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MIT in the Media
The following news clips about MIT, updated on a regular basis, are just a partial selection of our most recent media coverage.
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The Washington Post,
March 5, 2012
"Science and technology are meaningful when interwoven with all of the other modes of learning. A STEM, without its bloom, quickly withers in the forest of everday life."
The New York Times,
March 4, 2012
"On Feb. 13, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which has been posting course materials online for 10 years, opened registration for its first MOOC, a circuits and electronics course."
CNN,
March 4, 2012
"It was after the robotic hummingbird flew around the auditorium -- and after a speaker talked about the hypersonic plane that could fly from New York to the West Coast in 11 minutes -- that things got really edgy."
The Boston Globe,
March 3, 2012
"As far as MIT is concerned, Jacob Hurwitz is a pirate. The sophomore has the certificate to prove it. Hurwitz 'is no longer a lily-livered landlubber,’ the MIT document affirms."
Forbes,
March 4, 2012
"Saturday at the Hynes Convention Center in Boston was Day 2 of the MIT Sports Analytics Conference hosted by MIT’s Sloan Graduate School of Management."
CNN Money,
March 2, 2012
"You know that investing can be tough. Andrew Lo (of MIT) says it's even tougher than you think."
New Scientist,
March 2, 2012
"Dead psychedelic chemical gel comes back to life 10:54 2 March 2012 Exclusives Physics and Math Caitlin Stier, video intern A colour-changing gel driven by a classic chemical reaction can now be resuscitated by adding pressure after the reaction has stabilised. Developed by Irene Chou Chen, a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, it's the first time oscillations in a responsive gel have been revived by a mechanical trigger."
The Boston Herald,
March 2, 2012
"'Moneyball' is spreading beyond baseball, thanks in part to Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, which kicks off its sixth year today at Hynes Convention Center."
The Huffington Post,
March 1, 2012
"Does a new study lend support to Richard Lindzen's 'iris effect' hypothesis?"
Reuters,
March 1, 2012
"Why Nations Fail, by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, respectively, is a wildly ambitious work that hopscotches through history and around the world to answer the very big question of why some countries get rich and others don't."
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