A whole new world of learning via MIT OpenCourseWare videos
“I get the chance to not only watch the future happen, but I can actually be a part of it and create it,” says Ugandan entrepreneur Emmanuel Kasigazi.
“I get the chance to not only watch the future happen, but I can actually be a part of it and create it,” says Ugandan entrepreneur Emmanuel Kasigazi.
Mayor’s youth employment program brought local high schoolers to MIT this summer.
Researchers developed a new system that can make computer programs run faster, while guaranteeing accuracy.
Thousands of children participate in MIT-developed artificial intelligence curriculum.
To put global climate modeling at the fingertips of local decision-makers, some scientists think it’s time to rethink the system from scratch.
The programs are designed to foster an understanding of how artificial intelligence technologies work, including their social implications.
Empowering a global community of learners in displacement.
Twist is an MIT-developed programming language that can describe and verify which pieces of data are entangled to prevent bugs in a quantum program.
MIT computer scientists and mathematicians offer an introductory computing and career-readiness program for incarcerated women in New England.
A new “common-sense” approach to computer vision enables artificial intelligence that interprets scenes more accurately than other systems do.
Senior Shardul Chiplunkar aims to be a translator between the tech world and the rest of society.
Artificial intelligence is top-of-mind as Governor Baker, President Reif encourage students to “see yourself in STEM.”
Probabilistic programming language allows for fast, error-free answers to hard AI problems, including fairness.
Weekend robotics workshops help middle and high school girls dispel “computing phobia.”
The new version of the popular free coding platform builds on a robust community of kid coders.