravet Syndrome all his life. But having the possibility of creating a tool to speed up and improve diagnosis process for other children is a strong motivation for me, my family and the community around us. Helping others is sometimes the only way to heal your own wounds.

Learn more about Dx29, the Global Commission and how AI can support diagnosis and read more from the Microsoft In Health Blog on the Global Commission.