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In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 905

The Boston Globe

"Among the factors weighing on the recovery are government job cuts, the result of the slowdown in tax collections following the recession, said Paul Osterman, a professor of management at Massachusetts Institute of Technology."

Nature

"The idea of using bacteria-fighting viruses as a weapon against hard-to-treat infections is making a surprising comeback, but with a twist on how it has been attempted for nearly a century."

BBC News

"Harvard and MIT's online university, edX, has taken a significant step forward - in a deal with Pearson to provide a global network of invigilated exam centres for online students."

Bloomberg News

"EdX, the online school founded by Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will offer proctored final exams to allow students to use their results for credentials and job applications."

Popular Science

"A five-year project called ENCODE, for 'Encyclopedia of DNA Elements,' found that about 80 percent of the human genome is biologically active, influencing how nearby genes are expressed and in which types of cells."

Scientific American

"The Twitterati likely already know that last week, I joined MIT science writing professor (and fellow author/physics aficionado) Tom Levenson in the virtual world, Second Life, for the Virtually Speaking Science (VSS) podcast, hosted by BlogTalk Radio."

The Economist

"We’re trying to put web use for everybody on the international agenda, and for each country that’s wondering what it should do next, help them answer the question." -MIT's Tim Berners-Lee

USA Today

"Junot Díaz has built a big audience with two books: Drown, a collection of short stories, and his debut novel, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, which won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for fiction."

The Huffington Post

"For his latest project, 'The Last Pictures,' the experimental artist plans to present his work in space, hanging in the midst of cosmic artifacts rather than earthly masterpieces."

CBS News

"A pair of robotic spacecraft in orbit around the moon began collecting data on lunar gravity again last week, as part of the probes' extended mission."

Nature

"First they sequenced it. Now they have surveyed its hinterlands. But no one knows how much more information the human genome holds, or when to stop looking for it."

The Wall Street Journal

"Berenice Abbott's science photographs invite us to contemplate the wonder of creation."

The Boston Globe

"Some smartphone apps collect and transmit sensitive information stored on a phone, including location, contacts, and Web browsing histories, even when the apps are not being used by the phone’s owner, according to two researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology."

The New York Times

"They bill their new book, Visual Strategies, as a guide to graphics for scientists and engineers, but it will be useful for anyone who wants to make clear presentations of data of any kind."

The Boston Globe

"We knew before that most cancers were due to mutations in the genes in cancer cells. Now [that we can sequence a tumor’s genes], we’re able to identify the full spectrum of mutations that have occurred in a given cancer." -MIT's Phillip A. Sharp