Microsoft, Nokia, and the South Australian Government team up for space tech initiatives


    The Visitor's Center at Microsoft Headquarters campus is pictured July 17, 2014 in Redmond, Washington.Source: Stephen Brashear/Getty Images for Microsoft

    Via the power of indestructible Nokia phones, Microsoft Azure, and the South Australian Government’s eagerness to bolster its space efforts, there’s a new triangular partnership in town, one potentially more iconic than the Three Musketeers. It’s true: Microsoft, Nokia, and the South Australian Government are joining forces to meld space technology, 5G, AI, and other major industry buzzwords together in an effort to redefine the digital era and grow Australia’s space industry.

    Microsoft’s Azure Space team will be making room for itself at Lot Fourteen in Adelaide, Australia, which South Australian Premier Steven Marshall has welcomed.

    “This partnership between Microsoft and Nokia further cements our state’s standing within the global space industry,” Premier Marshall stated. You can read the rest of his quotes at Microsoft’s site.

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    Developing industry-shaking digital advancements by way of space tech and 5G while also boosting South Australian job counts aren’t the only items on the docket for Microsoft, Nokia, and the South Australian Government. The trio is also working on ways to promote diversity in STEM in South Australia.

    This is far from the first time that Microsoft’s Azure Space initiatives have landed a fruitful partnership. Not long ago, Microsoft and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) teamed up to help the astronauts floating around on the International Space Station (ISS) make the most of the station’s very, very limited internet capacity.

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