Putting food-safety detection in the hands of consumers
Simple, scalable wireless system uses the RFID tags on billions of products to sense contamination.
Simple, scalable wireless system uses the RFID tags on billions of products to sense contamination.
The new media arts and sciences faculty member merges social justice with design, architecture, music, performance, and technology.
For the fifth year, the poster session brought together colleagues from across MIT to learn about new projects and partnerships.
Knowledge Futures Group and the MIT Press team up to highlight ways to meet increasing demands for open access content.
Enzyme can target almost half of the genome’s “ZIP codes” and could enable editing of many more disease-specific mutations.
Massive global survey reveals ethics preferences and regional differences.
New MIT-hosted database is open to both examiners and the wider public, and seeks to reduce the number of wrongly-issued patents.
Cryptography techniques to screen synthetic DNA could help prevent the creation of dangerous pathogens, argues Professor Kevin Esvelt.
Institute throws open its doors for the Greater Boston area’s fourth annual celebration of innovation.
First-of-its kind collaboration will leverage the web’s power to create open, community-sourced access to knowledge.
PhD student Zijay Tang is developing a living material that can sense and filter water contaminants.
Architect and planner remembered as a man who brought people together through a combination of wisdom, optimism, and charm.
By making hydrophobic sections water-soluble, researchers hope to learn more about protein structures.
In a novel system developed by MIT researchers, underwater sonar signals cause vibrations that can be decoded by an airborne receiver.
Technique can capture a scene at multiple depths with one shutter click — no zoom lens needed.