Kaifu Lee Starts Job as Boss of Google China
(China
Daily September 22, 2005)
Kaifu Lee, a target in the on-going
fight between Microsoft and Google, has taken up his post as Google's head in
China with the aim of recruiting 50 college graduates in 2005.
Lee, former vice-president with the US software giant Microsoft, said
yesterday in Beijing, "We have a lot of expectations for our Chinese operations
and the Chinese market."
Speaking after he received permission to work for the search engine in China,
he said that Google's development centre in China will be established very soon.
Google has been deciding where to put the centre between Beijing and
Shanghai. Lee said his company will make a decision soon.
It already has a representative office in Shanghai and has signed deals with
several advertisement agents, preparing for the formal launch of its business in
China.
The search giant plans to build a world-class centre in China, which will not
only work on the localization of its products and services, but also on
cutting-edge technologies for its global operations.
The top Chinese scientist at Google said his job is to hire at least 50
college graduates by the end of this year, as the job-hunting season for
graduate students starts this month.
"We are here not to steal talent from other companies, but train local
people," he said.
Lee, who enjoys a high reputation among Chinese students for his success in
companies including Microsoft and Apple, promised he would lead the 50 new
students personally and make them into top-class computer scientists.
He added that since the graduates can only begin work after their graduation
in the middle of next year, his firm will also try to recruit engineers from
within the industry.
Microsoft Research Asia, which was founded by Lee in 1998 in Beijing, also
said yesterday it would aim to recruit 100 to 150 graduates this year.
Although the Chinese scientist received permission to work for Google from a
US local court, he was not allowed to work on any projects similar to ones he
had worked on at Microsoft.
The world's largest software firm sued Lee and Google for the breach of a
non-compete agreement between Microsoft and Lee in July and demanded the court
stop Lee from working at Google for one year following his departure from
Microsoft.
About Lee
Born in Taiwan, Kaifu Lee moved to the United States, where he obtained
his BA at Columbia University in New York and his PhD in Computer Science from
Carnegie Mellon University, Pennsylvania in 1988. Before joining Microsoft in
1998, Lee spent many years at Apple Computers as vice president of the company's
interactive media group, which developed numerous programs such as QuickTime and
PlainTalk speech technologies.
Lee is one of the world's top researchers in speech-recognition technology
and joined Microsoft in 1998 to, among other activities, develop a program for
PC users who can talk to their computer instead of typing. During his tenure at
Microsoft, Lee founded Microsoft Research Asia, which soon became one of the
best centers of research in the world.
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