Celebrating open data
New prize program recognizes MIT researchers who make data openly accessible and reusable.
New prize program recognizes MIT researchers who make data openly accessible and reusable.
MIT engineers are controlling pore openings for maximum molecule capture.
Photonics community gathers to further develop open-source software for electromagnetic simulations spanning a broad range of applications.
MIT researchers create KineCAM, an instant camera that yields images that appear to move.
Eighty scholarly monographs and edited collections partially funded by libraries participating in MIT Press’s Direct to Open model will publish openly this year.
Researchers created Exo for writing high-performance code on hardware accelerators.
MIT scientists unveil the first open-source simulation engine capable of constructing realistic environments for deployable training and testing of autonomous vehicles.
FLC Excellence in Technology Transfer Award recognizes two innovations that have transitioned to commercial use.
Originally developed at MIT Lincoln Laboratory, the technology allows organizations to ensure the security of sensitive data stored in the cloud.
New publishing model provides unique and timely solutions to the production, curation, and preservation of knowledge.
First-of-its-kind sustainable framework for open-access monographs moves professional and scholarly books to a library-supported open-access model.
$850,000 grant from Arcadia will allow exploration of alternatives to the traditional market-based business model for professional and scholarly monographs.
Report catalogs, analyzes available open-source publishing software; warns open publishing must grapple with siloed development and community-owned ecosystems.
Grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation will enable a landscape analysis and code audit of all known open source authoring and publishing platforms.