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‘Gears 5’ Versus Multiplayer Tech Test now open to all Xbox Live Gold members

The Gears 5 Versus Tech Test began last weekend, inviting both those players who have pre-ordered Gears 5 and Xbox Game Pass members to rev up their Lancers and roadie run through their opponents on the way to victory. Thanks to the incredible Gears fans, both new and veteran, who made our initial Gears 5 Versus Tech Test weekend a smashing success. This weekend we’re extending the invitation to join the action to all Xbox Live Gold members as part of Xbox Live Free Play Days this weekend.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJ_AzLHaUJc?version=3&rel=1&fs=1&autohide=2&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&wmode=transparent&w=1020&h=574]

Starting at 10 a.m. PDT tomorrow, COG hopefuls who are new to the Gears 5 fight can enlist in the Boot Camp training mode and then jump right into Arcade, the new game type designed for over-the-top fun. If you’re returning for another round following last week’s Tech Test, be sure to check out fan-favorite King of the Hill, the updated competitive game type Escalation and continue your Tour of Duty, a series of challenges that grant sweet rewards. A new reward has also been added – the Wreath Bloodspray, which can be earned by completing one match during the Tech Test from 5:30 – 6:30 pm PDT on Friday, July 26. No matter your level of Gears familiarity, Gears 5 offers a game type for you.

To ensure you’re ready for battle, search the Microsoft Store for Gears 5 Tech Test and download to your library. The Tech Test is available for download right now, but servers will be offline until tomorrow at 10 a.m. PDT. We also wanted to remind you that online multiplayer will require Xbox Live Gold for Xbox Game Pass for Console members, and that because this Tech Test is to help test our servers, you might encounter some queueing as you start to play. We hope to make Gears 5 a great online experience for all players and Xbox Game Pass members on launch, and this Tech Test will help.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AHJGsbywMFY?version=3&rel=1&fs=1&autohide=2&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&start=1&wmode=transparent&w=1020&h=574]

Thanks for your support and we look forward to seeing you online! Be sure to visit www.gears5.com and follow @GearsofWar on Facebook and Twitter to keep up-to-date with the latest on Gears 5 ahead of its worldwide launch on September 10.

Gears 5 will release on September 10 for Xbox One, Windows 10 PC and Xbox Game Pass. Early access starts on September 6 for Xbox Game Pass Ultimate members and Gears 5 Ultimate Edition purchasers. Pre-order details can be found on the Microsoft Store.

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Azure publishes guidance for secure cloud adoption by governments

Governments around the world are in the process of a digital transformation, actively investigating solutions and selecting architectures that will help them transition many of their workloads to the cloud. There are many drivers behind the digital transformation, including the need to engage citizens, empower employees, transform government services, and optimize government operations. Governments across the world are also looking to improve their cybersecurity posture to secure their assets and counter the evolving threat landscape.

To help governments worldwide get answers to common cloud security related questions, Microsoft published a white paper, titled Azure for Secure Worldwide Public Sector Cloud Adoption. This paper addresses common security and isolation concerns pertinent to worldwide public sector customers. It also explores technologies available in Azure to help safeguard unclassified, confidential, and sensitive workloads in the public multi-tenant cloud in combination with Azure Stack and Azure Data Box Edge deployed on-premises and at the edge for fully disconnected scenarios involving highly sensitive data. The paper addresses common customer concerns, including:

  • Data residency and data sovereignty
  • Government access to customer data, including CLOUD Act related questions
  • Data encryption, including customer control of encryption keys
  • Access to customer data by Microsoft personnel
  • Threat detection and prevention
  • Private and hybrid cloud options
  • Cloud compliance and certifications
  • Conceptual architecture for classified workloads

Azure can be used by governments worldwide to meet rigorous data protection requirements.

For governments and the public sector industry worldwide, Microsoft provides Azure – a public multi-tenant cloud services platform that government agencies can use to deploy a variety of solutions. A multi-tenant cloud platform implies that multiple customer applications and data are stored on the same physical hardware. Azure uses logical isolation to segregate each customer’s applications and data from those of others. This approach provides the scale and economic benefits of multi-tenant cloud services while rigorously helping prevent customers from accessing one another’s data or applications.

