New device detects heat strain in military trainees
In the intensity of basic training, a smartwatch-based system warns recruits when they are at risk of heat injury.
In the intensity of basic training, a smartwatch-based system warns recruits when they are at risk of heat injury.
A program within MIT Corporate Relations has become the largest university-based platform for startups to connect with corporations.
New technique applied to small computer chips enables efficient vision and detection algorithms without internet connectivity.
The MIT EnergyHack brought together bright minds from across the world to address some of the energy sector’s most pressing challenges.
A life-detecting radar, a microscale motor, and a quantum network architecture are among this year's most innovative new technologies.
MIT App Inventor’s “Appathon” joins programmers from around the world to imagine a better future and start building it one app at a time.
Reversible system can flip the magnetic orientation of particles with a small voltage; could lead to faster data storage and smaller sensors.
How-to manual from MIT and the Fashion Institute of Technology codifies successful textiles partnership between designers, engineers.
MIT professor is designing the next generation of smart wireless devices that will sit in the background, gathering and interpreting data, rather than being worn on the body.
Student inventors recognized on World IP Day for groundbreaking, patentable solutions to issues related to maternal health, energy efficiency, and plastic waste.
Leveraging research done on campus, student-run MIT Driverless partners with industry collaborators to develop and test autonomous technologies in real-world racing scenarios.
Awardees have created new products, companies, and even entirely new industries, employing over 40,000 workers.
CSAIL's “LaserFactory” system automates the full process for making functional devices in one system.
The MIT Energy Club hosts its sixth annual EnergyHack with 260 participants joining in from around the globe in this all-virtual event.
Thirteen teams receive up to $10K for invention projects that address local and worldwide problems.