A universal system for decoding any type of data sent across a network
New chip eliminates the need for specific decoding hardware, could boost efficiency of gaming systems, 5G networks, the internet of things, and more.
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New chip eliminates the need for specific decoding hardware, could boost efficiency of gaming systems, 5G networks, the internet of things, and more.
Record number of honorees will engage in the life of the Institute through teaching, research, and other interactions with the MIT community.
MIT professor is designing the next generation of smart wireless devices that will sit in the background, gathering and interpreting data, rather than being worn on the body.
A former department head who established the MEng degree for EECS undergraduates, Penfield developed courses illuminating the equivalence of information and thermodynamic entropy.
This year’s projects address mobile evaporative vegetable preservation, portable water filtration, and dairy waste reduction.
For the past seven years, the MIT University Center for Exemplary Mentoring has created a robust infrastructure of resources, people, and support.
MIT researchers find a new way to quantify the uncertainty in molecular energies predicted by neural networks.
ARROW, a reconfigurable fiber optics network developed at MIT, aims to take on the end of Moore’s law.
Rigorous selection process for the prestigious fellowship took into account students’ outstanding track record of scientific achievement and inquiry, as well as contributions to the STEM community.
MIT offers over 120 undergraduate classes related to sustainability, a sign of growing student and faculty interest in the environmental impacts of their fields.
MIT alumni-founded Amplitude offers tools to help companies respond to the ways users interact with their digital products.
SensiCut, a smart material-sensing platform for laser cutters, can differentiate between 30 materials commonly found in makerspaces and workshops.
Longtime EECS faculty member was known for his work on the biophysics of auditory systems.
Student-designed Nimbus solar car travels 1,109 miles in five days, averaging 38.4 miles per hour.
Probabilistic programming language allows for fast, error-free answers to hard AI problems, including fairness.