Toward cheaper water treatment
MIT spinout makes treating, recycling highly contaminated oilfield water more economical
MIT spinout makes treating, recycling highly contaminated oilfield water more economical
MIT professors’ choice-modeling software predicts customer preferences for retailers.
Startup brings nonstick coating to consumer goods packaging in major licensing deal.
MIT spinout signs deal to commercialize microchips that release therapeutics inside the body.
Softball-sized camera can be tossed into unseen areas, sends panoramic images back to a smartphone.
A nuclear power plant that will float eight or more miles out to sea promises to be safer, cheaper, and easier to deploy than today’s land-based plants.
Rich Fletcher and Daniel Chamberlain will use their winnings to field-test a low-cost mobile device to diagnose pulmonary disease in rural India.
Reinventing how these batteries are made also improves their performance and recyclability.
2015 fellows include MIT alumni and members of the International Development Innovation Network working in Brazil, Ethiopia, India, Tanzania, and Uganda.
Annual summit expands to three sessions, focused on recycling, health care, and empowering desert communities.
doDOC helps enterprises focus import and share highly complex documents with its Web platform.
Ethernet co-inventor and 3Com founder will shape Start6, EECS’s innovation and entrepreneurship workshop.
“Design is a conversation” at this year's ATHack, or Assistive Technologies Hackathon, for people with disabilities.
MIT Sloan MBA students found Spoiler Alert app to match surplus food inventory with those in need.
Startup’s software, designed to plan NASA space missions, now drives more effective online advertising.