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Microsoft campus library closes in broader shift to AI-powered β€˜digital learning experiences’

15 January 2026 at 16:35
Microsoft is closing its physical libraries and transitioning to digital learning hubs. (GeekWire File Photo / Todd Bishop)

The Microsoft Library in Redmond has long been a quiet anachronism in the middle of the high-tech campus, a place where authors gave talks and employees checked out old-fashioned paper books, including titles recommended by CEO Satya Nadella and other execs.

That chapter of the company’s history is now closing.

The Verge broke the news Thursday that Microsoft’s traditional library is going away as part of what Microsoft described internally as a shift to a β€œmodern, AI-powered learning experience.”

Responding to an inquiry from GeekWire, the company confirmed that its libraries in Redmond, Hyderabad, Beijing, and Dublin closed as of this week and β€œare being repurposed into collaborative spaces for group learning and experimentation,” where employees can explore emerging technologies.

β€œWe’re evolving Microsoft Library locations and services to better support how employees learn, stay current, and build new skills,” a Microsoft spokesperson said via email. The changes are already underway and will roll out fully in the coming weeks, according to the company.

Books recommended by CEO Satya Nadella and CFO Amy Hood on display at the Microsoft Library. (GeekWire File Photo / Todd Bishop)

In an internal FAQ obtained by The Verge, Microsoft described the new approach as a β€œSkilling Hub” and acknowledged that the decision β€œaffects a space many people valued.”

The shift also includes cuts to employee subscriptions for newspapers and industry reports. Publications affected include The Information and Strategic News Service, which had provided global reports to Microsoft employees for more than two decades.

Microsoft said it continues to offer access to more than 20 digital resources and subscriptions, β€œprioritizing those most valuable to employees.”

Strategic News Service didn’t mince words about Microsoft’s AI-focused rationale.

β€œTechnology’s future is shaped by flows of power, money, innovation, and people β€” none of which are predictable based on LLMs’ probabilistic regurgitation of old information,” Berit Anderson, the company’s chief operating officer, told The Verge.

An author event at the Microsoft Library, where employees could attend talks and check out books. (GeekWire File Photo / Todd Bishop)

The library has moved around over the decades, from the original Building 4 to Building 92 most recently. The news of the closure drew a nostalgic response on X from Steven Sinofsky, the former Windows president, who called the library β€œa crown jewel of the early days.”

β€œThey bought every PC book and two copies of every software,” Sinofsky wrote. β€œIf you found one you needed that they didn’t have, they acquired it.”

OpenAI reorganizes some teams to build audio-based AI hardware products

2 January 2026 at 16:27

OpenAI, the company that developed the models and products associated with ChatGPT, plans to announce a new audio language model in the first quarter of 2026, and that model will be an intentional step along the way to an audio-based physical hardware device, according to a report in The Information.

Citing a variety of sources familiar with the plans, including both current and former employees, The Information claims that OpenAI has taken efforts to combine multiple teams across engineering, product, and research under one initiative focused on improving audio models, which researchers in the company believe lag behind the models used for written text in terms of both accuracy and speed.

They have also seen that relatively few ChatGPT users opt to use the voice interface, with most people preferring the text one. The hope may be that substantially improving the audio models could shift user behavior toward voice interfaces, allowing the models and products to be deployed in a wider range of devices, such as in cars.

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