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Tips and tricks on how best to tackle each season in ‘Forza Horizon 4’

In Forza Horizon 4, Seasons change everything where players must master driving in dry, wet, muddy, snowy and icy conditions. A first for the racing genre and rarely seen in any open-world game, dynamic seasons create a world that is constantly evolving each week and with more than 450 cars, novices and veterans alike can explore the beautiful open world of Britain filled with unique and challenging driving experiences.

While Forza Horizon 4’s deep upgrade system can optimize any car for any season, it’s always best to think about the right car choice for each weather condition, whether you need to adjust your suspension and how you need to change your driving style depending on the terrain. Luckily, we have some tips and tricks on how best to tackle each season and what to expect, sourced by Turn 10 Studios’ Design Director Jon Knoles.

Summer

Hovercraft GIF

Hovercraft GIF

 Under a high, mid-day summer sun, conditions are perfect for putting the pedal to the metal on Britain’s fastest motorways or ripping along the golden sands of the northern coast past the brooding Bamburgh Castle. You may encounter the occasional summer rain, but most of the time you’ll find dry weather.

If you take a shortcut through fields, you’ll easily plow through tall grasses and flowers. Don’t worry about wood and wire fences, small trees, or stacked drystone walls. Whatever you’re driving, if you’re going fast enough they’ll break without breaking your car. Smaller, lighter cars will slow down considerably more than larger, heavier vehicles when you plow through these obstacles.

Spring to Summer GIF

Spring to Summer GIF

When Horizon summer arrives, as with all seasons, keep an eye out for seasonal gameplay events, challenges, and rewards, which expire at the end of the season. You may find summer events often take advantage of the perfect driving conditions to feature faster cars on faster, paved roads.

Autumn

Summer to Fall GIF

Summer to Fall GIF

 Whether you call it autumn or fall, it’s perhaps the most beautiful and most colorful season to explore the tree-lined, winding roads of Britain’s Lake Country in the world’s greatest road cars, or to tackle the 4×4 Adventure Park’s muddy playground for off-roaders.

It’s after harvest, so fields that were full of tall grasses in summer are now plowed and full of soft or muddy earth that will slow you down a bit, and are peppered with new obstacles in the form of big and heavy bales of hay, which will definitely slow you down if you hit them. It will rain in autumn more than in summer and roads do become a bit slicker in the wet, so you’ll be wanting to plan a little earlier for hard turns.

Summer to Fall GIF

Summer to Fall GIF

When autumn arrives, keep an eye out for a seasonal barn find car—each season reveals a classic to discover and restore, but you’ll want to find it before the season changes again.

Winter

Fall to Winter

Fall to Winter

With the low sun shimmering through bare trees across a frosty landscape, you might be worried that you’ll be sliding all over the place. Don’t worry, all tires are good for all seasons, and will be enough to keep you on the roads if you remember to brake—and turn—for curves. If you want more grip on the snow and ice, you can equip your car with studded winter tires in the upgrade shop, and any car that was already equipped with off-road or rally tires will automatically switch to studded tires.

The weather may range from clear to light flurries, or the occasional blizzard. Higher elevations in the north will have more deep snow than lowland areas in the south. Coastal beaches are still sandy, and motorways, the city streets of historic Edinburgh, and other major roads are cleared of ice and snow. In winter, you can reach previously inaccessible areas to search for bonus boards to smash or barn find cars, such as on an island in the middle of a deep lake. And when you’re on the frozen lake, it doesn’t matter what you’re driving or what kind of tires you have, you will slide around a lot, which itself is a lot of fun.

Fall to Winter GIF

Fall to Winter GIF

Keep an eye out for snowmen, too. Smashing them is fun, and it will net you combo skill points. Seasonal events are sure to test your mettle on the slippery ice, but rest assured there are still clear roads to conquer.

Spring

Winter to Spring GIF

Winter to Spring GIF

After a cold winter, the British landscape bursts to life once again in vibrant color, and one thing you can be sure of is a lot more rain, but you’ll also get a lot of sun. Or as they say in much of Britain in the spring, “If you don’t like the weather, just wait a few minutes.”

Of all the seasons, spring is probably the one with the most varied conditions throughout. Previously dry or shallow riverbeds become deep, rushing streams, which may bring low-slung supercars and lightweight cars to a crawl, but don’t pose much of a challenge for off-road vehicles such as SUVs, trophy trucks, and buggies. If you happen to climb to a mountain peak in the north, you’ll still find pockets of snow to play around in.

Spring to Summer GIF

Spring to Summer GIF

As with autumn, spring events may bring a more rally-heavy theme with mixed-surface races to suit the varied conditions. Whether it’s in a sturdy new Subaru WRX Sti, or a classic Group B rally monster from the 80s, you’ll be sure to discover some trail-blazing events in cars built to tackle all the tarmac, gravel, and mud that you’ll get plenty of in spring.

Forza Horizon 4 launches on October 2, 2018 on Xbox One, Windows 10 and Xbox Game Pass, and is now available for pre-order in the Microsoft Store. Stay tuned to Xbox Wire and ForzaMotorsport.net for future updates.

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Bring Microsoft technology to your classroom with these free online sessions

Want to get started with Microsoft in the classroom? We’ve pulled together a list of upcoming training sessions hosted by Microsoft Learning Design Specialists Troy Waller & Megan Townes. In these session you will get to know how you can make the most of Microsoft in your classroom.

Tuesday 4th September 2018, 8:00-9.30PM AEST

This online workshop is aimed at educators for whom Office 365 is relatively new and who are looking to implement solutions to classroom problems right away. It is designed to give educators an understanding of how Office 365 can provide the right environment for better learning outcomes. Educators will learn to become more innovative with cloud-based tools, regardless of the device they use. We will explore Office 365 through hands-on activities that will introduce educators to Office Online and OneDrive.

This workshop will be facilitated by Microsoft Learning Design Specialist Troy Waller.

Register now: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/getting-started-with-office-365-registration-48795432452

Monday 17th September 2018, 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm AEST

Minecraft: Education Edition is an open-world game that promotes creativity, collaboration, and problem-solving in an immersive environment where the only limit is your imagination. Students can play in a secure environment along with their classmates, collaborate on projects, and record and reflect on their learning within the game. This workshop is designed specifically for K-12 teachers who would like to introduce Minecraft: Education Edition into their classroom. Learning objectives: Participants will learn why Minecraft enhances learning experiences for both students and educators. Explore digital resources available to educators. Learn about the unique features of Minecraft: Education Edition. Tour through a world demonstrating curriculum applications of the game.

This workshop will be facilitated by Microsoft Learning Design Specialist Megan Townes.

