... Anne-Marie Bronlund, of Wellesley, on Tuesday, December 2, 2008. She has been a resident of Wellesley since 1963. Born on December 21, 1928 in Pittsfield, MA, she was the daughter of the late Louis R. and Marguerite (Guillaume) Bronlund. 1951 she graduate...
...mechanics but the second part of the system: the one time pad. Today, Seth Lloyd and colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, publish a way of guaranteeing security over a quantum channel without having to fall back on a one time...
...at a nursing home in Windsor Locks, Conn. His death was confirmed by Suzanne Corkin, a neuroscientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who had worked closely with him for decades. Henry Molaison was 82. From the age of 27, when he embarked on...
... Fedora 10, codenamed Cambridge, was released last month with lots of hot new features. The developers have already started planning the next release and have revealed the schedule. The final release of Fedora 11 is planned for the end of May. Leading up t...
... PORTLAND, Ore. MIT researchers said they have succeeded in using radio waves to mix the 1 million-degree C plasma at its Alcator C-Mod fusion reactor. While a host of obstacles remain for bringing commercial fusion reactors online, the ability to use radi...
...very much the new kid on Irish distilling's block, Cooley's path to glory started way back in 1971, in a bar in Massachusetts. The Plough and the Stars in Cambridge now carries a plaque to the effect that it was here Willie McCarter - then a student at MIT...
... Blake Stacey is a physics boffin who fooled MIT into giving him a degree and has been wandering the Earth ever since. Randall Munroe has been trying to understand the truth of the world by counting Google hits: "Obama is a replicant" - 1 (Email is req...
...throughout the genome2. The researchers then analysed the RNA made by those polymerases. Meanwhile, Phillip Sharp of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge and his colleagues focused on RNAs produced near the beginning of genes that code for...
...at one time." Acknowledgments for the Hubble image include C. Bailyn and W. van Altena of Yale University, W. Lewin of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and A. Sarajedini of the University of Florida. Wow, It appears we are not alone. ...
... There's obviously something appealing about ending the lawsuits and letting people file share freely. But, it's quite problematic to add an effective "tax" when none is necessary. Plenty of other business models, such as those we've outlined here and else...