A hyperscale public cloud provides resiliency in times of natural disaster or other disturbances. The cloud provides capacity for failover redundancy and empowers sovereign nations with flexibility regarding global resiliency planning. A hyperscale public cloud also offers a feature-rich environment incorporating the latest cloud innovations such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, Internet of Things (IoT) services, intelligent edge, and more. This rich feature set helps government customers increase efficiency and unlock insights into their operations and performance.

Using Azure’s public cloud capabilities, customers benefit from rapid feature growth, resiliency, and the cost-effective operation of the hyperscale cloud while still obtaining the levels of isolation, security, and confidence required to handle workloads across a broad spectrum of data classifications, including unclassified and classified data. Leveraging Azure isolation technologies, as well as intelligent edge capabilities (such as Azure Stack and Azure Data Box Edge), customers can process confidential and sensitive data in secure isolated infrastructure within Azure’s multi-tenant regions or highly sensitive data at the edge under the customer’s full operational control.

To get answers to common cloud security related questions, government customers worldwide should review Azure for Secure Worldwide Public Sector Cloud Adoption. To learn more about how Microsoft helps customers meet their own compliance obligations across regulated industries and markets worldwide, review “Microsoft Azure compliance offerings.

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New approaches to Home and Xbox voice commands roll out to Xbox Insiders

As Xbox Insiders, your feedback helps inform the decisions and updates we make on Xbox, from new features to how gamers interact with the console itself. Based on your valuable feedback, we’ve been continuing to iterate on two key experiences on Xbox, delivering you a faster Home experience and evolving the way we support Xbox voice commands to improve the voice experience.

Evolving Home

The Home on Xbox One is the first thing you see when you turn on your Xbox One, and we want to deliver an easy and seamless experience for you to navigate your console. We’ve heard your feedback and have continued to iterate on Home to get you into your gaming experiences faster and keeping more of your content front and center. With today’s update, we’re experimenting with a streamlined user interface.

With this new experimental Home design, the first thing you’ll notice is we’ve removed the Twists from the top of Home in favor of separate buttons that launch your gaming experiences. The goal is to let you jump into Xbox Game Pass, Mixer, Xbox Community and Microsoft Store quicker than ever. We’ve also shifted things around to make more room for your recently played titles.

We need your help testing out the new interface. The new experimental Home rolls out this week to select Xbox Insiders in our Alpha and Alpha Skip Ahead rings. For more details on rollout, keep an eye on the Xbox Insiders section of Xbox Wire. The Home experience will continue to evolve and change based on your feedback, so please let us know what you think and share your ideas for Home at the Xbox Ideas Hub. You may see this layout change and even come and go as we iterate on your feedback.

Changes to voice commands on Xbox One

Last fall, we expanded Xbox voice commands to hundreds of millions of smart devices by enabling Xbox One to connect with Xbox Skill for Cortana and Alexa-enabled devices. Xbox Skill continues to grow and change based on your feedback, including new updates that rolled out earlier this month.

Building on these efforts, we are now further evolving the way we support voice commands on Xbox and are moving away from on-console experiences to cloud-based assistant experiences. This means you can no longer talk to Cortana via your headset. However, you can use the Xbox Skill for Cortana via the Cortana app on iOS, Android, and Windows or via Harmon Kardon Invoke speaker to power your Xbox One, adjust volume, launch games and apps, capture screenshots, and more —just as you can do with Alexa-enabled devices today. We’ll also continue to improve the Xbox Skill across supported digital assistants and continue expanding our Xbox voice capabilities in the future based on fan feedback.

Starting this week, this update will roll out to our Alpha Skip Ahead ring and will fully rollout to all users this fall.  As part of these changes, this update will temporarily disable dictation for the virtual keyboard on Xbox One. Don’t worry though, our team is working to provide an alternative solution and will have more details to share soon.

As always, your feedback is important to us and our partners as we continue to evolve the Xbox One Home and shape the digital assistant and voice command experience on Xbox. We have some exciting updates in the works and can’t wait to share what’s next, so stay tuned for more.

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AI in health: Are we there yet?

