MIT students and alumni “hack” Hong Kong Kowloon East
Activating technology for urban life with a virtual site visit to Hong Kong in collaboration with the Department of Urban Studies and Planning.
Activating technology for urban life with a virtual site visit to Hong Kong in collaboration with the Department of Urban Studies and Planning.
By 2030, 40 percent of vehicles sold in China will be electric; MIT research finds that despite benefits, the cost to consumers and to society will be substantial.
MIT historian, and scholar of assimilation and exclusion, surveys the deeper history behind the current crisis.
MIT students collaborate online with international peers to tackle business challenges for the Hong Kong International Airport.
The Biden administration must navigate a new set of global challenges, experts say in MIT panel discussion.
Francesca Macchiavello Cauvi, Alice Ho, Ava Waitz, and Lucio Milanese will pursue master’s degrees in global affairs and leadership training at Tsinghua University in Beijing.
Study finds China’s industrial-park policy is better for productivity when political connections are not a factor.
Using novel computational approaches, graduate student Sean Liu develops better tools for analyzing data.
MIT students collaborate online with Hong Kong peers and industry partners to build fintech solutions.
“Doing something for the community good is good for me also” is known as gongdexin (in Mandarin), kootokushin (in Japanese), and kongdokshim (in Korean).
Philip Kuai MNG '07 leads first fully virtual investor roadshow to bring his company, Dada Group, to an initial public offering in New York.
Graduate student Muni Zhou shows how tiny magnetic seed fields can expand to cosmic proportions.
Writing in The New York Times, President Reif says recently rescinded ICE policy reflected “a stark misreading of our national interest.”
A six-week donation drive yields 15,000 N95 respirator masks and 1,000 medical gowns for use in Massachusetts hospitals.
An architect and urban planner, Lee’s impact is evident throughout Boston and the city’s Chinatown, his childhood home.