Innovating at the speed of light
Symposium speakers describe how colleges must meet the challenges of a rapidly emerging environment in which "computing is for everyone."
Symposium speakers describe how colleges must meet the challenges of a rapidly emerging environment in which "computing is for everyone."
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.
First-of-its kind collaboration will leverage the web’s power to create open, community-sourced access to knowledge.
Grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation will enable a landscape analysis and code audit of all known open source authoring and publishing platforms.
National Endowment for the Humanties-Mellon Foundation Open Book Program grant will support the digitization and open accessibility of key MIT Press titles.
With a new multimedia website, landscape architecture professor Anne Whiston Spirn makes a secret garden public and explores how ideas create form.
Press' first major digitization endeavor ushers in a new era of access.
MIT conference stems from data-rich historical project on French theater.
MIT report represents the first thorough mapping of the ongoing convergence between interactive and participatory practices within digital journalism.
2,600 recently rediscovered early modern letters to be analyzed in groundbreaking international digital humanities project.
In a Q&A, course co-founder Professor Shigeru Miyagawa discusses his unique online course and its impact on digital education.
New class offers MIT students the chance to pair technical know-how with real-world art and humanities projects at local museums.