3Q: Muriel Médard on the world-altering rise of 5G
“The reason 5G is so different is that what exactly it will look like is still up in the air. Everyone agrees the phrase is a bit of a catch-all.”
“The reason 5G is so different is that what exactly it will look like is still up in the air. Everyone agrees the phrase is a bit of a catch-all.”
Graduate students receive J-WAFS fellowships to support research focused on improving water access for rural as well as urban communities.
MIT engineers develop a way to triple the survival time for swimmers in wetsuits.
Institute Professor chosen to help forge connections and identify opportunities for sustained international cooperation.
Award honors top collegiate inventors in the United States.
Eleven principal investigators from six MIT departments will receive grants totaling over $1.3 million, overhead free, for research on food and water challenges.
At annual event, 10 teams split $92,500 in prize money for designing innovations that improve lives worldwide.
Katabi receives prestigious honor and $250,000 cash prize for her contributions to wireless systems.
Dennis Orgill SM ’80, PhD ’83 applies mechanical engineering principles to the operating room.
Providing training and resources, MakerHealth helps nurses and doctors hack medical equipment to improve patient care.
Putting limits on foreign students or technical publications would be counterproductive, write Deutch and Condoleezza Rice.
With its best showing yet in a three-year history, the MIT Energy Hackathon fostered innovation with technological advancement from students around the world.
Fifteen student teams nationwide address local problems through invention.
Teams developing materials solutions for ships and buildings split second and third prizes.
The TLO serves to protect and invest in the inventions created by MIT researchers.