Illustrated image of cloud infrastrctureIllustrated image of cloud infrastrcture

The upside artificial intelligence (AI) opportunity is undeniable for every health ecosystem stakeholder. You can feel the anticipation. By 2020, Gartner predicts that 70% of healthcare provider CIOs will cite advanced analytics as their top priority. By now, nearly every senior leader is evangelizing the value of a comprehensive, enterprise-wide AI strategy to accelerate their digital transformation.

It feels like AI is on the verge of going mainstream with 50% reporting AI as a top strategic priority to improve performance and cost effectiveness, yet only 4% of CIOs in their survey consider it a top priority for funding.  So what exactly are these AI leaders doing that is substantially different and putting them ahead of the pack?

Foundation first

A recent HIMSS Media Report pinpoints what these AI leaders are doing to create a culture of innovation.  In short, AI leaders start their AI journey by first building an AI foundation of innovation readiness and processes. To become “innovation ready”, Chief Data Officers will tell you that a critical piece of AI work is the groundwork for data preparation. It’s hard to imagine building a house without first preparing the foundation, and most organizations start construction on their AI house before doing the foundational data preparation work needed for AI to succeed.

Preparing data to be AI-ready involves more than just correcting errors, duplicates, or reformatting. Data needs to be extracted, organized, and labeled in ways that allow machine learning tools to generate the kind of enterprise-grade AI models that can drive transformative business or clinical process change.

Microsoft is reducing the time, cost, and complexity of laying your AI foundation

Very few health organizations are equipped with the tools, skills, and resources they need to do the data preparation groundwork that AI needs to succeed. That’s why Microsoft chose to host HL7® FHIR® DevDays 2019 in the Microsoft Conference Center in Redmond, WA earlier in June.  HL7 FHIR, or Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources, is an open interoperability standard that can extract and organize siloed data from disparate sources (20 or more databases for many organizations) into AI-ready data sets.  Collaborating with HL7 and industry experts, we hosted over 100 hands-on tutorials and hackathons, as well as keynotes to upskill our customers and partners to be able to install their AI foundation. We also joined top interoperability and AI experts from around the world to find ways to further improve the HL7 FHIR standard.

Beyond preparing data for AI, health systems also need a simple and safe way to protect, control, and track access to protected health data at scale. Open cloud platforms coupled with new AI dev tools are making it easier for developers to create innovative applications and to collaborate in powerful ways at scale.  At Microsoft, we share the same commitment and challenges to deliver better care so we we’re taking the same approach with healthcare development to help improve operational outcomes. For example, we first developed our Azure API for FHIR®as an open source project, and we’re doing the same with our recent FHIR® R4 and our SQL persistence provider projects.

We are also growing our open source healthcare team at Microsoft Healthcare with a focus on high-impact approaches to health data interoperability, working with stakeholders across the ecosystem of hospitals, care providers, insurers, electronic health record system developers. With an open source project backed by an in-house engineering team, the gang has been able to add features at an impressive rate.

Get started on your AI foundation

Check out AI Business School for a leadership crash course on AI strategy, culture, and responsibility.

FHIR® is the registered trademark of HL7 and is used with the permission of HL7 

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How Patient.Info website uses Azure to keep its finger on the pulse of health in the UK

One of the biggest impacts of technology on healthcare has been the ability to turn your home into a basic GP surgery. Smartwatches can measure your heart rate, blood pressure and how many calories you’ve burnt; digital assistants can remind you to exercise; gadgets will help you monitor your asthma and cope with back pain; you can videochat with your doctor via your laptop. You can even buy smart shorts that log electrical activity in your muscles.

The gradual shift from calling a GP surgery to make an appointment and travelling there, to monitoring and managing conditions as part of your regular day – often online – is being welcomed at both ends of the phone line.

As one of the most popular medical websites in the UK, Patient.Info is at the forefront of this revolution. More than 100 million people logged on to the site in 2018 to read articles about healthcare, check symptoms and learn to live a healthier life.

Jason Keane, Chief Executive, says Patient.Info’s success and popularity is a result of the clear, accurate and reliable clinical information people find on the site, which has all been written by healthcare professionals.

