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Innovation and Entrepreneurship (I&E)

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STAT

Justin Chen of STAT writes that Biobot Analytics, which was founded by former MIT researchers, is measuring traces of drugs in sewers in an attempt to detect emerging public health threats. The technology could “first pinpoint communities that need interventions, like substance abuse programs, and later measure the success of those programs in lowering drug use,” explains Chen.

Boston Globe

Boston Globe reporter Jonathan Saltzman writes about how MIT alumnus Bernat Olle’s startup, Vedanta Biosciences, Inc., is looking to “collect a sample of every type of bacteria that lives in the gut.” The hope is to one day use what’s learned from this ‘library’ to help treat diseases.

CNBC

CNBC reporter Lora Kolodny writes about Spyce kitchen, an MIT startup that uses both humans and robots to make what it calls “complex meals.” “Spyce has a stated goal of not replacing human chefs, explains Kolodny, “but helping them work faster, and make delicious meals more consistently, in its restaurants.”

Boston Herald

Boston Herald reporter Jordan Graham writes about Ori, a Media Lab spinout that aims to make apartments more functional and spacious through the use of robotic furniture. Founder and CEO Hasier Larrea, an MIT alumnus, explains that by using technology and robotics, “you can make a 300-square-foot apartment be much more functional than a traditional static 400-square-foot apartment.”

Economist

The Economist spotlights the experience of several MIT graduates who have started their own companies in a piece about teaching entrepreneurship. The Economist notes that MIT alumna Bilikiss Adebiyi-Abiola credits a course she took at MIT with helping her, “gain confidence in pitching to a room full of investors.”

WBUR

In this WBUR segment, Prof. Robert Langer speaks with Karen Weintraub about the challenges of bringing scientific discoveries from an academic lab to the marketplace. “The people who often do the best are the ones that are good at dealing with failure,” says Langer.

NECN

NECN’s Brian Shactman interviews MIT alumnus Sam Shames for this “Tech Check” segment about the Embr Wave, a wristband developed by Shames and others to help the wearer feel cooler or warmer. “There’s actually a piece of technology to make it easier for all of us to get along when it comes to temperature,” declares Schactman.

Mashable

In this video, Mashable spotlights AlterEgo, a wearable device that allows for silent communication between human and machine. The video notes that graduate student Arnav Kapur’s goal in developing the device was to, “create something to let people communicate silently and without being obtrusive to each other.”

Forbes

Forbes contributor Frederick Daso describes how two female MBA students at the MIT Sloan School of Management, Preeti Sampat and Jaida Yang, started their own venture capital firm in an effort to, “bridge the geographical and diversity gaps in the current early-stage investing ecosystem.”

Quartz

Quartz reporter Kwasi Gyamfi Asiedu writes that Sierra Leone has appointed alumnus David Sengeh to serve as the country’s first Chief Innovation Officer. In this new position, reports Asiedu, Sengeh will be focused on jumpstarting Sierra Leone’s “economy by elevating the role of innovation in its day to day dealings.”

CNBC

MIT spinout Ginkgo Bioworks is highlighted on the 2018 CNBC Disruptor 50 list, reports CNBC’s Andrew Zaleski. Zaleski notes that Ginkgo Bioworks, “has developed an automated process for combining genetic parts that has made it the largest designer of printed DNA in the world. That breakthrough has positioned the start-up to change the face of a variety of industries.”

Financial Times

Seb Murray writes for the Financial Times about the increasing importance of business plan competitions, like the MIT Launch competition. Prof. Bill Aulet, managing director of the Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship, stresses that winning a competition doesn’t guarantee success if winners “self-delude themselves into thinking they no longer need to evolve their business plans.”

Associated Press

Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau stressed the importance of investing in artificial intelligence at the MIT Solve conference, reports the Associated Press. Trudeau noted that “leaders also have a responsibility to shape the rules and principles to guide the development of artificial intelligence.”

The Boston Globe

During remarks at the MIT Solve conference, Canada’s prime minister Justin Trudeau highlighted his country’s role in the future of AI. Trudeau believes Canada’s scientific accomplishments and cultural diversity will “ensure that AI systems will be programmed by teams with a broader understanding of human needs,” writes Hiawatha Bray for The Boston Globe.

The Boston Globe

The Boston Globe’s Scott Kirsner discusses the impact of Cambridge biotech company Biogen, cofounded by Prof. Phil Sharp, which celebrates its 40th anniversary this year. “The company has become the biggest oak tree of the Massachusetts biotech sector,” writes Kirsner, “not only because it is still standing after four decades, but because it has dropped a lot of acorns.”