Skip to content ↓

In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 877

Bloomberg Businessweek

"Bloomberg's Sheila Dharmarajan takes us inside the MIT media lab." (Video)

CBS Boston

"You might be used to an x-ray, MRI, or a blood pressure cuff to monitor your health, but how about your car? Scientists at MIT are making that a reality."

The Boston Globe

"Joi Ito, director of MIT’s renowned Media Lab, announced the creation of a new type of fellowship, the Director’s Fellows, designed to involve individuals with 'less-than-traditional backgrounds' in the innovative work the Lab is doing. And the first class has some serious star power, including the likes of chess grandmaster Maurice Ashley and director J.J. Abrams, the man behind 'Lost' and the new 'Star Trek' movies."

New Scientist

"Satellites are no longer weapons, according to a change in US anti-arms trafficking law."

The Huffington Post

"First there was the HAPIfork, a smart fork that tells users when they may be overeating. Now, alcohol drinkers have their own resource that tracks when they may have had one too many."

Forbes

"When we teach our introductory entrepreneurship class at MIT, we take it for granted that each of our 75 students will be able to start an American company upon graduating."

Bloomberg Businessweek

"The Bind technology is meant to selectively target the cancer cells, making it easier to deliver more potent doses of the drug there without poisoning healthy tissue."

Inside Higher Ed

"Meet Caesar: the computer system that, like its Roman namesake, divides and conquers."

Forbes

"Researchers from the MIT Poverty Action Lab showed that, in one state, reforms to increase training marginally improved the police effectiveness and public image."

ABC News

"A Japan Airlines Boeing 787 readying for takeoff at at Boston Logan International Airport today sprang a leak from its number one engine, spilling approximately 40 gallons of fuel onto the runway, and had to be towed back to the gate."

WGBH

"Today, the once desolate streets of Kendall Square hum at lunch hour, filled with employees of the world’s leading biotech, information technology and venture capital firms. MIT is still a strong magnet for companies looking to recruit from its talent pool — but it isn’t the only draw."

Reuters

"Even if Washington politicians eventually resolve their differences over fiscal issues, that is not expected to fully restore losses already caused to tech spending, experts said."

Financial Times

"'The banks had the balance sheet, but the reality was it was the taxpayers that were giving them the balance sheet. It’s not clear we want the taxpayer subsidising proprietary trading in electricity or even hedging in electricity,' says John Parsons, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist and former consultant to energy companies."

The Boston Globe

"Though firefighters contained the small fire and it did not appear to cause significant damage, it knocked out Boston’s only nonstop flight to Asia Monday and sent ticketing agents scrambling to find alter­natives for 176 stranded travelers, while Boeing and federal ­inspectors were en route to determine what went wrong with the $207 million Dreamliner."

CBS News

"Some of Rubin’s choices included academics like former M.I.T. President Susan Hockfield, lawyers like former S.J.C Chief Justice Margaret Marshall and business leaders like Bank of American Executive Anne Finucane and Mike Widmer, head of the Mass. Tax Payers Foundation."