Loading...
Autor, Capozzola, Raman, and Smith receive MIT's most prestigious undergraduate teaching award.
Reach Every Reader aims to end early literacy crisis.
Synthetic biologist hopes to develop treatments for cancer and other diseases.
New technologies, systems, and business models are rapidly changing the energy landscape, experts attest.
MIT senior and Rhodes Scholar Matthew Chun wants to promote innovation that enhances quality of life in developing countries.
Katie Rae, managing director of The Engine, has collaborated with other Boston-based female investors to create FemaleFounders.org. The group will hold “office hours” that will encourage “entrepreneurs to get to know women investors and build a community,” writes Ron Miller for TechCrunch.
Bloomberg View’s Barry Ritholtz interviews MIT Innovation Teams Program (i-Teams) Director Luis Perez-Breva about his love for projects that “look impossible,” ideas that are “born bad,” and what the word “innovation” really means.
In a Science Friday short film, “Breakthrough: Connecting the Drops,” Professor Lydia Bourouiba shows how she designs tests to study infectious disease transmission. First aired in April 2017, the video is one of a six-part series “Breakthrough: Portraits of Women in Science,” which Science Friday will release at select theaters nationwide this March for Women’s History Month.
EasyEmail, a startup co-founded at MIT, offers an AI-driven “productivity tool” for quickly responding to email. “Going through MIT’s Sandbox Program, Fuse, and The Martin Trust Center’s NYC Summer Startup Studio helped the team rapidly iterate and develop their product,” writes Forbes contributor Frederick Daso, also a graduate student at MIT.
When rotated at a "magic angle," graphene sheets can form an insulator or a superconductor.
New technique is nontoxic to cells, should allow scientists to study neuron function for months or years instead of weeks.
MIT biological engineers discover why a promising drug failed in clinical trials.
Unsubscribe from our newsletter.
Have feedback or questions about our newsletter? Email mitnews-email@mit.edu
This email was sent by: MIT News Office, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Room 11-400, Cambridge, MA, 02139-4307, USA
© 2024