Word: technologyã
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...would be happy to give advice to the new dean but wants to give him free reign with SEAS.Venky will remain a professor at the College, and is working with several colleagues to develop a new concentration that will “show the broader interplay between science and technology??.He will also spend time at either the Harvard Kennedy School or the Business School, writing papers about the issues related with management of engineering schools and research institutes, which he said “require a different kind of culture and mindset.”Venky...
...Venky will remain a professor at the College, and is working with several colleagues to develop a new concentration that will “show the broader interplay between science and technology?...
...component of an officer’s duties, which, according to Chaney, Leonidas does not have quite right.And for the cadets of the Paul Revere battalion—a division of the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) that includes students from Harvard, Tufts, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology??getting it right is serious business. These students must master the kind of discipline necessary to lead soldiers—some many years their senior—in combat. It’s something Leonidas was bred to do. For these cadets, it takes a different kind of instruction...
...they leave details to the imagination.But will high defi nition really addanything to a poorly-lit money shot thatwas fi lmed using decrepit equipment?And what about highbrow cinema? Will“Casablanca”—a visually gorgeous moviethat was made without the benefi t ofmodern technology??be improved byBlu-ray technology?Michael Curtiz’s directing, IngridBergman’s vulnerability, Bogey’s worldwearyone-liners—these were what made“Casablanca” great, not a pedantic obsessionwith visual detail. The profi t motivewas what fueled the creation...
...subsidies and single-ply toilet paper—HUDS’ latest effort has not escaped criticism. The new technology deserves few brownie points, but students ought not overlook their good fortune in having a dining service that actually cares—and outclasses any other college caterer. The technology??s extravagance alone calls HUDS’ judgment into question—its estimated $40,000 price tag (HUDS declined to provide any specific figures) hardly justifies the slim margin of convenience it may provide. Dish labels already include the most salient food information, from serving size...