Register now: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/getting-started-with-minecraft-registration-48796774466  

Tuesday 2nd October 2018, 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm AEST

Microsoft’s mission is to empower all people and all organisations to achieve more. The classroom is no different. Microsoft Windows and Windows-based applications like Office, together with other assistive technologies, offer features that make computers easier to use for everyone – giving teachers the opportunity to provide personalised learning, and students an improved experience and equal opportunity in the classroom. Join our session to see how Windows 10 and Office 365 can transform students’ educational experience and personalise learning.

This workshop will be facilitated by Microsoft Learning Design Specialist Troy Waller.

Register now: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/creating-an-inclusive-classroom-with-microsoft-technologies-registration-48796816592

Monday 15th October 2018, 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm AEDT

Learning is more powerful and dynamic with tools that are already right in front of you – and it’s up to educators to impress this on students in the classroom. With Microsoft OneNote, educators can create digital notebooks that support academic standards and education outcomes across disciplines and tasks, such as writing, reading, mathematics, science, history, CTE, and elective courses. Students may use OneNote across content areas and grade levels, and use OneNote to compile and organize unstructured information, research, and content. OneNote also supports research, collaboration, information management, communication, note taking, journaling, reflective writing, and academic requirements. 

This workshop will be facilitated by Microsoft Learning Design Specialist Megan Townes.

Register now: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/getting-started-with-onenote-registration-48796971054

Monday 15th October 2018, 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm AEDT

OneNote Class Notebooks have a personal workspace for every student, a content library for handouts and a collaboration space for lessons and creative activities. It is designed to help teachers and lecturers save time and be even more efficient with their classes. This workshop will introduce teachers to the basic features of Class Notebook and allow time for exploration to get hands-on with ideas and examples for classroom use.

This workshop will be facilitated by Microsoft Learning Design Specialist Troy Waller.

Register now: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/getting-started-with-class-notebook-registration-48797026219

Monday 12th November 2018, 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm AEDT

How do we support teachers and students who are challenged to learn in an increasingly collaborative and mobile environment? Microsoft Teams creates an ideal digital hub for teachers to deliver instruction, enhance learning, and interact in a rich and engaging online space. Participants will engage in a series of immersive learning activities that will build a strong understanding of how to use Microsoft Teams to improve collaboration with colleagues and meet the learning needs of their students. 

This workshop will be facilitated by Microsoft Learning Design Specialist Megan Townes.

Register now: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/getting-started-with-teams-registration-48797109468

Remember to follow our social channels for live streams as well as updates on upcoming events and training sessions; Facebook & Twitter. Alternatively if you’re looking for the Right Device for your classroom, you can see our future ready solutions here.

This post was originally published on this site.

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Microsoft releases new Cybersecurity Policy Framework

Each year, more and more governments are developing policies to address security challenges presented by an increasingly digitized world. And to support those efforts, I’m excited today to announce the release of Microsoft’s new Cybersecurity Policy Framework, a resource for policymakers that provides an overview of the building blocks of effective cybersecurity policies and that is aligned with the best practices from around the globe. Nations coming online today, and building their cybersecurity infrastructures, should not—and need not—be burdened with the stumbling blocks that characterized previous generations of cybersecurity policies. Instead, such nations should be empowered to leapfrog outdated challenges and unnecessary hurdles.

For years, Microsoft has worked with policymakers in advanced and emerging economies, and across many social and political contexts, to support the development of policies to address a wide range of cybersecurity challenges. This new publication captures and distills the important lessons learned from those years of experience partnering with governments. And as increasing numbers of countries wrestle with how to best address cybersecurity challenges, the Cybersecurity Policy Framework is an indispensable resource for the policymakers joining this work.

According to the last analysis provided by the United Nations, half of the countries on earth today either have or are developing national cybersecurity strategies. I have little doubt that in the next decade every single outstanding country will add its name to that list. And this trend highlights the importance of this new resource. The policies established today will impact how technologies are used for years to come and how safe or dangerous the online world becomes for all of us. Truly, there is no going back, only forward.

The Cybersecurity Policy Framework is not one-stop shopping for cybersecurity policymakers, but it does serve as an important “umbrella document,” providing a high-level overview of concepts and priorities that must be top of mind when developing an effective and resilient cybersecurity policy environment.

Specifically, this new resource outlines:

  • National strategies for cybersecurity.
  • How to establish a national cyber agency.
  • How to develop and update cybercrime laws.
  • How to develop and update critical infrastructure protections.
  • International strategies for cybersecurity.

We at Microsoft have been at this work for a long time and have developed a wide variety of resources to help those who are working to position their industries and nations to capitalize on the benefits of new technologies—so many that they can often be difficult to find! And this highlights another strength of the Cybersecurity Policy Framework, while it is not one-stop shopping, each section does provide an overview of a critical policy topic as well as links to the associated and more in-depth resources my team has developed over the years to assist policymakers. In this way, this new resource serves not only as essential, high-level guidance, but also as a key to a broader catalogue of resources built on years of experience partnering with governments around the world.

Reading through this new resource, I am proud of the work we have done in pursuit of a safer online world. Important progress has been made and these foundational principles underscore much today’s cybersecurity discourse. However, we have—and will always have—more work to do as a result of the changes and innovations in technology always on the horizon, and their implications for cybersecurity. I’m glad to put this resource forward today to support a new generation of policymakers and also look forward to partnering with them to tackle the new challenges we will face together tomorrow.

Download your copy of the Cybersecurity Policy Framework today.

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The evolution of music: How the cloud helps reward artists and record labels

From vinyl records to cassette tapes, CDs, MP3 players and streaming services, the way we listen to music has rapidly evolved over the years.

As more and more people turn to the conveniences of streaming music, it’s easy to forget the challenges faced when making sure that artists and labels are fairly compensated.

Everyone talks about digital transformation providing companies with a competitive edge. For music rights organisations, however, adopting a digital culture isn’t a choice. It’s a matter of survival.

This was the situation facing the Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights Agency (CMRRA), a music licensing organisation which represents the majority of music publishers and music copyright owners in Canada.

In 2011, the CMRRA along with the rest of the music copyright industry faced drastic changes to its business model. Streaming services such as Spotify and Apple Music were dramatically increasing the number of transactions from tens of thousands to hundreds of millions, while the revenue per transaction decreased to small fractions of a cent.

In this new digital-first world, a file containing hundreds of millions of transactions can generate royalty payments of €100,000. In the pre-digital world, for comparison, this would have generated millions of Euros instead.

To help its transformation, CMRRA needed a robust and secure solution which would help with the increased number of transactions in a cost-effective way, while allowing it to continue to distribute royalties to artists and other rights holders. The company began its journey by turning to Spanish Point – a Microsoft Gold Partner in Ireland.

