view in browser
MIT Logo
March 22, 2024
Greetings! Here’s the latest from the MIT community.
 
Have feedback to share? Email mitdailyeditor@mit.edu.
Chair Challenge
Three students sit in unique wood chairs against a white background
Students in MIT course 4.500 (Design Computation) create their own chairs using computational tools like 3D modeling, rendering, and animation, while carefully considering the chair user’s experience. “A chair is the best product for learning design,” says Professor Larry Sass. 🪑
Top Headlines
A new way to help business leaders visualize climate actions
The free En-ROADS simulator uses climate data and modeling to visualize the impact of environmental policies and industry actions (or inactions) through 2100.
MIT Heat Island
AI generates high-quality images 30 times faster in a single step
A novel method makes tools like Stable Diffusion and DALL-E-3 faster by simplifying the image-generating process to a single step while maintaining or enhancing image quality.
MIT Heat Island
MIT announces financial aid and tuition rates for the 2024–25 academic year
Financial aid increased, more than offsetting a 3.75 percent increase in tuition.
MIT Heat Island
#ThisisMIT
Instagram photo of the outside of a stone and glass building with ivy on the ground and an abstract bronze sculpture nearby on a sunny day. Text via @mitscience: Friday photo dump
Follow @mitscience on Instagram
In the Media
A nuts-and-bolts guide to Boston’s AI revolution // Boston Magazine
Boston Magazine spotlights MIT’s leading role in the AI revolution in Greater Boston. In the 1960s, researchers at what is now MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab (CSAIL) led “groundbreaking machine-learning projects such as the creation of Eliza, a psychotherapy-based computer program that could process languages and establish emotional connections with users (a primordial chatbot, essentially).”
Gigantic new aircraft design aims to create the largest plane ever to fly // CNN
Radia, an energy startup founded by Mark Lundstrom ’91, SM ’93, MBA ’93, has developed the Windrunner, an airplane designed to deliver 300-foot-blades directly to wind farms. In an effort to “help the world meet its decarbonization targets, it’ll use sustainable aviation fuel and need only a simple packed-dirt or gravel runway to land on.”
This edition of the MIT Daily was brought to you by office hours with Addie. 🐶

Thanks for reading, and have a relaxing weekend!

—MIT News
Forward This Email Subscribe