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MIT in the Media
The following news clips about MIT, updated on a regular basis, are just a partial selection of our most recent media coverage.
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Bloomberg Businessweek,
December 10, 2011
"A paper by a prominent team of economists says the tax rate for top U.S. earners could be hiked to 83 percent without hurting anyone but the 'mega rich.'”
CNN Money,
December 9, 2011
"Realizing full benefits from a smart grid ultimately means controlling devices in customers’ homes, businesses, and other facilities. But who should exercise that control, and how?"
CNN Money,
December 9, 2011
"The aging U.S. population is a potential gold mine for entrepreneurs who can build technologies to help this huge demographic remain active and stay in their homes as long as possible."
The Wall Street Journal,
December 9, 2011
"Worried that you won’t know what to do with yourself in retirement?"
The Economist,
December 9, 2011
"Additive manufacturing, then, is changing not only how things are made, but what is made."
Scientific American,
December 8, 2011
"On Monday, MIT released the Future of the Electric Grid after a two year study on the current state and future needs of this critical infrastructure."
The Chicago Tribune,
December 7, 2011
"That's not to say that forming a habit is easy. If it were, we would all be eating our green vegetables, exercising regularly and flossing with great abandon."
The Guardian,
December 7, 2011
"An important aspect of OCW (MIT's OpenCourseWare) is that it forces a discussion of intellectual property and the mission of the university in the dissemination of knowledge with a bit of urgency."
The Boston Globe,
December 8, 2011
"Clad in glass, terra cotta, and granite, the complex will also include retail shops to fill in a large hole in the commercial strip along Massachusetts Avenue, as well as a 1.35-acre park adjacent to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology."
Forbes,
December 7, 2011
"Quantum computing ideas have also influenced chemistry and physics: Several research groups have used quantum-computing analogies to explain the remarkable light-harvesting efficiency of photosynthetic molecules in plants, and to suggest how solar panels might be designed with similar efficiencies." -MIT's Scott Aaronson
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