“The objective is to empower people to make informed choices,” he says. “That’s about understanding the patient’s needs and offering them great content so they can manage their own care. It’s getting patients to the services they need. Patient.Info plays a critical role in not only being able to give people the ability to make informed choices, because the content is written and peer reviewed by GPs, but it makes the entire experience very safe and secure in one tool.”

<img width="4032" height="3024" src="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk.jpg" class="animate-viewport c-image" alt="Sarah Jarvis and Jason Keane" srcset="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk.jpg 4032w, https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-2.jpg 300w, https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-3.jpg 768w, https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-4.jpg 1600w" sizes="(max-width: 4032px) 100vw, 4032px" data-attachment-id="75200" data-permalink="https://news.microsoft.com/en-gb/features/patient-info-is-using-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-the-nations-health/sarahjason/" data-orig-file="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk.jpg" data-orig-size="4032,3024" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="sarahJason" data-image-description="

Sarah Jarvis and Jason Keane

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Sarah Jarvis and Jason Keane

A high level of safety and security is important when people are sharing personal information online, so Keane and Clinical Director Sarah Jarvis MBE took no chances and moved Patient.Info onto Azure, Microsoft’s cloud platform. They also use Power BI to quickly and easily understand all the information held in their Data Lake.

Moving to Azure also allows the website to cope with sudden surges in demand – during winter when flu is more prevalent, for example – as Azure will automatically free up more server space when needed.

“Our users need to have complete confidence in what we’re doing,” Keane adds. “We work with Microsoft because we know all of the data is in a very safe and secure environment. It’s the best technology out there to really make sure that all of that information is not only safe and secure but meets UK and EU law.”

Patient.Info grew out of an online health information director set up by Dr Tim Kenny and his wife, Dr Beverley Kenny, in 1996. Tim led a group of medical authors to produce a resource for medical staff and their patients.

It has evolved into an award-winning service led by Jarvis – a GP, former GP trainer and resident doctor for the Jeremy Vine show on BBC Radio 2 – that also produces a newsletter sent to 750,000 subscribers and around 3,200 leaflets for patients and doctors on health conditions and 850 on medicines, in addition to hundreds of editorial features, all medically peer reviewed and approved.

Its 23-year growth has been mirrored by a rise in demand for GPs and the services they provide in communities. In 2017, the British Medical Association warned that the NHS was at breaking point. There are around 34,000 GPs in the UK, but a report by the King’s Fund, Nuffield Trust and Health Foundation in March this year stated that the shortfall in the number of GPs is “so serious that it cannot be filled at all”.

The Government is drawing up a Green Paper on social care in the UK, with former Deputy PM Damian Green recommending new taxes on older people and a private insurance model to top up a universal level of state care.

Jarvis has been a GP since 1990, and has seen first-hand the demand levels rise.

“We know that we have a huge crisis in the number of GPs and healthcare provision across the UK, we know that the Department of Health is moving very long way towards trying to empower people to be in charge of their own conditions and to self-care,” she says. “We know that up to one-in-three people walking up to A&E does not need to be there, and about the same proportion in general practice. We need to engage patients; we know that up to half of medications are not taken as they should be, and that’s even more of an issue for patients who are taking what we call preventive medication.”

“So much of the work we do these days is proactive, it’s about keeping people healthy and stopping them from getting ill in the first place,” Jarvis says. “That means that it’s not remotely surprising given that we’re doing so much more for our patients, and that they’re getting older and that they have more long-term conditions, that GP workload has increased by about 50% in the past 10 to 12 years alone. We have to empower patients to self-manage if general practice is going to survive and be there when people need it.”

<img width="4000" height="2660" src="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-1.jpg" class="animate-viewport c-image" alt="Doctor talking to patient, shows laptop with hospital website on the screen" srcset="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-1.jpg 4000w, https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-5.jpg 300w, https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-6.jpg 768w, https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-7.jpg 1600w" sizes="(max-width: 4000px) 100vw, 4000px" data-attachment-id="73827" data-permalink="https://news.microsoft.com/en-gb/2018/12/04/scottish-research-company-aridhia-is-moving-to-azure-which-could-be-a-huge-boost-for-alzheimers-research/rawpixel-760103-unsplash/" data-orig-file="https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-1.jpg" data-orig-size="4000,2660" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="rawpixel-760103-unsplash" data-image-description="

