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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 872

Nature

"In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, scientists and officials are trying to protect the largest US city from future floods."

Los Angeles Times

"Researchers believe they may have spotted the youngest black hole in the Milky Way galaxy, and — from scientists’ point of view – it’s not far away."

Wired.co.uk

"Synthetic biologists at MIT have developed 'genetic circuits' that can perform basic logic functions in living cells."

The Huffington Post

"Gift giving can be fraught with anxiety, and Valentine's Day gifts are no exception." -MIT's Renee Richardson Gosline

The Guardian

"In his book, Theory U, Dr Otto Scharmer, senior lecturer at MIT, explores how leadership itself needs to transform in order to be able to lead us across this threshold."

The Huffington Post

"So is there a conflict between science and religion?" -MIT's Max Tegmark

USA Today

"Earth orbits in a shooting gallery of asteroids and space rocks, but an impact looks unlikely for the foreseeable future."

Scientific American

"Power-conducting films that could be stuck to any surface under the sun are coming. Will that get us the solar power we need?"

The Boston Globe

"Named after the first known black MIT graduate, the 28-year-old Robert R. Taylor Network pairs professionals in architecture, science, technology, engineering, and math with students from urban communities who are underrepresented in those fields, said Darian C. Hendricks, the network’s chairman and chief executive."

The Boston Globe

"Things were different in Boston on Sunday. A massive snowfall will do that to a city."

The New York Times (Slideshow Image)

"Students from Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology had a snowball fight in Cambridge, Mass."

Bloomberg Businessweek

"Today we look at e-business, or Internet commerce, an academic specialty that borrows heavily from a number of academic disciplines from entrepreneurship and marketing to data mining and analysis."

Wired.co.uk

"A team of roboticists has shown that by getting robots and humans to carry out simple tasks together, then swap roles, synchronicity increases significantly because the machines gain a better understanding of what's required of them."

Scientific American

"New tech from MIT aims to clean the water used in fracking so much that you'd happily drink it, even though it was once filled with chemicals."

NPR

"For Valentine's Day, maybe you'll post a photo of your loved one on Facebook, tweet out a love poem or text-message your secret crush. But as we make those virtual connections, are we missing something?"