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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 884

Forbes India

"In operations research John Little is best known for his proof of the queuing formula, commonly known as Little’s Law."

The Wall Street Journal

"In 2010, MIT researchers used similar methods to predict health. Studying early-morning and late-night call and text patterns, they could discern if a person was suffering from colds, stress or mild depression."

Wired.co.uk

"Holographic TV may remain a distant prospect, but the Media Lab's Camera Culture group is developing the next best thing: screens capable of producing glasses-free 3D images that can be seen from various angles."

UPI.com

"U.S. physicists say unexpected results from the Large Hadron Collider suggest its particle collisions may be producing a new type of matter."

Scientific American

"How bad are the storms, flooding, and other disasters going to be in 20 years? This new simulation can help governments plan."

The Wall Street Journal

"One would think that, as a global commodity, any particular grade of oil would fetch a similar price regardless of where it was sent, but for a 12-year stretch Saudi Arabia sold crude to U.S. refiners at a substantial discount. To judge from the political contributions they made, the refiners appreciated the gesture."

Forbes

"The well-known success of information technologies (IT) in India is actually two successes, with two sets of implications and potential." - MIT's Iqbal Quadir

Forbes

Two Technologies Propelling India Forward - "The well-known success of information technologies in India is actually two successes, with two sets of implications and potential."

Popular Science

"Particle collisions are turning up unexpected quantum weirdness."

The Boston Globe

"Started in December 2010, the Sandbox is a project of the Deshpande Foundation, a global think tank based at MIT that champions entrepreneurship and innovation as catalysts for sustainable change."

The Wall Street Journal

"Could a car that knows when you are stressed or ill save you from having an accident? Auto makers are stepping up efforts to find out."

The Wall Street Journal

"Auto makers are researching technology that could feed your heart rate, blood pressure and other biometric responses into the car's computers, the better to determine when you're drowsy or overwhelmed with distracting media. MIT researcher Bryan Reimer and WSJ's Joe White has details on Lunch Break."

Wired.co.uk

"His goal: to blur the lines between human disability and human augmentation, using technology."

CNN Money

"Improving cell efficiency is important for lowering the cost of producing solar electricity."

The Huffington Post

"Not long ago we had to creatively generate data to inform strategy, planning, decisions and public policy. Today we are swimming in data." -MIT's Joe Coughlin