Hitting play on transformation
Spanish Point had already digitised the process for the Irish Music Rights Organisation (IMRO), but it wasn’t just a case of dealing with increased transaction volumes, as Spanish Point CEO Donal Cullen explains: “There is also the problem of matching millions of music streaming transactions with poor metadata against a database of millions of songs,” he states.

“Many copyright organisations have failed to cope with this increase in data volumes, meaning the songs and recordings have not been licensed or correctly identified. The license income that should have been paid to songwriters and music publishers has remained with streaming companies. The streaming services and other entertainment platforms do want to pay the artists, it’s just a question of finding a practical way of doing it.”

The solution developed by Spanish Point saw CMRRA move its operations to the cloud, enabling it to successfully cope with these challenges and generate more income for its members. Using Microsoft’s advanced features, Spanish Point provided a more agile and responsive service at a lower cost than a traditional on-premise or hosted provider.

“In the past, if a song was played on a radio station it was broadcast to thousands of listeners,” Cullen explains. “Now you have people using their smartphone in cars to stream music. Services like Spotify and YouTube are sending data to rights organisations on each individual stream. That has increased the volume of data by three or four orders of magnitude.”

“It is not unusual for files to contain 200 million transactions. The rights organisations now must identify each song from quite poor metadata and find the artists to pay royalties to. There is simply no way they could do that without a cloud solution. Even four or five years ago it would have been beyond our reach. It has enabled us to help customers like CMRRA improve their data processing performance by a factor of 40.”

Moving to the cloud solved the problems of scale, flexibility and financial viability. “Before the cloud, organisations would invest in computing power to meet peak demand,” Cullen notes. “That meant the payroll system had to be able to meet very high demand on one or two days each month while it would be barely used for the rest of the time. In the cloud you pay for what you use as you need it. Also, Microsoft’s cloud autoscales to meet the size of files and that’s directly related to how much we and our customers are going to get paid.”

Microsoft Ireland commercial director Aisling Curtis believes the challenge faced by the music rights industry demonstrates the enormous power of digital culture. “This is a great example of digital disruption and how a digital transformation approach can be used to solve issues across an entire industry”, she says.

“It’s not just something for large companies or enterprise-sized organisations to be concerned about. Organisations of every size can adopt a digital culture to innovate and gain competitive advantage. Spanish Point has done a fantastic job for CMRRA using the Microsoft platform and has created a new solution which is applicable to the whole music rights industry.”

Cloud with benefits
As a result of its transformation, CMRRA has dramatically increased its revenue and reduced its members’ annual subscription fees from 10.5 per cent to six per cent. It has also opened up new numerous new opportunities for the company.

“They are now going to licence mechanical works in the US,” says Cullen. “They were restricted to Canada up until now, but they have become a lot cheaper than their US competitors because of the Microsoft cloud solution.”

For the future, Spanish Point is planning to use Microsoft’s AI technology to further enhance its solution. Currently, the company is moving into the US market and is also working with customers in Spain and Turkey with this solution.

“Microsoft has worked closely with Spanish Point on a number of digital transformation projects over the years,” says Aisling Curtis. “Spanish Point is a very innovative firm. It explores new frontiers with Microsoft products and platforms which enables its customers to access new business opportunities and gain competitive advantage. This is a very tangible example of how digital culture and transformation is allowing an Irish company to solve a worldwide issue for customers. It is a defining example of the impact of digital culture.”

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5 years later: Growing a global portfolio of renewable wind energy

We started our renewable energy journey in earnest with our first power purchase agreement in 2013 – Keechi wind farm, a 110 MW project in a quiet, rural county west of Dallas. Already wind energy was a growing force in Texas, with 12,000 MW online in 2013.

In the past five years, Texas has nearly doubled that generation, growing to 22,000MW of wind generation capacity, fueled in no small part by corporate demand from companies like Microsoft. We, too, have grown – from 110 MW in 2013, we now have a global portfolio of more than 1.2 gigawatts of renewable energy, and more than half of that is from wind.

This American Wind Week, we are celebrating the progress that’s been made across the nation in the past several years. This is a win-win-win story, as new wind projects generate clean power and new jobs and economic growth in communities from coast to coast, and every state in between, all while lowering the carbon footprint of the U.S. But there’s still much to be done. While some forecasts indicate that renewable energy could power 80% of the U.S. by 2050, as of today only 17% of the U.S.’s energy needs are currently met by renewables.

How do we close the gap between potential and production? This is a question we’ve been increasingly focused on as our portfolio has grown. Microsoft is a large energy consumer, a result of our growing cloud business and the increasingly digitized, connected world that relies on it. As a result, we’ve set corporate commitments to grow the percentage of renewable energy powering those operations. We’re well on our way to reaching our 60 percent target ahead of the 2020 goal.

This progress is important – but insufficient. Even as we and other large technology companies march towards 100 percent targets, our energy loads are still only less than one percent of total energy consumption in the world.

That means we need to do more than just buy renewable energy to get from potential to production. That is why our goal is larger than transforming our operations. We’re focused on how we can help transform energy markets and green the grids. That means where we buy matters. Our first deal was in Texas, a booming wind market. Since then, we’ve expanded both wind and solar purchases into less likely markets, like Ireland and Virginia. We have operations there, which gives us a seat at the table and a stake in the future greening of the market. It also means how we buy matters. We’ve created new deal structures that lower risk and/or lower costs for others to participate in the market. Finally, it means that we care deeply about energy transformation beyond procurement. We use our R&D, technology and operations to test new solutions, like integrated energy storage batteries in wind turbines, grid-integrated batteries and software and AI-enabled autonomous grids for utilities serving more renewable loads.

This regionalized strategy, focused on opening access to markets and enabling a transformation of grids, is where the future lies, for our business, sustainability and the economy. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, wind turbine technicians and solar panel installers are the nation’s two fastest growing jobs in 2017. There are over 105,000 Americans working in wind power, and as wind becomes a more ubiquitous source of power it is expected to grow past its current bench marker of supplying over 6% of the U.S.’s electricity. The clean air benefits and the industry jobs make wind power an $8 billion dollar industry, and it has nowhere to go but up from here. Since 2009, there has been a 65% reduction in the cost of wind power, giving businesses added financial incentive to invest in wind power and setting the industry up to continue to grow.

We’re excited about the future of wind in the U.S. and around the globe. Learn more about our five-year journey in Illinois, Kansas, Wyoming, Ireland and the Netherlands, and stay tuned for updates on where the wind is blowing us next here at the Green Blog.

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‘Cuphead’ goes triple platinum

Hello friends! We’re barely past the halfway mark of 2018, and are humbled to announce that Cuphead has already reached over 3 million copies sold! It’s hard for us to express just how appreciative we are to everyone who has played and enjoyed our niche little run & gun game with the wacky rubber-hose characters.

