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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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Wired,
November 2, 2011
"Researchers have discovered an underworld of genetic exchange among bacteria, one more vast than previously imagined."
The Huffington Post,
November 1, 2011
"Businesses are getting hip to blogging and colleges in particular are starting to realize the benefits."
Popular Science,
November 1, 2011
"Bacteria swap genetic information as readily as people can share digital data — there are no cultural, political or systemic boundaries, according to a new study."
NPR- On Point with Tom Ashbrook,
November 1, 2011
"Ever since machines came on the scene, humans worried they would steal their jobs. They did. But humans adapted."
The Boston Globe,
November 1, 2011
"The MIT Endicott House in Dedham recently eliminated chemical sanitizers and detergents from its housekeeping and food services."
Bloomberg,
November 1, 2011
"Bob Langer may be the last, best hope for aging rockers. Just ask Roger Daltrey, The Who's lead singer."
Boston Herald,
November 1, 2011
"The eggheads at the MIT Sloan School of Management and the brainiacs at Harvard Business School were no match for the IBM Watson supercomputer in a local game of Jeopardy! against the machine yesterday."
NPR's On Point with Tom Ashbrook,
October 31, 2011
"Late at night, while you’re asleep, guys with no PhDs sit around trying to figure out the mysteries of the universe."
Russia- Beyond the Headlines,
October 31, 2011
"The Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (SIST) recently announced that it’s first president will be MIT professor Edward Crawley."
Popular Science,
October 31, 2011
"In 2011 the volume of available data is predicted to continue along its exponential growth curve to 1.8 zettabytes. (A zettabyte is a trillion gigabytes; that’s a 1 with 21 zeros trailing behind it.)"
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