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Job title of the future: metaverse lawyer

Madaline Zannes, IRL.COURTESY OF MADALINE ZANNES Qualifications needed: Technically, none; the metaverse isn’t an actual juris­diction. There’s no “metaverse law,” and it’s not an area that lawyers can be licensed in—at least... Read more »

The future is disabled

“Normal” leaves a lot of people out, and it isn’t, by itself, an inherent good. In this issue of MIT Technology Review, you’ll read important stories of ongoing issues around accessibility. Lorena... Read more »

Play Online Slot Machines that have High Volatility and Win

This article will assist you in beating the odds of 33 winning on slot machines. I will be discussing the best ways to make real money on slot machines, and how to... Read more »

How to Uninstall Avast Secure Internet browser

Many individuals that https://teksquad.us/6-valuable-tips-on-how-to-secure-confidential-information-outside-your-office/ employ antivirus software from Avast discover that their computer may be rerouted to an Avast Secure Web browser installation webpage after frequent updates. This is not a problem... Read more »

Becoming superheroes, together

We must understand systemic inequalities so we can understand why and how to correct them. From both stories, we see how exclusion is less productive than inclusion. Leaving up barriers to women’s... Read more »

A simple urine test for low-cost cancer diagnosis

A nanoparticle sensor developed by Professor Sangeeta Bhatia, SM ’93, PhD ’97, and colleagues including former MIT postdoc Liangliang Hao, now an assistant professor at Boston University, could make it possible to detect and... Read more »

A silky solution to seed counterfeiting

Using drop casting, in which a drop of liquid containing a suspension of the desired materials is deposited on a surface, dean of engineering Anantha Chandrakasan and his colleagues produced tags less... Read more »

Patches to the rescue

In tests, 26 times more of a drug passed through pig skin than was possible without ultrasonic assistance. Meanwhile, researchers led by Ana Jaklenec and Institute Professor Robert Langer, ScD ’74, of... Read more »

A study that really holds water

Video of water spreading through the specialized sandgrouse feathers, under magnification, shows the uncoiling and spreading of the feather’s barbules as they become wet. MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY, HARVARD UNIVERSITY Using scanning electron microscopy,... Read more »

Nanoparticles target lung disease

After one dose of the particles was administered to the lab mice, the mRNA made it into about 40% of the epithelial cells, which form most of the lung lining. Three doses... Read more »