To celebrate this huge milestone, we’re putting Cuphead on sale on Steam and Xbox for the next couple of days! So if you haven’t had a chance to wallop the Devil, it’s a good day for a swell battle!

We’ll also be marking the occasion here at Studio MDHR with some extra-special giveaways over the next few days. Keep an eye out on Twitter or Facebook for some fun surprises.

Looking back, 2018 has been a very exciting year for us.

The big highlight, of course, was getting the chance to pull the curtain back on the project we’ve been working on since the original game’s release: our upcoming DLC, The Delicious Last Course!

[embedded content]

We’ve also been so fortunate to be able to share in the adventure with some amazing people. We met the legendary animator James Baxter at this year’s Annie Awards in February, and somehow managed to convince him to do an on-stage animation collaboration with us at E3!

[embedded content]

In June, we cheered on the amazing Mexican Runner as he delivered a lightning fast and hilariously entertaining speedrun at Summer Games Done Quick 2018. It’s such a thrill to see people still finding new and exciting ways to explore the Inkwell Isles.

[embedded content]

So while we’ll mostly have our pencils to paper for the rest of the year, we still have a couple little tricks up our sleeve before the end of 2018. Stay tuned to our social channels to be the first to know! Hi dee ho!

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Can sound help save a dwindling elephant population? Scientists using AI think so.

Scientists with the Elephant Listening Project estimate that Africa’s population of forest elephants has dropped from roughly 100,000 animals in 2011 to fewer than 40,000 animals today. But those numbers are largely based on indirect evidence: ivory seizures, signs of poaching and labor-intensive surveys that are too expensive to be done regularly.

The Elephant Listening Project has spent more than three decades researching how elephants use low-frequency rumbling sounds to communicate with one another. More recently, those scientists began to use acoustic sensors at research sites to inform population estimates and, ultimately, to track and protect forest elephants across their ranges in Central and West Africa.

If scientists find, for example, that at specific times of year elephants are using clearings in an unprotected logging concession to access scarce minerals or find mates, scientists can work with the loggers to schedule their work to minimize disturbance and reduce conflicts.

But there has been a bottleneck in getting data out of these remote African forests and analyzing information quickly, says Peter Wrege, a senior research associate at Cornell who directs the Elephant Listening Project.

“Right now, when we come out of the field with our data, the managers of these protected areas are asking right away, ‘What have you found? Are there fewer elephants? Is there a crisis we need to address immediately?’ And sometimes it takes me months and months before I can give them an answer,” says Wrege.

Conservation Metrics began collaborating with the Elephant Listening Project in 2017 to help boost that efficiency. Its machine learning algorithms have been able to identify elephant calls more accurately and will hopefully begin to shortcut the need for human review. But the volume of data from the acoustic monitors, shown in the spectrogram below, is taxing the company’s local servers and computational capacity.

Microsoft’s AI for Earth program has given a two-year grant to Conservation Metrics to build a cloud-based workflow in Microsoft Azure for analyzing and processing wildlife metrics. It has also donated Azure computing resources to the Elephant Listening Project to reduce its data-processing costs for the project. The computational power of Azure will speed processing time dramatically, says Matthew McKown, the CEO of Conservation Metrics. The platform also offers new opportunities for clients to upload and interact with their data directly.

It currently takes about three weeks for computers to process a few months of sound data from this landscape-scale study, says McKown. Once the Azure migration is complete later this year, that same job may take a single day.

“It’s a huge improvement. We’re really interested in speeding up that loop between having equipment monitoring things out in the field and going through this magic process to convert those signals into information you can send into the field where someone can take action,” says McKown. “Right now, that process can take a really long time.”

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Podcast: Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott’s insights on the history and future of computing

Kevin Scott

Chief Technology Officer Kevin Scott

Episode 36, August 8, 2018

Kevin Scott has embraced many roles over the course of his illustrious career in technology: software developer, engineering executive, researcher, angel investor, philanthropist, and now, Chief Technology Officer of Microsoft. But perhaps no role suits him so well – or has so fundamentally shaped all the others – as his self-described role of “all-around geek.”

Today, in a wide-ranging interview, Kevin shares his insights on both the history and the future of computing, talks about how his impulse to celebrate the extraordinary people “behind the tech” led to an eponymous non-profit organization and a podcast, and… reveals the superpower he got when he was in grad school.

Related:


Episode Transcript

Kevin Scott: It’s a super exciting time. And it’s certainly something that we are investing very heavily in right now at Microsoft, in the particular sense of like, how do we take the best of our development tools, the best of our platform technology, the best of our AI, and the best of our cloud, to let people build these solutions where it’s not as hard as it is right now?

Host: You’re listening to the Microsoft Research Podcast, a show that brings you closer to the cutting-edge of technology research and the scientists behind it. I’m your host, Gretchen Huizinga.

Kevin Scott has embraced many roles over the course of his illustrious career in technology: software developer, engineering executive, researcher, angel investor, philanthropist, and now, Chief Technology Officer of Microsoft. But perhaps no role suits him so well – or has so fundamentally shaped all the others – as his self-described role of “all-around geek.”

Today, in a wide-ranging interview, Kevin shares his insights on both the history and the future of computing, talks about how his impulse to celebrate the extraordinary people “behind the tech” led to an eponymous non-profit organization and a podcast, and… reveals the superpower he got when he was in grad school. That and much more on this episode of the Microsoft Research Podcast.

Host: Kevin Scott, welcome to the podcast today.

Kevin Scott: Well thank you so much for having me.

Host: So, you sit in a bit chair. I think our listeners would like to know what it’s like to be the Chief Technical Officer of Microsoft. How do you envision your role here, and what do you hope to accomplish in your time? I.E., what are the big questions you’re asking, the big problems you’re working on? What gets you up in the morning?

Kevin Scott: Well, there are tons of big problems. I guess the biggest, and the one that excites me the most and that prompted me to take the job in the first place, is I think technology is playing an increasingly important role in how the future of the world unfolds. And, you know, has an enormous impact in our day-to-day lives from the mundane to the profound. And I think having a responsible philosophy about how you build technology is like a very, very important thing for the technology industry to do. So, in addition to solving all of these, sort of, complicated problems of the “how” – what technology do we build and how do we build it? – there’s also sort of an “if” and a “why” that we need to be addressing as well.

Host: Drill in a little there. The “if” and the “why.” Those are two questions I love. Talk to me about how you envision that.

