Justin Solomon appointed associate dean of engineering education
MIT faculty member in electrical engineering and computer science to focus on innovation in engineering education and new pedagogical approaches.
QuData·

MIT researchers have developed MIGHTY, an open-source system that enables autonomous drones to navigate dangerous environments with greater speed and precision. Combining LiDAR, onboard AI, and advanced trajectory planning, MIGHTY allows drones to dodge obstacles in milliseconds while maintaining smooth flight.
Read full articleMIT faculty member in electrical engineering and computer science to focus on innovation in engineering education and new pedagogical approaches.
AI-driven physical control of human actions raises ethical and regulatory challenges, necessitating new frameworks for safety and oversight. The post MIT students build a device that lets Claude AI control your hand with electric pulses appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Meet the man who wants Ukraine to use autonomous drones that could decide on their own to use lethal force.
The incident underscores vulnerabilities in critical infrastructure, potentially impacting regional stability, energy security, and global markets. The post UAE Defense Ministry intercepts drones targeting Barakah nuclear plant appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Rising drone threats in the Gulf could destabilize energy markets and impact global inflation, affecting central bank policies and crypto hubs. The post UAE defense ministry intercepts two drones as one strikes power generator near nuclear plant appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Most of the interesting companies that caught our eye in the past month were working on problems in the physical world, often far from the glow of a laptop screen. They include a supplier of cell-based milk, a startup that bills itself as the operating system for modern law firms, and a defense tech startup that makes containerized manufacturing platforms for drones and other equipment near the battlefield.
The prestigious fellowship funds graduate studies at Stanford University.
MIT’s Sinan Aral has the data . . . and a warning. Outsourcing creativity to AI may be the most rational move leaders make, and the most dangerous one.