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July/August 2026

The Engineering issue

Go big or go home. That may be true—sometimes. But, just as often, solving engineering challenges means thinking small. From the tiny transistors powering the AI boom to the machines digging the world’s longest tunnels, human ingenuity is tackling problems at every scale. Plus: A fresh spin on air conditioning, stratospheric cell service, and more.

Hacking the atmosphere: Geoengineering gets a reality check

Researchers are starting to explore the tools and systems we need to develop to cool down the planet.

Want to get a data center online quickly? Give it some flex.

As the data-center boom puts pressure on the grid, some companies say the answer isn’t just more power plants but software that dials down centers’ energy-guzzling ways when demand spikes.

The search for dark matter has been blown wide open

After decades of hunting, physicists still don’t know what makes up most of the universe’s matter. Now they need to cast a wider net.

Inside the world’s deepest and longest subsea road tunnel

Norway’s Rogfast is an exceptional engineering feat, opening a route for drivers deep below the North Sea. We went down to see it.

Collection

A new US phone network for Christians aims to block porn and gender-related content

Launching next week on T-Mobile's network, the cell plan takes a nuclear approach to online safety.

A startup claims it broke through a bottleneck that’s holding back LLMs

Subquadratic has now shared more details about its new model. But some are still skeptical.

Musk v. Altman week 1: Elon Musk says he was duped, warns AI could kill us all, and admits that xAI distills OpenAI’s models

Musk kept his cool, and OpenAI’s lawyer bulldozed him with piercing questions about his motivations for suing the company.

China has approved the world’s first invasive brain-computer chip—here’s what’s next

The country wants to become a global leader in brain implants. Strong government support is expected to help accelerate that process.

A reality check on the AI jobs hysteria

What do the numbers really say about the impact of artificial intelligence on the labor market? The answer might surprise you.

Anthropic’s Code with Claude showed off coding’s future—whether you like it or not

As tools like Claude Code get better, more and more developers are happy to hand off coding tasks to them. The way software gets built has changed for good.

The balcony solar boom is coming to the US

Plug-in panels are getting popular—how do we make sure they’re safe?

AI chatbots are giving out people’s real phone numbers

People report that their personal contact info was surfaced by Google AI—and there’s apparently no easy way to prevent it. 

Three things in AI to watch, according to a Nobel-winning economist

Daron Acemoglu is more cautious than most about predictions of a jobs apocalypse. Here’s what’s worrying him instead.

Inside interoception: The hidden sense of how you feel inside

Researchers are decoding how signals move between body and brain, with implications for how we understand and treat conditions from obesity to anxiety.

Collection

MIT Technology Review’s What’s Next series looks across industries, trends, and technologies to give you a first look at the future.

What’s next for IVF

Automation, AI, and screening technologies are already transforming reproductive medicine.

What’s next for AI in 2026

Our AI writers make their big bets for the coming year—here are five hot trends to watch.

What’s next for carbon removal?

Companies have still drawn down only enough CO2 to cancel out a few hours of US emissions. Here’s what it will take to really scale up the sector.

What’s next for AlphaFold: A conversation with a Google DeepMind Nobel laureate

“I’ll be shocked if we don’t see more and more LLM impact on science,” says John Jumper.

What’s next for AI and math

The last year has seen rapid progress in the ability of large language models to tackle math at high school level and beyond. Is AI closing in on human mathematicians?

What’s next for nuclear power

Global shifts, advancing tech, and data center demand: Here’s what’s coming in 2025 and beyond.

What’s next for our privacy?

The US still has no federal privacy law. But recent enforcement actions against data brokers may offer some new protections for Americans’ personal information.

Why EVs are (mostly) set for solid growth in 2025

What happens in the US, however, will depend a lot on the incoming Trump administration.

What’s next for NASA’s giant moon rocket?

The Space Launch System is facing fresh calls for cancellation, but it still has a key role to play in NASA’s return to the moon.

What’s next for drones

Police drones, rapid deliveries of blood, tech-friendly regulations, and autonomous weapons are all signs that drone technology is changing quickly.

Explainers

Let our writers untangle the complex, messy world of technology to help you understand what’s coming next in our popular explainer series.

Inside interoception: The hidden sense of how you feel inside

Researchers are decoding how signals move between body and brain, with implications for how we understand and treat conditions from obesity to anxiety.

What do new nuclear reactors mean for waste?

New designs mean new strategies for managing spent fuel.

Peptides are everywhere. Here’s what you need to know.

The compounds have exploded in popularity, but big questions about safety and effectiveness are still unresolved.

This is the most misunderstood graph in AI

To some, METR’s “time horizon plot” indicates that AI utopia—or apocalypse—is close at hand. The truth is more complicated.

LLMs contain a LOT of parameters. But what’s a parameter?

They’re the mysterious numbers that make your favorite AI models tick. What are they and what do they do?

What we still don’t know about weight-loss drugs

Questions surround their effects on brain health, pregnancy or long-term use.

How do our bodies remember?

The more we move, the more our muscle cells begin to make a memory of that exercise.

Trump is pushing leucovorin as a treatment for autism. What is it?

The president also blamed the painkiller Tylenol for autism, but the evidence doesn’t stack up at all.

Mar/Apr 2026

All the latest from MIT Alumni News, the alumni magazine of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

A boost for manufacturing

For years, Suzanne Berger has been a leading advocate for US industry. Now she’s co-directing MIT’s Initiative for New Manufacturing, a platform to help the country make more goods.

Using big data for good

In pet genetics, cancer research, and beyond, Charlie Lieu, MBA ’05, SM ’05, has spent her career harnessing massive data sets to make the world better for everyone.

A retinal reboot for amblyopia

Anesthetizing the retina of a “lazy” eye for just two days can restore vision in mice.

Innovation on the move

MIT alumni are helping build a better MBTA—reshaping route planning, improving service, and supporting the workforce that keeps Greater Boston connected.

A Q&A with RankoBot

Ranko Bon, PhD ’75, has posted five decades of his journal entries online. Now anyone can “converse” with him through a chatbot based on his writing. We had a go.

A I-designed proteins may help spot cancer

Nanoparticles coated with the molecular sensors could be used in at-home diagnostics.

Just pull a string to turn these tile patterns into useful 3D structures

Inspired by the Japanese art of kirigami, an MIT team has designed a technique that could transform flat panels into medical devices, habitats, and other objects without the use of tools.

Vine-inspired robot fingers can reach out and grab someone

The new design could be adapted to sort warehouse products, unload heavy cargo, or help lift patients out of bed.

A new way to rejuvenate the immune system

Stimulating the liver to generate signals normally produced by the thymus can reverse age-related declines in T-cell populations.

March/April 2026

MIT Alumni News

Read the whole issue of MIT Alumni News, the alumni magazine of Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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