WBUR
WBUR’s Cristela Guerra highlights a new exhibit at the MIT List Visual Arts Center called “Colored People Time.” The exhibit “turns time on its head,” Guerra explains, and “dives into questions of race, colonization, and reparations."
WBUR’s Cristela Guerra highlights a new exhibit at the MIT List Visual Arts Center called “Colored People Time.” The exhibit “turns time on its head,” Guerra explains, and “dives into questions of race, colonization, and reparations."
Prof. John Sterman speaks with Emma Smith of CBC about how Nova Scotia’s plan to switch from oil to wood for heating some public buildings will speed up climate change. “Turns out that wood and coal have about the same amount of carbon per unit of useful energy in them, but burning wood is less efficient," says Sterman.
Prof. Yossi Sheffi speaks with Jon Fortt of CNBC’s “Squawk Alley” about how the coronavirus could hurt global businesses. “It affects both supply and demand,” says Sheffi. “It’s not just manufacturing in China that is affected.”
MIT researchers have identified security flaws in a mobile voting application that allowed some overseas and military citizens to vote remotely, reports Lydia Emmanouilidou for PRI’s The World. “When things are opaque — when you can't verify, when you can't see what the code is doing,” says graduate student Michael Specter, “there is no way of vetting that it's doing the right thing.”
MIT researchers have developed a new smart diaper that can send caregivers a message when it detects moisture, reports Caroline Enos for The Boston Globe. “A small moisture sensor in the diaper contains a radio frequency identification tag, which transmits a radio signal to a nearby receiver when the diaper becomes wet,” Enos writes.
Graduate student Clara Park speaks with Ira Flatow of Science Friday about her work developing a bionic heart that could be used to test cardiac devices. Park explains that she and her colleagues fused a real heart “with robotic muscles to mimic the realistic motions and anatomy of the heart.”
Atlantic reporter Conor Friedersdorf highlights a new study by MIT researchers that shows handwashing at airports could help reduce the spread of disease.
Verge reporter Thomas Ricker writes that MIT researchers have developed a new RFID sensor that could be used to detect moisture in diapers and send an alert to caregivers. “The sensor can be manufactured for less than 2 cents, making it suitable for disposable diapers without adding bulk,” Ricker explains.
Artist Christine Sun Kim speaks with Boston Globe reporter Diti Kohli about her exhibit at the MIT List Visual Arts Center and her experiencing signing the national anthem at the Super Bowl. For visitors to her exhibit, Kim says she hopes her work “sits in the back of their mind, and stays with them in terms of respecting our deafness and sign language.”
In a segment for PRI’s The World, Lucy Martirosyan spotlights the work of artist Christine Sun Kim, who has a new exhibit at the MIT List Visual Arts Center and performed the national anthem in American Sign Language during this year’s Super Bowl. “I always find that the best way to communicate with a wider audience who [is] not deaf is to use a format that people can easily understand,” Kim said.
Forbes reporter Bruce Dorminey explores how MIT researchers have captured new images of the Pallas asteroid that “reveal a tiny world that is so pockmarked with craters that it resembles a high-end golf ball, maybe a Titleist or a Top-Flite.”
MIT researchers have found that an internet voting app has security flaws that could make it vulnerable to hackers, reports Anthony Izaguire for the AP. “In order to maintain trust in our elections system, we must assure that voting systems meet the high technical and operation security standards before they are put in the field,” explains principal research scientist Daniel Weitzner.
Writing for Motherboard, Kim Zetter explores a new study by MIT researchers that uncovers security flaws in a mobile voting app that was used in West Virginia and a number of other states. “It’s really impressive that they were able to find such a pervasive set of vulnerabilities,” says Prof. Matt Blaze of Georgetown Law School.
TechCrunch reporter Brian Heater writes that CSAIL researchers have developed a new material that could help bring a sense of touch to robotic arms. “The usually rigid material was reconfigured into a ‘kirigami’ configuration, laser cut and reassembled into chain-linked rows so it can be stretched and flexed to adhere to the shape of the robot and move with it,” explains Heater.
Smithsonian reporter Katherine J. Wu writes that astronomers from MIT have captured a series of photographs of the Pallas asteroid that could shed light on the asteroid’s turbulent history. Wu notes that the findings “reveal Pallas as the most cratered object in the asteroid belt—a title it’s almost certainly earned by bashing into some of its neighbors.”