Doctor talking to patient, shows laptop with hospital website on the screen

” data-medium-file=”https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-5.jpg” data-large-file=”https://www.sickgaming.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/how-patient-info-website-uses-azure-to-keep-its-finger-on-the-pulse-of-health-in-the-uk-7.jpg”>

“So much of the work we do these days is proactive, it’s about keeping people healthy and stopping them from getting ill in the first place”

According to research published in 2017 in BMJ Open, the open access medical research journal, GP appointments in the UK last an average of 9.22 minutes. People in 28 countries, including the US (21.07 minutes), Switzerland (17 minutes), Belgium (15 minutes) and Sweden (22.5 minutes), spend longer with their doctor.

The challenge for GPs is to offer people the best possible care when they are seeing them for less than 10 minutes. Patient.Info is helping family doctors by giving them fast access to information they can trust, while they are in a room with a patient.

“Around 60% of the GPs in the country have access to the information on Patient.Info directly within their consulting systems, which they can trust completely because it was written by their peers and it’s been peer reviewed,” Jarvis adds. “They can read it on their screen while the patient is in the consultation. I’ve used Patient.Info for 20 years and it is such an invaluable part of my working life. A patient came in recently complaining of chest pain, shortness of breath and dizziness, and was convinced they were dying. I could immediately bring up the page on panic attacks, go through it with them and say, look at these symptoms, you’re having panic attacks.”

As people live longer, they develop more complex medical conditions that need to be managed. Whether it’s a website full of easy-to-read information or a leaflet, simplicity is key when a large proportion of the people who use NHS services are elderly. Azure is ensuring that no matter how technologically adept or otherwise someone is, they can still access the care they need.

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Getting to common terms for data sharing

Sharing data between organizations can help address some of society’s biggest challenges.  There is no question that working with data in any fashion requires careful consideration of privacy and security risks, but there are clear benefits to be gained when done appropriately. 

For example, a group of research institutions and medical clinics recently came together to create a central data repository of information about patients suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive neurodegenerative disease that affects nerve cells in the brain and the spinal cord, as part of a project called Answer ALS.  That dataset can now be used by the same organizations to improve their artificial intelligence research to advance treatments for ALS – more rapidly and with greater efficacy than they could have achieved on their own. 

And yet, much of the potential that can be realized through data sharing in similar scenarios remains untapped – in part because the tools for collaboration are often immature or non-existent. Organizations that wish to share data often have to confront the reality of having to spend months or even years negotiating and drawing up contracts to govern data sharing arrangements, for example, which can be a time consuming, expensive and laborious process. 

Many people and organizations are doing great work to tackle this problem.  There are many data use agreements and resources readily available through an Internet search. We’ve created a set of links to many of them here

At the same time, we think there is an opportunity to do more.  We want to help make it easier for individuals and organizations that want to share data to do so.  Often, agreements for broad data sharing scenarios are unnecessarily long and complex. We also think there is an important role for agreements that limit rights to computational use for AI.  Further, we think the state of the art on data sharing for proprietary and private data sets is changing rapidly and the terms available publicly could be improved and better explained. 

We’ve developed three data use agreements for community review and input. We have drawn from precursors, but are also advancing some new thinking drawn from our own experiences in working on data sharing projects.  Hopefully you will see some of this experience come through, particularly in the annotations. 

Going forward, our aim is to work with interested stakeholders to improve these agreements and to offer additional ones that cover a wide range of data sharing scenarios.  Please take a look at the initial drafts and let us know what you think! 

Data innovation is a complex topic, but we should work together to make the terms used more streamlined and defined. We hope these drafts are a step in this direction. 

#opendata #AI #responsibleAI

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Caesars Entertainment bets on the Microsoft cloud

Today’s post was written by Les Ottolenghi, executive vice president and chief information officer at Caesars Entertainment.

The gaming and entertainment industry is at a pivotal moment in its history, as traditional forms of entertainment face wholesale disruption in a hyper-connected world. I joined Caesars Entertainment in January 2016 to help navigate our way to becoming a purely digital business so that we can enhance the guest experience across our enterprise, which includes 55 destinations. Customers—habituated to mobile devices and omnichannel experiences—now expect their entertainment to be digital, real-time, and reliable. Caesars is using Microsoft cloud technologies, from the Office 365 suite of products to Azure and Dynamics 365, as a key part of its strategy to apply digital technology to the casino gaming industry.