Kevin Scott: You know, I think one of the more furious debates that we all are increasingly having, and I think the debate itself and the intensity of the debate are good things, is sort of around AI and what impact is AI going to have on our future, and what’s the right way to build it, and what are a set of wrong ways to build it? And I think this is sort of a very important dialogue for us to be having, because, in general, I think AI will have a huge impact on our collective futures. I actually am a super optimistic person by nature, and I think the impact that it’s going to have is going to be absolutely, astoundingly positive and beneficial for humanity. But there’s also this other side of the debate, where…

Host: Well, I’m going to go there later. I’m going to ask you about that. So, we’ll talk a little bit about the dark side. But also, you know, I love the framework. I hear that over and over from researchers here at Microsoft Research that are optimistic and saying, and if there are issues, we want to get on the front end of them and start to drive and influence how those things can play out. So…

Kevin Scott: Yeah, absolutely. There’s a way to think about AI where it’s mostly about building a set of automation technologies that are a direct substitute for human labor, and you can use those tools and technologies to cause disruption. But AI probably is going to be more like the steam engine in the sense that the steam engine was also a direct substitute for human labor. And the people that benefited from it, initially were those who had the capital to build them, because they were incredibly expensive, and who had the expertise to design them and to operate and maintain them. And, eventually, the access to this technology fully democratized. And AI will eventually become that. Our role, as a technology company that is building things that empower individual and businesses, is to democratize access to the technology as quickly as possible and to do that in a safe, thoughtful, ethical way.

Host: Let’s talk about you for a second. You’ve described yourself as an engineering executive, an angel investor, and an all-around geek. Tell us how you came by each of those meta tags.

Kevin Scott: Yeah… The geek was the one that was sort of unavoidable. It felt to me, all my life, like I was a geek. I was this precociously curious child. Not in the sense of you know like playing Liszt piano concertos when I’m 5 years old or anything. No, I was the irritating flavor of precocious where I’m sticking metal objects into electric sockets and taking apart everything that could be taken apart in my mom’s house to try to figure out how things worked. And I’ve had just sort of weird, geeky, obsessive tastes in things my entire life. And I think a lot of everything else just sort of flows from me, at some point, fully embracing that geekiness, and wanting – I mean, so like angel investing for instance is me wanting to give back. It’s like I have benefited so much over the course of my career from folks investing in me when it wasn’t a sure bet at all that that was going to be a good return on their time. But like I’ve had mentors and people who just sort of looked at me, and, for reasons I don’t fully understand, have just been super generous with their time and their wisdom. And angel investing is less about an investment strategy and more about me wanting to encourage that next generation of entrepreneurs to go out and make something, and then trying to help them in whatever way that I can be successful and find the joy that there is in bringing completely new things into the world that are you know sort of non-obvious and -complicated.

Host: Mmmm. Speaking of complicated. One common theme I hear from tech researchers here on this podcast, at least the ones who have been around a while, is that things aren’t as easy as they used to be. They’re much more complex. And in fact, a person you just talked to, Anders Hejlsberg, recently said, “Code is getting bigger and bigger, but our brains are not getting bigger, and this is largely a brain exercise.”

Kevin Scott: Yes.

Host: So, you’ve been around a while. Talk about the increased complexity you’ve seen and how that’s impacted the lives and work of computer scientists and researchers all around.

Kevin Scott: I think interestingly enough, on the one hand, it is far more complicated now than it was, say, 25 years ago. But there’s a flipside to that where we also have a situation where individual engineers or small teams have unprecedented amounts of power in the sense that, through open-source software and cloud computing and the sophistication of the tools that they now use and the very high level of the abstractions that they have access to that they use to build systems and products, they can just do incredible things with far fewer resources and in far shorter spans of time than has ever been possible. It’s almost this balancing act. Like, on the other hand, it’s like, oh my god, the technology ecosystem, the amount of stuff that you have to understand if you are pushing on the state-of-the-art on one particular dimension, which is what we’re calling upon researchers to do all the time, it’s really just sort of a staggering amount of stuff. I think about how much reading I had to do when I was a PhD student, which seemed like a lot at the time. And I just sort of look at the volume of research that’s being produced in each individual field right now. The reading burden for PhD students right now must be unbelievable. And it’s sort of similar, you know, like, if you’re a beginning software engineer, like it’s a lot of stuff. So, it’s this weird dichotomy. I think it’s, perhaps if anything, the right trade off. Because if you want to go make something and you’re comfortable navigating this complexity, the tools that you have are just incredibly good. I could have done the engineering work at my first startup with far, far, far fewer resources, with less money, in a shorter amount of time, if I were building it now versus 2007. But I think that that tension that you have as a researcher or an engineer, like this dissatisfaction that you have with complexity and this impulse to simplicity, it’s exactly the right thing, because if you look at any scientific field, this is just how you make progress.

Host: Listen, I was just thinking, when I was in my master’s degree, I had to take a statistics class. And the guy who taught it was ancient. And he was mad that we didn’t have to do the math because computer programs could already do it. And he’s not wrong. It’s like, what if your computer breaks? Can you do this?

Kevin Scott: That is fascinating, because we have this… old fart computer scientist engineers like me, have this… like we bemoan a similar sort of thing all the time, which is, ahhh, these kids these days, they don’t know what it was like to load their computer program into a machine from a punch paper tape.

Host: Right?

Kevin Scott: And they don’t know what ferrite core memories are, and what misery that we had to endure to… It was fascinating and fun to, you know, learn all of that stuff, and I think you did get something out of it. Like it gave you this certain resilience and sort of fearlessness against these abstraction boundaries. Like you know, if something breaks, like you feel like you can go all the way down to the very lowest level and solve the problem. But it’s not like you want to do that stuff. Like all of that’s a pain in the ass. You can do so much more now than you could then because, to use your statistic professor’s phrase, because you don’t have to do all of the math.

(music plays)

Host: Your career in technology spans the spectrum including both academic research and engineering and leadership in industry. So, talk about the value of having experience in both spheres as it relates to your role now.

