Microsoft Reside Labs is a catalyst for the convergence of two vital facets of technology advancement. The purpose is to inspire new pondering and new strategies to product innovation.
By Julie Evans
Microsoft Live Labs will probably a location exactly where couple of have gone prior to: the intersection of simple study and pure engineering. Its mission: to drive state-of-the-art World-wide-web technologies.
Live Labs was founded by Gary Flake, technical fellow at Microsoft, who saw the require to type a trench within the center between the long-term nature of researchers and the near-term focus of engineers.
“… there’s an intersecting point somewhere in the center exactly where there’s this convergence of analysis and engineering exactly where a lot of interesting things happen,” Flake said. “The notion of being a little bit in the center is one that’s a little bit awkward for Microsoft. We wanted Reside Labs to be a place that was truly having a home inside the center in between these extremes. We apply this pattern not just on the continuum in between engineering and analysis, but we also think about it in terms of tactics versus strategy, long-term versus short-term, horizontal platforms versus vertical engineering. In every case, we are aspiring to try to make the market connect the dots between the two extremes.”
The Live Labs team has about 70 members in engineering, investigation, development, testing, business management, and operations. Researchers spend 80 percent of their time working in a bottom-up,
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“It’s a place for PhDs who love to build stuff to work with engineers who love to rapidly innovate new technologies,” said Brett Brewer,
Thomas Sabo Onlineshop, technical assistant. He said Reside Labs acts as a virtuous cycle: more innovative products enhance Microsoft’s reputation, which might be leveraged to recruit new talent who will develop innovative products,
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There is really a misperception within the industry that Microsoft doesn’t create cutting-edge Internet products,
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Often mistakenly called “Windows Reside Labs,” Brewer said the group consciously left Windows out of its name “to make it clear that we aspire to influence multiple product areas, not just Windows Reside.”
Other companies have efforts similar to Live Labs; in fact, Flake started the research lab at Yahoo. Many labs, however, are focused on pure study, whereas “Reside Labs is certainly more down the center, 50 percent engineering and 50 percent study,” Brewer said.
A shining example of what Live Labs strives to do might be found in Photosynth, a system for visualizing large collections of photographs of a location or object by flying around in 3-D while viewing a sketchy 3-D model and “morphing” (cross dissolving) from one photo to the next.
“It’s the perfect marriage of a actually great engineering product,
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Photosynth was the brainchild of Rick Szeliski, principal researcher at Microsoft Investigation; Noah Snavely, a Ph.D. student at the University of Washington; and Steve Seitz, Snavely’s advisor. “I have personally been involved in working with images and 3-D photos for over two decades, and being able to combine the richness of travel photography together with the interactivity of 3-D games has long been one of my dreams,” Szeliski said.
The Reside Labs team took its fundamental study prototype, called Photo Tourism, and added SeaDragon technology for handling large amounts of multi-resolution imagery. The team also refined the user interface and built a complete, Web-based experience around the simple idea.
“The best thing is the incredible collection of creative and passionate researchers, designers, and developers at Live Labs; especially Blaise Aguera y Arcas, the architect of SeaDragon, and Patrice Simard, their chief scientist,” Szeliski said. “They both noticed the potential of Photosynth from its earliest days and helped bring this vision to life.”
The biggest challenge in working with Reside Labs was reaching consensus on the vision, “since it elicits such strong (positive) reactions from everyone who sees it and wants to contribute,” Szeliski said. “We have too many ideas on how to expand and deploy the system and for its impact on our customers plus the world at large, and we keep getting more from people outside of Microsoft who have seen our demos. Prioritizing all of these great ideas and building a system that is easy to use yet fresh and exciting can be a big challenge, but everyone on the team is committed to making this happen, so it’s been great fun.”
A major challenge for Reside Labs is effectively transferring their technology to product teams, Flake said. “I think the most challenging thing we manage on a day-to-day basis is the idea that we can’t be successful unless our partners are successful,” Flake said. “Evangelizing this idea that collaboration and connection among the teams is healthy and great thing … can be a challenge. I think it’s a challenge worth working through. We get a lot of return in terms of the partnerships we have. It’s something that’s not quite natural at this point, and we spend a lot of time actually managing to this.”
Live Labs isn’t focused on what the competition is doing, although it closely watches industry trends, Brewer said. “With Photosynth, we didn’t go out and look at Flickr and Smugmug and say, ‘wouldn’t it be cool if we had one?’ Instead, we said, ‘Wait, we have Seadragon, the University of Washington had a cool prototype to stitch photos together. ... Let’s create Photosynth and bring them together to create something truly unique.”