Microsoft cloud technologies accelerate our business, from delivering new entertainment options to mobilizing and taking care of customers and our team members. Agility is a key benefit as we strive to stay ahead in a connected world that’s always evolving. With Office 365, we gained a modern workplace that improves efficiency in intelligent ways that map to our business strategies. For example, the dissemination of information and real-time connections among employees who are using Office 365 facilitates the teamwork that’s required to deliver exceptional customer experiences. Our IT team can also use Microsoft technologies to deploy these capabilities to the enterprise more seamlessly than ever. As part of our Microsoft cloud rollout, we deployed a text message bot that was built on the Microsoft Azure Bot Service framework to answer users’ questions about the rollout to aid in change management. Thanks to the pilot, the IT team not only gained experience in the design and development of the bots, but overall, the rollout was more successful across the enterprise.

Office 365 business productivity tools are exceptional, up to date, compliant, highly secure, and resilient so that IT can invest in exploring new technology opportunities. With built-in security services and other integrations, IT is free to focus on customer-facing initiatives—more than 60 percent of IT projects are now aimed at delivering value for customers and our team members, which is a huge increase from past years. And as we build digital technology into everything we do, we transform from a brick and mortar to a platform business that delivers what our customers want—before our competitors.

Recently, Caesars launched an interactive and immersive gaming and entertainment environment inside The LINQ Hotel + Experience on the Las Vegas Strip. At the RE:MATCH bar inside The LINQ screens around the bar offer interactive digital experiences, including games on the bar top and one-of-a-kind, immersive digital art installations. Across the casino floor at The Book, customers can fire up an Xbox and play casual games, and they can compete in e-sports events next door. All this translates into a unique experience for our guests that is available all day, every day. To facilitate coordination among the more than 200 people who worked on the project, we used Office 365 to connect the teams and share the information they needed to deliver the experience. It’s a great example of how we’re taking advantage of Microsoft technology to optimize our resources and focus on the customer engagement model.

We are also testing artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities in Azure to explore real-time, machine learning–based content creation and a deployment model to help us provide customers with what they need, when they need it, whether that be on a screen on a wall or in the palm of their hands. In the future, if a problem at a Los Angeles airport delays a guest’s arrival, we could proactively alleviate their anxiety by sending them an email to reassure them about their reservations or to confirm that we’ll hold their tickets for a big headliner show.

Caesars Entertainment is in the early stages of a global Windows 10 deployment. The continuous release cycles with Windows 10 will satisfy employees who have come to expect constant upgrades on their digital platforms. We’re also focused on making sure that we deliver the right technology into our team members’ hands. Surface Pro has been such a strong product that it has become the device of choice for our executives. And this is where employee satisfaction, which is so important to our culture, comes in. Our team members are more engaged and satisfied with work because they have modern, cloud-powered tools to create connections and improve their productivity. And in a networked world where individuals are vulnerable to cyberattacks and fake information, they know they can still get their work done safely. This is because we use Office 365 with services such as Azure Active Directory and other Microsoft security services, in concert with our security platform and controls, allowing us to geofence sign-in alerts, for example.

As Caesars progresses with its digital transformation, we’re poised to embrace new opportunities in the gaming and hospitality business. Ensuring that our team members are happy and productive with a modern workplace and Microsoft cloud technology is our best bet on getting there.

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Check out the ways AI is helping save lives in emergencies

Disaster can bring out the best in human nature. Emergency service personnel, rescue crews and volunteers work tirelessly, often putting their own lives at risk.  

Whether they’re responding to a natural disaster or other accident, rescue and relief teams increasingly use AI as a vital tool to save lives and to get help to the right place at the right time. 

These are some of the technologies from organizations beyond Microsoft that are making a difference in disaster zones. 

[Subscribe to Microsoft on the Issues for more on the topics that matter most.] 

Robot rescuers 

When a building collapses, rescuers will look for voidsspaces in the rubble where a person could be trapped. This is often slow, painstaking work in cramped and dangerous conditions.  