Kevin Scott: You know, the interesting thing about the research that I did is, I don’t know that it ever had a huge impact. The biggest thing that I ever did was this work on dynamic binary translation and the thing I’m proudest of is like I wrote a bunch of software that people still use, you know, to this day, to do research in this very arcane, dark alley of computer science. But what I do use all the time that is almost like a superpower that I think you get from being a researcher is being able to very quickly read and synthesize a bunch of super-complicated technical information. I believe it’s less about IQ and it’s more of the skill that you learn when you’re a graduate student trying to get yourself ramped up to mastery in a particular area. It’s just like, read, read, read, read, read. You know, I grew up in this relatively economically depressed part of rural, central Virginia, town of 250 people, neither of my parents went to college. We were poor when I grew up and no one around me was into computers. And like somehow or another, I got into this science and technology high school when I was a senior. And like I decided that I really, really, really wanted to be a computer science professor after that first year. And so, I went into my undergraduate program with this goal in mind. And so, I would sit down with things like the Journal of the ACM at the library, and convince, oh, like obviously computer science professors need to be able to read and understand this. And I would stare at papers in JACM, and I’m like, oh my god, I’m never, ever going to be good enough. This is impossible. But I just kept at it. And you know it got easier by the time that I was finishing my undergraduate degree. And by the time I was in my PhD program, I was very comfortably blasting through stacks of papers on a weekly basis. And then, you know, towards the end of my PhD program, you’re on the program committees for these things, and like not only are you blasting through stacks of papers, but you’re able to blast through things and understand them well enough that you can provide useful feedback for people who have submitted these things for publication. That is an awesome, awesome, like, super-valuable skill to have when you’re an engineering manager, or if you’re a CTO, or you’re anybody who’s like trying to think about where the future of technology is going. So, like every person who is working on their PhD or their master’s degree right now and like this is part of their training, don’t bemoan that you’re having to do it. You’re doing the computer science equivalent of learning how to play that Liszt piano concerto. You’re getting your 10,000 hours in, and like it’s going to be a great thing to have in your arsenal.

Host: Anymore, especially in a digitally-distracted age, being able to pay attention to dense academic papers and/or, you know, anything for a long period of time is a superpower!

Kevin Scott: It is. It really is. You aren’t going to accomplish anything great by you know integrating information in these little 2-minute chunks. I think pushing against the state-of-the-art, like you know creating something new, making something really valuable, requires an intense amount of concentration over long periods of time.

Host: So, you came to Microsoft after working at a few other companies, AdMob, Google, LinkedIn. Given your line of sight into the work that both Microsoft and other tech giants are doing, what kind of perspective do you have on Microsoft’s direction, both on the product and research side, and specifically in terms of strategy and the big bets that this company is making?

Kevin Scott: I think the big tech companies, in particular, are in this really interesting position, because you have both the opportunity and the responsibility to really push the frontier forward. The opportunity, in the sense that you already have a huge amount of scale to build on top of, and the responsibility that knowing that some of the new technologies are just going to require large amounts of resources and sort of patience. You know like one example that we’re working on here at Microsoft is we, the industry, have been worried about the end of Moore’s Law for a very long time now. And it looks like for sort of general purpose flavors of compute, we are pretty close to the wall right now. And so, there are two things that we’re doing at Microsoft right now that are trying to mitigate part of that. So, like one is quantum computing, which is a completely new away to try to build a computer and to write software. And we’ve made a ton of progress over the past several years. And our particular approach to building a quantum computer is really exciting, and it’s like this beautiful collaboration between mathematicians and physicists and quantum information theory folks and systems and programming language folks trained in computer science. But when, exactly, this is going to be like a commercially viable technology? I don’t know. But another thing that we’re you know pushing on, related to this Moore’s wall barrier, is doing machine learning where you’ve got large data sets that you’re fitting models to where you know sort of the underlying optimization algorithms that you’re using for DNNs or like all the way back to more prosaic things like logistic regression, boil down to like a bunch of sort of linear algebra. We are increasingly finding ways to solve these optimization problems in these embarrassingly parallel ways where you can use like special flavors of compute. And so like there’s just a bunch of super interesting work that everybody’s doing with this stuff right now, like, from Doug Burger’s Project Brainwave stuff here at Microsoft to… uh, so it’s a super exciting time I think to be a computer architect again where the magnitude and the potential payoffs of some of these problems are just like astronomically high, and like it takes me back to like the 80s and 90s, you know which were sort of the, maybe the halcyon days of high-performance computing and these like big monolithic supercomputers that we were building at the time. It feels a lot like that right now, where there’s just this palpable excitement about the progress that we’re making. Funny enough, I was having breakfast this morning with a friend of mine, and you know like both of us were saying, man, this is just a fantastic time in computing. You know, like on almost weekly basis, I encounter something where I’m like, man, this would be so fun to go do a PhD on.

Host: Yeah. And that’s a funny sentence right there.

Kevin Scott: Yeah, it’s a funny sentence. Yeah.

(music plays)

Host: Aside from your day job, you’re doing some interesting work in the non-profit space, particularly with an organization called Behind the Tech. Tell our listeners about that. What do you want to accomplish? What inspired you to go that direction?

Kevin Scott: Yeah, a couple of years ago, I was just looking around at all of the people that I work with who were doing truly amazing things, and I started thinking about how important role models are for both kids, who were trying to imagine a future for themselves, as well as professionals, like people who are already in the discipline who are trying to imagine what their next step ought to be. And it’s always nice to be able to put yourself in the shoes of someone you admire, and say, like, “Oh, I can imagine doing this. I can see myself in this you know in this career.” And I was like we just do a poorer job I think than we should on showing the faces and telling the stories of the people who have made these major contributions to the technology that powers our lives. And so that was sort of the impetus with behindthetech.org. So, I’m an amateur photographer. I started doing these portrait sessions with the people I know in computing who I knew had done impressive things. And then I hired someone to help you know sort of interview them and write a slice of their story so that you know if you wanted to go somewhere and get inspired about you know people who were making tech, you know, behindthetech.org is the place for you.

Host: So, you also have a brand-new podcast, yourself, called Behind the Tech. And you say that you look at the tech heroes who’ve made our modern world possible. I’ve only heard one, and I was super impressed. It’s really good. I encourage our listeners to go find Behind the Tech podcast. Tell us why a podcast on these tech heroes that are unsung, perhaps.

Kevin Scott: I have this impulse in general to try to celebrate the engineer. I’m just so fascinated with the work that people are doing or have done. Like, the first episode is with Anders Hejlsberg, who is a tech fellow at Microsoft, and who’s been building programing languages and development tools for his entire 35-year career. Earlier in his career, like, he wrote this programming language and compiler called Turbo Pascal. You know like I wrote my first real programs using the tools that Anders built. And like he’s gone on from Turbo Pascal to building Delphi, which was one of the first really nice integrated development environments for graphical user interfaces, and then at Microsoft, he was like the chief architect of the C# programming language. And like now, he’s building this programming language based on JavaScript called TypeScript that tries to solve some of the development-at-scale problems that JavaScript has. And that, to me, is like just fascinating. How did he start on this journey? Like, how has he been able to build these tools that so many people love? What drives him? Like I’m just intensely curious about that. And I just want to help share their story with the rest of the world.

Host: Do you have other guests that you’ve already recorded with or other guests lined up?

