Skip to content ↓

In the Media

Displaying 15 news clips on page 950

New Scientist

"Now a new game called Rope Revolution, developed by graduate student Lining Yao and colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, uses an augmented-reality rope to allow players to fly a kite, ride a horse or skip with a partner across the globe."

Forbes

"On Friday and Saturday this upcoming weekend, I suspect that attendees will be in for a welcomed treat as MIT’s Sloan School of Management will be hosting their Sloan Sports Analytics Conference."

Boston Herald

"Inventory levels for single-family homes and condominiums in the Boston area are at an all-time low, signaling a shift to stability in the Hub’s housing market."

Forbes India

"Neuroscientist Mriganka Sur is deepening our understanding of how the brain works and the 'mis-wiring' that causes mental disease."

Wired

"The net is said to measure 'slam force G’s.'"

The New York Times

"Parking assist systems promise not only to help you locate the right-size parking space, but also to parallel-park the vehicle for you."

The Boston Globe

"So that’s my mission: Find out whether Kendall Square has finally arrived or whether all the buzz is just the same kind of wishful thinking we’ve heard for years."

The Boston Globe (AP)

"Cutting corporate tax rates and deleting loopholes is just what most economists prescribe for the tangled U.S. tax code."

The New York Times

"We’re producing more natural gas these days than we can use, thanks to new techniques to extract gas from shale."

MSNBC

"Light from three ancient stars at the edge of the Milky Way indicates that the stars contain tellurium, a brittle, superconducting element that is rare on Earth."

Forbes

"And so the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference was born in 2007."

The Boston Globe

"By fulfilling certain physical education requirements, MIT students can receive pirate certificate."

The Boston Globe

"When The Boston Club reported in its 2010 census of the 100 largest public corporations in Massachusetts that only 11.3 percent of their board seats were filled by women, our reaction was 'what’s wrong with this picture?'”

The Guardian

"Nature deals some unkind blows, but none is more hurtful to the pride of man than the looming demise of the Y chromosome."

The Huffington Post

"'What would happen if we could turn off the machine?,' (MIT's Jeff) Lieberman asks, 'If we could transcend our individual experience of the world?'"