Enter Snakebot: a 5centimeter-wide robot equipped with lights and cameras that can squeeze into tight spaces. Developed by Carnegie Mellon University in PittsburghSnakebot can crawl, climb, roll and even swim. Prototypes were used in the aftermath of the Mexico City earthquake in September 2017. Operators sent the robot to search voids too small or unstable for people or search dogs to enter. Learning from that experience, the team that designed it now plans to add microphones and sensors that can detect hazardous gas. 

In Japan, the meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant after the tsunami that struck the country in 2011 required robots to enter areas that people couldn’t. Teams sent a variety of remotecontrolled and autonomous machines to inspect and remove the fuel rods.  

Eye in the sky 

Drones are giving emergency services a bird’seye view of disaster zones, which is proving particularly useful in fighting wildfires.  

Using surveillance drones that can stay aloft for hours, and small quadcopters, operators on the ground can see how a fire is behaving in real time and the hazards in the way. Some drones are equipped with thermalimaging cameras or laserimaging systems that help firefighters build maps predicting where fires will spread. 

Researchers are developing ways of using swarms of autonomous drones to assist firefighters on the ground. The Defense Science and Technology Laboratory in the U.K. and the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory recently ran the Swarm and Search AI 2019 Fire Hack competition, looking for new algorithms and AI applications for planning and executing complex drone missions. 

Recent devastating blazes like 2018’s Camp Fire in California demonstrate the need for such resources.  

Targeted help 

When a disaster strikes, large amounts of information flow into control rooms and emergency call centers. Making sense of it is vital to prioritizing the response and to deploying resources and personnel correctly. 

AI can trawl through vast quantities of data in a very short time, spotting patterns that may not be apparent to people under stress. Capabilities include prioritizing emergency calls and analyzing social media to create a picture of events unfolding in real time. DigitalGlobe’s Open Data Program, which provides high-resolution satellite imagery for disaster response, was used in the aftermath of Cyclone Idai in 2019 to identify damaged roads, buildings and infrastructure from space. 

In September 2018, Microsoft announced the AI for Humanitarian Action program in collaboration with the United Nations. This $40 million, five-year Microsoft initiative harnesses the power of AI to help with disaster recovery and supports nonprofit and humanitarian organizations through financial grants, partnerships and technology investments, in addition to technical expertise. This work is across the areas of disaster response; refugees and displaced people; human rights; and the needs of children, and is part of Microsoft’s AI for Good suite, a growing $125 million commitment to using AI to help unlock solutions to some of society’s biggest challenges.  

For more on AI innovation, visit https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/ai. And follow @MSFTIssues on Twitter.   

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How smart cities are putting people first

Aerial View of Shanghai HighwayAerial View of Shanghai Highway

The United Nations (UN) estimates that by 2050, 68 percent of the world’s population will live in cities. This rapid urbanization poses serious challenges to municipalities around the world, such as increased congestion and air pollution.

Cities need to be resilient – to survive, adapt, and grow, they also need to be great places to live in. Smart cities are leading the way in this transformation by moving on from 19th century ways of designing cities around automobiles to redesigning cities with people in mind – technology can help in ways not possible before.

Finding new ways to connect with and engage residents

Participating in local governance is important for all city residents, but traditional city hall meetings aren’t accessible to everyone. Smart cities, however, are now bringing city halls online via social media, or kiosks to remote areas.

At the same time, smart cities are modernizing their services and the infrastructure that delivers them. Water, energy, and other public services need careful regulation, and Internet of Things (IoT) technology is helping cities manage them in a sustainable and economical way. Cities are even using these innovations to collaborate across departments. In Denver, air quality sensors outside of schools measure the levels of pollution in different areas. City workers combine this information with traffic data to build a complete picture of how the flow of automobiles affects air quality.

Connecting and engaging with residents also means making public services more visible and accessible to everyone. Municipalities in the United States such as Lafayette, Louisiana, have introduced non-emergency municipal service portals that allow residents to receive real-time updates about sanitation, crime, city budgets, and more.

