"Run by Dr. Howard Shrobe, an M.I.T. computer scientist who is now a Darpa program manager, the effort began with a premise: If the computer industry got a do-over, what should it do differently?"
"Things have improved on campus; I am proud to have helped enroll a student body in which 45 percent of our undergraduates—and 44 percent of our STEM majors—are women." -MIT's Matt McGann
"The term “hacker” was popularized in Steven Levy’s 1984 book 'Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution.' It described an early generation of M.I.T. students who did not break into computers and networks — or black hats — but instead were passionate programmers and hardware tinkerers."
"Traditional medical tape has two layers: the sticky one and the non-sticky one that forms the backing. The adhesive is designed for adults, Karp said; newborns need something else just for them."
"Leah Buechley, an associate professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, meanwhile, has created a kit that allows girls to program 'wearable computers' that can be sewn into clothes and made to produce sound and light with microchips."
"A new proposal for Boston school assignments presented Saturday by a Massachusetts Institute of Technology doctoral student was essentially pushed to front-runner status by an advisory committee, as five other proposals began to fall off the table, just one month after they were unveiled."
"The study, based on the geographical pattern of 1m mobile-phone calls in Portugal, found that calls between phones far apart (a first contact, perhaps) are often followed by a flurry within a small area (just before a meeting)."
"Ramesh Raskar and his team at MIT have developed software and an iPhone accessory that can perform eye tests without the need for expensive equipment."
"You probably expect all the latest and greatest high-tech gear to be out in force at the infamous MIT Media Lab innovation complex. And you’d be right. Holograms? Check. 3D printing? Check. Robots? Triple check — even a DragonBot."
"Given sufficient warning, an asteroid headed on a collision course with Earth could be diverted by firing paintballs at it, an MIT graduate student has calculated."
"Anyone who's flown in recent years has encountered the stepped-up security procedures at the airport. But one expert says the focus on the skies ignores a far bigger safety risk these days: Mass transit on the ground."
"Harvard topped the chart of universities around the world that were ranked based on the "employability" of their graduates. MIT ranked seventh worldwide, while Boston University ranked 17th."