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This list of Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni includes students who studied as undergraduates or graduate students at MIT's School of Engineering; School of Science; MIT Sloan School of Management; School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences; School of Architecture and Planning; or Whitaker College of Health Sciences. Since there are more than 120,000 alumni (living and deceased), this listing cannot be comprehensive. Instead, this article summarizes some of the more notable MIT alumni, with some indication of the reasons they are notable in the world at large. All MIT degrees are earned through academic achievement, in that MIT has never awarded honorary degrees in any form.[1]
The MIT Alumni Association defines eligibility for membership as follows:[2]
The following persons are Alumni/ae Members of the Association: All persons who have received a degree from the Institute; and All persons who have been registered as students in a degree-granting program at the Institute for (i) at least one full term in any undergraduate class which has already graduated; or (ii) for at least two full terms as graduate students.
As of April 2011, the MIT Office of the Provost says that 76 Nobel awardees had or currently have a formal connection to MIT.[28] Of this group, 29 have earned MIT degrees (MIT has never awarded honorary degrees in any form).[1]
MIT's founder,
Inventors: Evans, Marc A. (San Jose, CA, US) Killian, Earl A. (Los Altos Hills, CA, US) Konas, Pavlos (Mountain View, CA, US)
Earl Killian's early work was in the software industry on networking, compilers, operating systems, and binary translation. In the last sixteen years, he has put his system software experience to work in computer architecture, designing instruction-set architectures, pipelines and performance models for microprocessors. As MIPS's Director of Architecture, he designed the MIPS III 64-bit instruction-set extension, and led the work on the R4000 microarchitecture. He was a cofounder of QED, which created the R4600 and R5000 MIPS processors. Most recently he was chief architect at Tensilica working on configurable/extensible processors.
Nobel Prize in Literature, