Microsoft's Canadian subsidiary has established a $10 million fund to support technology research and development at Canadian universities. But the first grant awarded from the fund has already caused an uproar, after one of the recipients agreed to require a class in a Microsoft programming language as part of the deal. The Microsoft Canada Academic Innovation Alliance was formally launched Wednesday, with a $2.3 million grant to University of Waterloo. The grant will fund, among other projects, a research program developing a mathematical recognition engine for the Tablet PC, for which Microsoft has developed operating system.
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