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Cambridge, Boston and region

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Boston.com

Boston.com reporter Emily Anderson speaks with graduate student Adrian Dalca about how the million photos he captured of the Boston skyline could be used to predict changes in the city. “You can get these patterns of change over time,” explains Dalca. “And it would be interesting to predict what’s going to happen here in the next year.”

Metro

Graduate student Adrian Dalca speaks with Metro reporter Spencer Buell about how the million photos he snapped of the Boston skyline could fuel advances in a variety of areas. “There are more scientific questions you can answer with a lot of data, which you couldn’t do if you only had a few images,” says Dalca. 

Boston Magazine

Kyle Clauss writes for Boston Magazine about graduate student Adrian Dalca, who captured one million photographs of the Boston skyline. The resulting collection, called the Boston Timescape Project, is a “comprehensive collection of view of our fair metropolis, in every season, in every condition,” writes Clauss. 

BetaBoston

A new study from MIT’s Industrial Performance Center finds that while Massachusetts is successfully launching and growing new startups, the state has a shortage of “super-scale” companies, reports Hiawatha Bray for BetaBoston. Bray explains that the report “calls for public- and private-sector efforts to foster the development of bigger businesses in the Bay State.”

Cambridge Chronicle

Natalie Handy of The Cambridge Chronicle writes about the MIT Museum’s Chain Reaction event, during which teams of people came together to build a mega machine. “Getting people involved, getting people excited, and dreaming and thinking about what they can make is what it’s all about,” said Jennifer Novotney of the MIT Museum. 

Boston.com

MIT researchers are using Legos to map out how changes in bus-rapid transit systems could affect transportation in Boston, writes Nina Godlewski for Boston.com. “Our ultimate objective is this idea of co-creation...We would like that to happen in how we produce 21st century transit systems,” explains Prof. Chris Zegras.

BetaBoston

Nihdi Subbaraman reports for BetaBoston on the legal clinics MIT and BU have started providing to student entrepreneurs. “The Entrepreneurship and Intellectual Property Clinic is intended to serve as a place where startup founders can seek basic advice about how to register their company or how to distribute ownership to multiple founders,” writes Subbaraman. 

Boston Globe

The Boston Globe’s Malcolm Gay speaks with Provost Marty Schmidt about HUBweek, a festival showcasing Boston’s prowess in arts, culture and technology. “Things move a lot faster now than they might have a quarter of a century ago, so HUBweek is, and is going to need to evolve rapidly,” says Schmidt. 

Associated Press

MIT and BU have joined forces to offer students entrepreneurs legal advice, the Associated Press reports. "It's almost like a godsend," says MIT sophomore Isaiah Udotong, who is starting his own company. "We were looking for legal advice and wondering how we were going to make sure everything is legitimate."

Boston Globe

MIT junior Ian Reynolds has constructed an LED display mapping the location of MBTA vehicles across the city’s subway lines, reports Steve Annear for The Boston Globe. “Our transit system has a lot of personality,” says Reynolds. “It’s very, very integrated into the fabric of the city.”

BostInno

BostInno reporter Dylan Martin writes about how MIT and BU have formed a new partnership to provide students with a source of legal advice on technology and business issues. “BU law students will provide free legal advice and representation to MIT and BU students who either want to start their own business or are already involved with a startup.”

The Tech

MIT and Boston University are joining forces to provide law clinics for student entrepreneurs looking for legal advice, reports Katherine Nazemi for The Tech. “There’s opportunity for students to drop in and say ‘I don’t know if I need help or not, but this is what I’m doing, what do you think?’” explains Chancellor Cynthia Barnhart.

Boston Globe

Conceptual artist Lawrence Weiner has been commissioned in part by the MIT List Visual Arts Center to create a mural at Dewey Square Park, writes Malcolm Gay for The Boston Globe. “We hope that the viewers in Boston take away their own individual reading of the mural after seeing it,” said List director Paul Ha.

Cambridge Chronicle

Erin Baldassari writes for The Cambridge Chronicle about MIT’s plans for six new buildings in Kendall Square. “As a bold new gateway to MIT, Kendall Square opens a new frontier for us to reimagine the relationship between town and gown,” said Hashim Sarkis, dean of the School of Architecture and Planning.

BostInno

Sam Henken writes for BostInno about MIT’s Kendall Square Initiative. "This project is really important to the academic mission of MIT," said Provost Marty Schmidt. "MIT as an institution really focuses on how we can take the ideas on this campus and move them out so they have impact."