Smart infrastructure case study: Houston, Texas, United States

Houston is undergoing an impressive smart city transformation. The city began working with Microsoft in 2018 to modernize its infrastructure, and its many ongoing initiatives include:

  • Smart water meters. Around 60 percent of the city’s 500,000 water customers have smart meters, which gather data on water usage every 15 minutes. In the future, this technology will give customers real-time leak alerts and conservation advice.
  • Proactive roadside air filtration. Bridges along the city’s main overpass are fitted with air quality monitors and air filtration technology, which senses and cleans pollution to prevent it from affecting nearby neighborhoods.
  • Community sentiment analysis. Houston uses Zencity technology to analyze data from social media and the internet, identifying trending topics to understand residents’ opinions about the city.

Finding smart solutions to traffic problems

Traffic is a big challenge for today’s cities, and it’s an issue that’s always changing. A few years ago, around 30 percent of inner-city traffic was attributed to drivers looking for parking. Today, rideshare services coupled with the growing popularity of one-day delivery services, might be contributing to increased traffic.  There are a number of cities who are commissioning studies to look at the impact of these types of services. It’s a challenge for cities – on one hand they want to bring new services to their residents but they are not fully aware of the impact until further down the line.

Smart cities try to tackle traffic congestion in a number of ways, including levying congestion charges or introducing electronic road pricing systems, which are smart tolls that vary according to traffic. Other cities are using technology such as security cameras and smart cars to gather traffic flow data.

Making mobility a priority for residents

Smart cities are also helping residents to get around by offering intelligent transportation services that adapt to their needs, such as route optimization. These services map out specific routes for individual residents, helping them get to their destinations quickly and they are informed by real-time data to help residents avoid delays such as traffic jams.

Growing evidence suggests that these systems encourage residents to use other modes of transportation besides automobiles. For growing cities, this can help reduce the “battle for the curbside” as cars compete to park or drop people off. The challenge for cities, however, is in ensuring that these smart transportation systems are safe and manageable after deployment. This is made easier by digital twin technology, in which cities simulate and virtually test new systems before deploying them.

Smart transportation case study: Auckland, New Zealand

The coastal city of Auckland is home to 1.6 million people, and it’s quickly attracting new residents to its shores. Thanks to its enviable quality of life and strong economy, the city expects its population to double in the next 25 years. This presents many transportation challenges for Auckland, particularly as its narrow shape limits how far its roads can expand.

To tackle these issues, Auckland created a new digital strategy to help residents move around. By using Microsoft cloud platforms, the city gathers data about traffic movement and weather conditions. This information is then used to inform commuters about travel routes and help plan developments in transportation infrastructure.

The city also deployed a range of smart transportation technologies, including traffic lights that react to real-time data. Global Positioning System (GPS) sensors on buses and sensors placed at key points along roads and intersections monitor the flow of automobiles in different areas. The system calculates when specific routes are overcrowded, and it adjusts the wait times at intersections to prevent traffic jams.

Reports indicate that the city’s digital strategy is having a real effect. Drivers are finding parking spaces more easily, citizens are using rail services more, and wait times for public transportation are being reduced significantly.

Next steps

With the ongoing shift toward rapid urbanization, smart cities are currently setting an example for the rest of the world, and people are noticing. In an October 2018 report, IDC FutureScape predicts that “Investment in smart city use cases will reach $158 billion by 2022, with the fastest overall growth in the Americas and the most spending on fixed visual surveillance and public transit.”

As the technology in these initiatives matures, one thing is certain—the cities of the future will put people first.

Want to learn more about how cloud-based technology is helping cities to put people first? Download our e-books Digital transformation in public transportation and Smarter cities start with smart infrastructure: 6 key elements to read about the innovations that are shaping urban life.

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From Apollo to ESO: Exploring the universe, celebrating a spirit of discovery

Fifty years ago this month, the crew of Apollo 11 made history when they touched down and set foot on the moon. It was a voyage of discovery that built upon centuries of progress to unlock the secrets of the heavens – a quest that continues to this day in the Chilean desert at the European Southern Observatory, or ESO. In this edition of Today in Technology, Microsoft President Brad Smith and Sr. Communications Director Carol Ann Browne learn how observational technology has evolved from Galileo’s telescopes to computers that must process enormous amounts of data.