Slice in Review: Our 13 Most Popular Posts of 2013
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As in years passed, Slice of MIT readers enjoyed seeing MIT recognized as a top institution but they also loved the Institute's unique and curious side, including stories on an alumnus super hero, flying reindeer, a stolen cannon, and a tiny solar-powered houseboat.
Do you have a favorite MIT story from 2013? Let us know in the comments below or on Facebook or Twitter.
- After PRISM, Is Too Much Anonymity Possible? Governments have mixed feelings about Tor, software developed by Roger Dingledine ’00, SM ’00.
- Life of Pi Sequel to be Filmed at MIT: The film, titled Life of Pi², focusess on a grad student at a post-apocalyptic MIT.
- Secrets to the Caltech Cannon Heist Revealed: Members of the Howe & Ser Moving Company spoke publicly about the 2006 hack.
- Report Details MIT’s Involvement in Aaron Swartz Case: The 182-page report finds no wrong-doing on the part of MIT.
- Who is Iron Man? A boston.com blog tracks down details of Tony Stark’s time at MIT in the mid-80s.
- Rankings Craze: MIT Scores High: MIT claimed the top spot for an undergraduate engineering program at a doctoral institution.
- Hacked! Ender’s Game Crash-Lands at MIT: Fans of the legendary science fiction book series took over Lobby 7 and the front of Bldg. 10.
- Memristors—Circuit to Flip the Hardware Industry? You know a technology has arrived when it pops up on a brass rat.
- A Tiny House Makes Alum’s Big Dream Come True: Claude von Roesgen '79 found the perfect summer lake home: a tiny house on a pontoon boat.
- Is MIT the Most Romantic Place on Earth? It might be—alums shared their Institute love stories.
- Jeopardy Smackdown: MIT Sophomore Enters College Championship Finals: Trevor Walker '15 won the quarter-final and semi-final on Jeopardy’s college edition.
- The Streak Continues—MIT’s Grad Engineering Program again Tops Rankings: MIT's graduate program in engineering is still the nation's best.
- Are Santa’s Reindeer Used for Propulsion or Navigation? MIT researchers scientifically answer how Santa's sleigh really flies.