Voice control everywhere
Low-power special-purpose chip could make speech recognition ubiquitous in electronics.
Low-power special-purpose chip could make speech recognition ubiquitous in electronics.
New chip would thwart the counterfeiting that plagues the market for wired device chargers.
Ingestible electronic devices could monitor physiological conditions or deliver drugs.
Professor emeritus of electrical engineering recognized for contributions to field of nanofabrication.
Technique mass-produces uniform, encapsulated particles for pharmaceuticals, many other uses.
Device that measures growth of many individual cells simultaneously could lead to rapid tests for antibiotics.
MIT provost and leader in microscale and nanoscale fabrication appointed to the Ray and Maria Stata Professorship in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
A leader in the field of manufacturing and design has been appointed the Clarence J. LeBel Professor of Electrical Engineering.
The Tec de Monterrey and MIT Program fosters exchanges in nanotechnology and nanoscience, with the goal of helping the Tec to become a research university.
Palacios, Shah, Tedrake promoted to full professor; Englund promoted to associate professor without tenure.
New technology could secure credit cards, key cards, and pallets of goods in warehouses.
Low-power chip processes 3-D camera data, could enable wearable device to guide the visually impaired.
Depositing different materials within a single chip layer could lead to more efficient computers.
New techniques for building microelectromechanical systems show promise.