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How Technology Review got its start

January/February 2024

Tech Review has graced coffee tables of MIT alumni for 125 years. Here’s how it all began.

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Features

  • Categorized in MIT News: Cover story

    How Technology Review got its start

    Tech Review has graced coffee tables of MIT alumni for 125 years. Here’s how it all began—and how the fledgling magazine helped rally alumni to oppose a merger with Harvard.

  • Categorized in MIT News: Feature story

    Buy Review

    The ads that helped pay Technology Review’s bills reflect the changing technological landscape of the past 125 years.

  • Categorized in MIT News: Feature story

    Noteworthy

    Reading Class Notes taught me what it means to be an MIT alum.

  • A startup mindset plays a big role in delivering ideas to the world.

  • Students peruse the collection of the List Museum’s Student Lending Art Program.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    Diabetes treatment without injections

    An implantable device contains encapsulated cells that produce insulin, plus a tiny oxygen-producing factory that keeps them healthy.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    A smart pill to track IBD

    The ingestible device combines engineered bacteria with low-power electronics to monitor gut inflammation in real time.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    A five-layer graphene surprise

    Unusual electronic behavior in a specific form of the material could help pack more data into magnetic memory devices.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    Ancient Amazonians created “dark earth”

    The rich soil sustained complex societies and also sequestered large amounts of carbon, a new study suggests.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    A Nobel Prize for Bawendi

    The MIT chemist shares the award for his work on quantum dots.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    Cleaner concrete

    An alum’s cement alternative could significantly reduce carbon dioxide emissions from concrete production.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    Fuel from sunlight

    An MIT system could harness 40% of solar heat to produce clean hydrogen for transportation.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    Sea + sun = drink

    A passive solar device could make desalinated seawater less expensive than tap water.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    Making RNA vaccines more powerful

    A new approach that strengthens the immune response could lead to intranasal vaccines for covid-19 and other diseases.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    Germicidal danger

    While useful for killing pathogens like those that cause covid-19 and the flu, sanitizing ultraviolet lights may cause unwanted chemical reactions that create indoor air pollution.

  • Categorized in MIT News: 77 Mass Ave

    Recent books from the MIT community

    January/February 2024

  • Have an idea for a great MIT story?


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