Kevin Scott: Yeah, we’ve got Alice Steinglass, who is the president of Code.org, who is doing really brilliantly things trying to help K-12 students learn computer science. And we’re going to talk with Andrew Ng in a few weeks, who is one of the titans of deep neural networks, machine learning and AI. We’re going to talk with Judy Estrin, who is former CTO of Cisco, a serial entrepreneur, board director at Disney and FedEx for a long time. And just you know one of the OGs of Silicon Valley. Yeah, so it’s you know like, it’s going to be a really good mix of folks.

Host: Yeah, well, it’s impressive.

Kevin Scott: All with fascinating stories.

Host: Yeah, and just having listened to the first one, I was – I mean, it was pretty geeky. I will be honest. There’s a lot of – it was like listening to the mechanics talking about car engines, and I know nothing, but it was…

Kevin Scott: Yeah, right?

Host: But it was fun.

Kevin Scott: That’s great. And like you know I hadn’t even thought about it before. But like if could be like the sort of computer science and engineering version of Car Talk, that would be awesome.

Host: You won first place at the William Campbell High School Talent Show in 1982 by appearing as a hologram downloaded from the future. Okay, maybe not for real. But an animated version of you did explain the idea of the Intelligent Edge to a group of animated high school hecklers. Assuming you won’t get heckled by our podcast audience, tell us how you feel like AI and machine learning research are informing and enabling the development of edge computing.

Kevin Scott: You know I think this is one of the more interesting emergent trends right now in computing. So, there are basically three things that are coming together at the same time. You know one thing is the growth of IoT, and just embedded computing in general. You can look at any number of estimates of where we’re likely to be, but we’re going to go from about 11 or 12 billion devices connected to the internet to about 20 billion over the next year and a half. But you think about these connected devices – and this is sort of the second trend – like they all are becoming much, much more capable. So, like, they’re coming online and like the silicon and compute power available in all of these devices is just growing at a very fast clip. And going back to this whole Moore’s Law thing that we were talking about, if you look at $2 and $3 microprocessor and microcontrollers, most of those things right now are built on two or three generations older process technologies. So, they are going to increase in power significantly over the coming years, like particularly this flavor of power that you need to run AI models, which is sort of the third trend. So, like you’ve got a huge number of devices being connected with more and more computer power and like the compute power is going to enable more and more intelligent software to be written using the sensor data that these devices are processing. And so like those three things together we’re calling the intelligent edge. And we’re entering this world where you’ll step into a room and like there are going to be dozens and dozens of computing devices in the room, and you’ll interface with them by voice and gesture and like a bunch of other sort of intangible factors where you won’t even be aware of them anymore. And so that implies a huge set of changes in the way that we write software. Like how do you build a user experience for these things? How do you deal with information security and data privacy in these environments? Just even programming these things is going to be fundamentally different. It’s a super exciting time. And it’s certainly something that we are investing very heavily in right now at Microsoft, in the particular sense of like, how do we take the best of our development tools, the best of our platform technology, the best of our AI, and the best of our cloud, to let people build these solutions where it’s not as hard as it is right now?

Host: Well, you know, everything you’ve said leads me into the question that I wanted to circle back on from the beginning of the interview, which is that the current focus on AI, machine learning, cloud computing, all of the things that are just like the hot core of Microsoft Research’s center – they have amazing potential to both benefit our society and also change the way we interact with things. Is there anything about what you’re seeing and what you’ve been describing that keeps you up at night? I mean, without putting too dark a cloud on it, what are your thoughts on that?

Kevin Scott: The number one thing is, I’m worried that we are actually underappreciating the positive benefit that some of these technologies can have, and are not investing as much as we could be, holistically, to make sure that they get into the hands of consumers in a way that benefits society more quickly. And so like just to give you an example of what I mean, we have healthcare costs right now that are growing faster than our gross domestic product. And I think the only way, in the limit, that you bend the shape of that healthcare cost growth curve, is through the intervention of some sort of technology. And like, week after week over the past 18 months, I’ve seen one technology after another that is AI-based where you sort of combine medical data or personal sensor data with this new regime of deep neural networks, and you’re able to solve these medical diagnostic problems at unbelievably low costs that are able to very early detect fairly serious conditions that people have when the conditions are cheaper and easier to treat and where you know the benefit to the patient, like they’re healthier in the limit. And so, I sort of see technology after technology in this vein that is really going to bring higher-quality medical care to everyone for cheaper and help us get ahead of these, you know sort of, significant diseases that folks have. And you know, there’s a similar trend in precision agriculture where, in terms of crop yields and minimizing environmental impacts, particularly in the developing world where you still have large portions of the world’s population sort of trapped in this you know sort of agricultural subsistence dynamic, AI could fundamentally change you know the way that we’re all living our lives, all the way from you know like all of us getting like you know sort of cheaper, better, locally-grown organic produce with smaller environmental impact, to you know like how does a subsistence farmer in India dramatically increase their crop yield so that they can elevate the economic status of their entire family and community?

Host: So, as we wrap up, Kevin, what advice would you give to emerging researchers or budding technologists in our audience, as many of them are contemplating what they’re going to do next?

Kevin Scott: Well, I think congratulations is in order to most folks, because this is like just about as good a time I think as has ever been for someone to pursue a career in computer science research, or to become an engineer. I mean, the advice that I would give to folks is like, just look for ways to maximize the impact of what you’re doing and so like I think with research, it’s sort of the same advice that I would give to folks starting a company, or engineers thinking about the next thing that they should go off and build in the context of a company: find a trend that is really a fast growth driver, like the amount of available AI training compute, or the amount of data being produced by the world in general, or by some particular you know subcomponent of our digital world. Just pick a growth driver like that and try to you know attempt something that is either buoyed by that growth driver or that is directly in the growth loop. Because I think those are the opportunities that tend to have both the most head room in terms of you know like if there are lots of people working on a particular problem, it’s great if the space that you’re working in, the problem itself, has a gigantic potential upside. Those things will usually like accommodate lots and lots and lots of sort of simultaneously activity on them and not be a winner-takes-all or a winner-takes-most dynamic. You know and there are also sort of the interesting problems as well. You know it’s sort of thrilling to be on a rocket ship in general.

Host: Kevin Scott. Thanks for taking time out of your super busy life to chat with us.

Kevin Scott: You are very welcome. Thank you so much for having me on. It was a pleasure.

Host: To learn more about Kevin Scott, and Microsoft’s vision for the future of computing, visit microsoft.com/research.

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How Centra improves patient care with Office 365 intelligent business tools

Today’s post was written by Joseph (Jody) Hobbs, managing director of business applications and information security officer at Centra.

