Making sense of all things data
Abel Sanchez helps industries and executives shift their operations in order to make sense of their data and use it to help their bottom lines.
Abel Sanchez helps industries and executives shift their operations in order to make sense of their data and use it to help their bottom lines.
Jeff Wilke SM '93, former CEO of Amazon’s Worldwide Consumer business, brings his LGO playbook to his new mission of revitalizing manufacturing in the U.S.
Developed at MIT, D2X is a new tool that makes it easy to debug any domain-specific programming language.
Codon compiles Python code to run more efficiently and effectively while allowing for customization and adaptation to various domains.
The Advanced Computing Users Survey, sampling sentiments from 120 top-tier universities, national labs, federal agencies, and private firms, finds the decline in America’s advanced computing lead spans many areas.
Located in the new MIT Welcome Center in Building E38, the installation expresses the dynamic, vibrant culture of MIT through the medium of programmable light.
Cloud security and video forensics software have been transitioned to end users.
Dan Huttenlocher is a professor of electrical engineering and computer science and the inaugural dean at MIT Schwarzman College of Computing.
Digital Credentials Consortium’s new report explores barriers to adoption.
Digital twins to expand training capabilities through virtual reality.
Photonics community gathers to further develop open-source software for electromagnetic simulations spanning a broad range of applications.
With FabO, PhD student Dishita Turakhia wants to empower students to learn digital fabrication by making video game objects and characters come alive.
Researchers created Exo for writing high-performance code on hardware accelerators.
MIT scientists unveil the first open-source simulation engine capable of constructing realistic environments for deployable training and testing of autonomous vehicles.
The reshaped series will integrate a wide range of disciplines — from mathematics to critical race theory, from software art to queer theory — to understand the social and cultural implications of software.