Microsoft discloses a lot more eco-friendly campaigns consisting of new Planetary Computer

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Microsoft has announced a new biodiversity initiative with the aim of collecting environmental data from around the world which will be made
available through a Planetary Computer.The new initiative was revealed by Microsoft President Brad Smith who said that the company will
provide its AI for Earth community with access to environmental datasets from around the world
The software giant will also give the community access to a computing platform which it can use to analyze those datasets on.AI for Earth
first launched back in 2017 and the initiative provides AI tools and skills to help solve global environmental challenges
However, the AI for Earth community requires much greater access to data, machine learning tools and the ability to share its work with
and by machines in space, in the sky, in and on the ground and in the water
One that would allow users to search by geographic location instead of keyword
Where users could seamlessly go from asking a question about what environments are in their area of interest, to asking where a particular
environment exists around the world
A platform that would allow users to provide new kinds of answers to new kinds of questions by providing access to state-of-the-art machine
that it will make further investments in specific environmental solution areas such as species identification, land cover mapping and land
use optimization.According to Smith, the company will start by creating a new AI for Earth partnership with the Group on Earth Observations
Biodiversity Observation Network
The $1m grant will support projects that strengthen existing efforts to monitor the Earth's biodiversity.Building a Planetary Computer is no
small task which is why Microsoft has expanded its partnership with the geographical information system software maker Esri
also wants to provide additional grants to give conservation organizations access to the datasets, compute and other resources.Via ZDNet