News News Events All News Stories All news stories Filter by Topics Academics Active Learning Labs Dean REEF Makerspace AI / Machine Learning Allston Campus Alumni Applied Computation Applied Mathematics Applied Physics Awards Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Diversity / Inclusion Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Date Showing 2660 of 2947 results Sep 12, 2009 Robotic grasper grabs worldwide exclusive license Barrett Technology announces agreement to acquire exclusive rights to a polymer-based robotic-hand technology Robotics, Sep 11, 2009 Environmental scientists say China could meet future energy needs by wind alone Study suggests that wind is ecologically and economically practical and could reduce CO2 emissions Sep 4, 2009 Humans and computers connect in Discovery Room New ways to manipulate large data sets envisioned (Harvard Gazette) Sep 2, 2009 Eating by breathing A Harvard biomedical engineer has come up with a new kind of dining experience, one that has the potential to revolutionize how we look at food (Boston Magazine) Aug 26, 2009 From physics to solid-state circuits, faculty member makes his mark Donhee Ham appointed Gordon McKay Professor of Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics; granted tenure Aug 24, 2009 Coming home Q&A with Kit Parker, Associate Professor of Bioengineering and US Army Major (Boston Globe) Aug 21, 2009 Muscular blob suggests new direction for tissue engineering A quivering blob of muscle proteins in a Harvard lab could lead to controllable biomaterials to replace damaged body tissue (New Scientist) Aug 19, 2009 Erez Lieberman-Aiden recognized as among world's top young innovators Technology Review honors graduate student whose interests span everything from the evolution of language to molecular biology Aug 14, 2009 Bioengineer Debra Auguste awarded Young Faculty Award from DARPA Grant will support research on understanding colloid morphogenesis Aug 13, 2009 Research team receives $10M NSF grant to fund the development of small-scale mobile robotic devices Using Nature as inspiration, scientists aim to advance micro-manufacturing, ultra-low-power computing, and multi-agent coordination Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 264 Page 265 Current page 266 Page 267 Page 268 … Page 294 294 Page 295 295 Next page › Last page »
Sep 12, 2009 Robotic grasper grabs worldwide exclusive license Barrett Technology announces agreement to acquire exclusive rights to a polymer-based robotic-hand technology Robotics,
Sep 11, 2009 Environmental scientists say China could meet future energy needs by wind alone Study suggests that wind is ecologically and economically practical and could reduce CO2 emissions
Sep 4, 2009 Humans and computers connect in Discovery Room New ways to manipulate large data sets envisioned (Harvard Gazette)
Sep 2, 2009 Eating by breathing A Harvard biomedical engineer has come up with a new kind of dining experience, one that has the potential to revolutionize how we look at food (Boston Magazine)
Aug 26, 2009 From physics to solid-state circuits, faculty member makes his mark Donhee Ham appointed Gordon McKay Professor of Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics; granted tenure
Aug 24, 2009 Coming home Q&A with Kit Parker, Associate Professor of Bioengineering and US Army Major (Boston Globe)
Aug 21, 2009 Muscular blob suggests new direction for tissue engineering A quivering blob of muscle proteins in a Harvard lab could lead to controllable biomaterials to replace damaged body tissue (New Scientist)
Aug 19, 2009 Erez Lieberman-Aiden recognized as among world's top young innovators Technology Review honors graduate student whose interests span everything from the evolution of language to molecular biology
Aug 14, 2009 Bioengineer Debra Auguste awarded Young Faculty Award from DARPA Grant will support research on understanding colloid morphogenesis
Aug 13, 2009 Research team receives $10M NSF grant to fund the development of small-scale mobile robotic devices Using Nature as inspiration, scientists aim to advance micro-manufacturing, ultra-low-power computing, and multi-agent coordination