Profile picture of Jody Hobbs.Centra is proud to count itself among the early adopters of cloud technology in the healthcare field. Back in 2014, we saw cloud computing as a way to keep up with the rapid growth we were experiencing across the enterprise—and the challenge of adapting to industry changes under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). Five years later, we’re still using Microsoft Cloud services to remain on the leading edge of business productivity software so that we can provide exceptional patient care.

With Microsoft 365, we are better able to adapt to industry-wide changes introduced by ACA, such as the transition from a fee-for-service model to a quality-based model. This change made capturing data and analytics very important, because now reimbursement is based on quality of care, not quantity of services. We use Power BI, the data analytics tool from Microsoft Office 365 E5, to meet new healthcare reporting requirements and provide a wealth of data to our clinicians. They use this data to measure their performance against quality benchmarks to improve patient experiences and health outcomes.

We also turned to Microsoft 365 to help address Centra data security and privacy policies. Microsoft accommodated our requirement for data to remain in the continental United States, which helps us comply with Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) regulations that are standard in the healthcare industry. We also found a great solution for emailing sensitive information by combining a Microsoft two-factor authentication solution with our existing encryption appliance. Microsoft invests an incredible amount in its security posture, more than we ever could, and this, along with the knowledge that our data is not intermingled with others’ data in the tenant, gives us peace of mind. And we use Office 365 Advanced Threat Protection, which gives us great insight into malicious activities aimed at our employees’ inboxes.

Keeping our Firstline Workers flexible and mobile is another major priority. We plan to get all our clinical workers online with Office 365 to actualize our vision for a more productive, mobile workforce. We have almost 4,000 employees taking advantage of Office 365 ProPlus and downloading up to five instances of Office 365 on a range of devices. This makes it seamless for them to work from home or the office using the same powerful, cloud-based productivity apps.

As Centra continues to grow from a network of hospitals to an assortment of health-related enterprises, adding everything from a college of nursing to our own insurance business, we see a cloud-based workplace solution as key to staying agile and making the most of our momentum. In Microsoft 365, we have found a solution that marries the strict security requirements of our industry with the needs of a workforce that demands anytime, anywhere access to colleagues and information. For Centra, change isn’t just a matter of increasing productivity or mobility—at the end of the day, our ability to stay up to date with the latest technology innovations means we are providing the best care possible.

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Indie games galore: Register now for the Aug. 30 ID@Xbox Pre-PAX Open House

For the fifth year in a row, ID@Xbox is hosting a Pre-PAX Open House on the Microsoft campus. Register here (the event is free) to start your PAX party a day early!

We’re super excited to host everyone on our home turf on campus in Redmond to play more than 50 super cool Xbox games from independent developers, including 8 new announces!

Join us on August 30 (the Thursday before PAX) from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. to play games, meet the wonderful developers who made ‘em, and maybe even win a prize in our raffle! Getting to hang out and play games with devs and Xbox fans makes this one of our favorite events of the year, so we hope you can make it!

Not only will you have the chance to check out more than 50 games releasing on Xbox One via the ID@Xbox program, you can also plan for the following:

  • Meet and chat with other teams at Microsoft.
  • Say hello to the Xbox Ambassadors and spin their prize wheel to win some swag!
  • Head to the Mixer area to try out the latest MixPlay experiences and get a glimpse at the future of interactive gaming.
  • Chat with the Microsoft User Research team to share your personal feedback and help them make better products for you and everyone.

But what about the games?

The following eight games haven’t previously been announced for Xbox One. We’re thrilled to reveal for the first time that they’re coming to Xbox One through the ID@Xbox program and you can try them out at this event:

  • Bot Rods (Holy Cow Productions)
  • La-Mulana2 (Active Gaming Media)
  • Museum of Simulation Technology (Pillow Castle)
  • Orphan (2Dimensions)
  • Revenant Dogma (KEMCO)
  • Super Retro Maker (Digital Dominion)
  • Thunder Rally (Typical Entertainment)
  • Where the Bees Make Honey (Whitethorn Digital)

In addition to those, we’ve pulled together a great variety of ID@Xbox titles for fans to try out:

  • Aftercharge (Chainsawesome Games)
  • Ashen (Annapurna Interactive)
  • Bad North (Raw Fury)
  • Below (Capybara)
  • Bendy and the Ink Machine (Rooster Teeth Games)
  • Black Desert (Pearl Abyss)
  • Children of Morta (11 bit studios)
  • Dead Cells (Motion Twin)
  • Deathgarden (Behaviour)
  • Desert Child (Akupara Games)
  • Epitasis (Epitasis Games)
  • Eternity: The Last Unicorn (1C Publishing)
  • Exception (Traxmaster Software)
  • FAR: Lone Sails (Mixtvision)
  • For the King (Curve Digital)
  • Generation Zero (Avalanche Studios)
  • Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes (Steel Crate Games)
  • Kingdom Two Crowns (Raw Fury)
  • Mark of the Ninja: Remastered (Klei)
  • Mutant Year Zero: Road to Eden (Funcom)
  • My Time at Portia (Team17)
  • Nippon Marathon (PQube)
  • Outer Wilds (Annapurna Interactive)
  • Projection : First Light (Blowfish Studios)
  • RAZED (PQube)
  • RemiLore (Nicalis)
  • Revenant Dogma (KEMCO)
  • Rival Megagun (Degica)
  • SINNER: Sacrifice for Redemption (Another Indie)
  • Starbound (Chucklefish)
  • Strange Brigade (Rebellion)
  • Super Meat Boy Forever (Team Meat)
  • Supermarket Shriek (Billy Goat Entertainment)
  • Superweights (Pompaduo)
  • Swimsanity (Decoy Games)
  • The Blackout Club (Question)
  • The Jackbox Party Pack 5 (Jackbox Games)
  • The Occupation (Humble Bundle)
  • The Videokid (Chorus Worldwide Games Limites)
  • Tunic (Finji)
  • Vigor (Bohemia Interactive)
  • Wargroove (Chucklefish)
  • Yuppie Psycho (Another Indie)

And as if that weren’t enough, you’ll also get a chance to play Ori and the Will of the Wisps and Forza Horizon 4, from Microsoft Studios, and The MISSING: J.J. Macfield and the Island of Memories, from Arc System Works.

Open to Everyone

Not only is this a free event, you don’t even need a PAX ticket! Though if you’re under 18, please come with a parent or guardian.

ID@Xbox Pre-PAX Open House

Microsoft Conference Center

16070 NE 36th Way, Bldg 33 – McKinley

Redmond, WA 98052

If you’re driving in, there’s free parking available. There will also be buses taking attendees directly to and from the event from the Washington State Convention Center. These buses pick up at the motor coach and shuttle bus loading area every 15-30 minutes beginning at 4:30 p.m., running every 15-30 minutes through 9:00 p.m.

We hope to see you there! Don’t forget to RSVP!