How MIT's all-women leadership team plans to change science for the better
WBUR sat down with MIT's new President Sally Kornbluth, along with MIT Provost Cynthia Barnhart and Chancellor Melissa Nobles.
WBUR sat down with MIT's new President Sally Kornbluth, along with MIT Provost Cynthia Barnhart and Chancellor Melissa Nobles.
When companies are growing really fast — like when revenue is shooting up 20 percent or 30 percent a year — nobody cares about profits.
According to Peter Weill the growing scope of the CIO role means they need to display more agility than ever before.
"... this could change the game of search entirely, which is core to Google's business."
"I think, increasingly, we're going to be seeing generative A.I. used for financial forecasts and scenario generation."
"It would take about 20 years before we got to 90 percent electric. That's just too long to meet our climate goals."
"Given the current labor market, people feel they can find other jobs which have better conditions and are willing to take the risk of leaving."
"All SPACs aren't bad, but a lot of them were bad because they should never have been public to begin with."
When she’s not analyzing data about her favorite biomolecule, senior Sherry Nyeo focuses on improving the undergraduate experience at MIT.
Is political polarization causing companies to hide their climate commitments? Sustainability Initiative Director Jason Jay outlines what this means for making progress on corporate climate action.