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The Tech (newspaper)

Student newspaper of MIT


Summary

Student newspaper of MIT

FieldValue
nameThe Tech
schoolMassachusetts Institute of Technology
imageTheTech-V130N18.png
image_size200px
captionFront page of The Tech (April 9, 2010)
typeStudent newspaper
owner
founder
founded
languageEnglish
headquarters
publishing_cityCambridge, Massachusetts 02139
publishing_countryUnited States
ISSN0148-9607
oclc3406944
websitethetech.com
freethetech.com/issues/

The Tech, first published on November 16, 1881, is the student newspaper at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Editions are published biweekly on Thursdays throughout the academic year and about once a month over the summer. The Tech established an early presence on the World Wide Web, and continues to publish online in tandem with the print edition.

Organization

The Tech is a fully student-managed and predominantly student-written publication, officially recognized as a student activity by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology administration (The Tech, About). The newspaper is largely financially independent, generating most of its revenue from advertising and donations rather than direct university funding, which allows it to maintain editorial autonomy (Wikipedia, The Tech). The publication also has an advisory board composed mainly of former staff members who are MIT alumni, providing guidance and institutional memory for current students (Wikipedia, The Tech).

Web edition

The Tech newspaper was an early publisher on the World Wide Web, first publishing online in 1993. Earlier, StarText, the *Fort Worth Star-Telegram'''s videotex system which displayed newspaper content on computer screens, began in 1982 in Fort Worth, Texas (but did not go on the Internet until 1996). In 1987, the *Middlesex News'' (Framingham, Massachusetts) launched Fred the Computer, a single-line BBS system used to preview the next day's edition and later to organize the newspaper's past film reviews.

Nearly every published issue of The Tech is available online, and most issues are accessible as PDF files, including the first issue, edited by Arthur W. Walker, which was originally printed by Alfred Mudge & Son, Printers, located at 34 School Street in Boston.

Notable alumni

  • Karen W. Arenson – education writer for The New York Times
  • Wesley Chan – prominent venture capitalist and Google Analytics and Google Voice founder
  • Noam Chomsky – father of modern linguistics - world-wide author and lecturer on world politics
  • Lynn Yamada Davis – known as “Lynja”; celebrity chef and TikToker
  • Simson L. Garfinkel – writer for Technology Review, Wired, and the Boston Globe
  • James R. Killian, Jr. – 10th president of MIT
  • Steve Kirsch – entrepreneur and philanthropist
  • Harry Ward Leonard – electrical engineer and inventor
  • Arthur Dehon Little – founded the consulting company Arthur D. Little and was instrumental in developing chemical engineering at MIT
  • Patrick Joseph McGovern, Jr. – chairman and founder of International Data Group (IDG)
  • Paul Schindler - American journalist known for being the software reviewer on the popular television program Computer Chronicles
  • Larry Stark (pseudonym Charles Foster Ford) – Boston theater critic who started writing for The Tech in the years 1962-64
  • Len Tower Jr. – founding board member of the Free Software Foundation, and activist with the GNU Project

References

References

  1. Kristina Grifantini, [https://www.technologyreview.com/s/410362/the-tech-then-and-now/ "The Tech, Then and Now"], ''[[MIT Technology Review]]'', June 23, 2008.
  2. "The Tech".
  3. (2007). "Web 2.0: New Tools, New Schools". ISTE.
  4. (2011). "Nightwork: A History of Hacks and Pranks at MIT". MIT Press.
  5. "The Tech - Archives". Tech.mit.edu.
  6. [http://tech.mit.edu/V1/PDF/N1.pdf The Tech, Vol 1, No 1] {{webarchive. link. (June 1, 2010)
  7. Matys, Lorraine. (January 6, 1977). "Newspaper gets new chief". The Record.
  8. (June 24, 2011). "Stark's review of Arthur Kopit's ''Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Momma's Hung You in the Closet, and I'm Feeling So Sad''".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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