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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 864

NPR

"So, a flying suit is not part of the plan. But the first challenge is to come up with stronger body armor so a commando can survive once he kicks in a door."

Popular Science

"[A]llow us to introduce you to the future, where our rulers will be crazy interactive devices that measure the angles on hand-drawn triangles and allow us to create our own Plinko games on the backs of receipts."

Forbes

“They will transform to optimize performance under different conditions and be more versatile than ever, revolutionizing the way we ship.”

Boston Magazine

“In a perverted twist of fate, cancer cells take advantage of this incredibly ancient survival strategy— the heat shock response— to help them survive despite the best efforts of our own natural defenses, and sophisticated therapeutics, to kill them."

The Washington Post

“If mice had Hollywood, this would be ‘Inception’ for them."

Wired

"Over the last couple of decades, engineers have improved TCP's congestion control algorithms, leading to the creation of a number of different competing versions of the protocol, including Compound TCP, NewReno, BIC and TCP Cubic."

The Washington Post

“It used to be that you had a fight, and it was over, and you moved on.”

NBC

"Suppose we landed on Mars and we saw a skyscraper, a huge building 10 stories high or something."

CNN

"While this is a positive start, it is very early in the multi-stepped process to characterize the performance of the reaction wheels and to determine if one could return to operation."

Scientific American

"Fracking, the same technology used to drill for natural gas, may provide an economical way to get at that geothermal energy."

Scientific American

"Fracking, the same technology used to drill for natural gas, may provide an economical way to get at that geothermal energy."

Wired

“People don’t like having their skin zapped all the time. It will be an effective technology if it is used to present information intermittently and with high-potency.”

The Boston Globe

“That’s where these driver trials started. We wanted to get people out on the streets, driving around, and just sort of measure this ground truth.”

Boston Magazine

“With an aging population in the US, injuries and degenerative conditions are subsequently on the rise. As a result, there is an increased demand for therapies that can repair damaged tissues."

Associated Press

"Countries around the world are collecting genetic material from millions of citizens in the name of fighting crime and terrorism — and, according to critics, heading into uncharted ethical terrain."