Learning to compute through art
“Introduction to Physical Computing for Artists” at the MIT Student Art Association teaches students to use circuits, wiring, motors, sensors, and displays by developing their own kinetic artworks.
“Introduction to Physical Computing for Artists” at the MIT Student Art Association teaches students to use circuits, wiring, motors, sensors, and displays by developing their own kinetic artworks.
The second annual student-industry conference was held in-person for the first time.
The device could help workers locate objects for fulfilling e-commerce orders or identify parts for assembling products.
19th Microsystems Annual Research Conference reveals the next era of microsystems technologies, along with skiing and a dance party.
The chip, which can decipher any encoded signal, could enable lower-cost devices that perform better while requiring less hardware.
The receiver chip efficiently blocks signal interference that slows device performance and drains batteries.
A wireless technique enables a super-cold quantum computer to send and receive data without generating too much error-causing heat.
Stacking light-emitting diodes instead of placing them side by side could enable fully immersive virtual reality displays and higher-resolution digital screens.
A quick electric pulse completely flips the material’s electronic properties, opening a route to ultrafast, brain-inspired, superconducting electronics.
Their technique could allow chip manufacturers to produce next-generation transistors based on materials other than silicon.
A new method can produce a hundredfold increase in light emissions from a type of electron-photon coupling, which is key to electron microscopes and other technologies.
The MIT professor discussed a new nanoengineered platform to investigate strongly correlated and topological physics.
Luqiao Liu utilizes a quantum property known as electron spin to build low-power, high-performance computer memories and programmable computer chips.
Researchers develop a scalable fabrication technique to produce ultrathin, lightweight solar cells that can be seamlessly added to any surface.
New technique could diminish errors that hamper the performance of super-fast analog optical neural networks.