License plates of MIT
Custom plates display expressions of scholarship, creativity, and MIT pride among Institute affiliates.
Custom plates display expressions of scholarship, creativity, and MIT pride among Institute affiliates.
During a recent history of technology symposium at MIT, participants shared exciting ideas about the future of their field.
Professor Olivier de Weck's approach combines quantitative engineering analysis and strategic thinking to drive innovation.
More than a decade since its launch, App Inventor recently hosted its 100 millionth project and registered its 20 millionth user. Now hosted by MIT, the app also supports experimenting with AI.
New “AI Comes Out of the Closet” system seeks to merge artificial intelligence and LGBTQIA+ support.
The conversation in Kresge Auditorium touched on the promise and perils of the rapidly evolving technology.
William Deringer studies “very old things and very technical things” — that have never been more relevant.
Combing through 35,000 job categories in U.S. census data, economists found a new way to quantify technology’s effects on job loss and creation.
The majority of U.S. jobs are in occupations that have emerged since 1940, MIT research finds — telling us much about the ways jobs are created and lost.
Materials from MIT’s Distinctive Collections reveal stories of women at the Institute.
Achievements in air traffic control, microelectronics, and lasers are recognized for their lasting benefit to humanity.
MIT historian of science Robin Wolfe Scheffler takes a close look at the progress of biomedical research in the U.S.
Kathryn Wysocki Gunsch, the museum’s deputy director, will serve as interim director until Gorman takes up his post this summer.
Stefan Helmreich’s new book examines the many facets of oceanic wave science and the propagation of wave theory into other areas of life.
Director and MIT Professor Jay Scheib’s production, at the Bayreuth Festival in Germany, features an apocalyptic theme and augmented reality headsets for the audience.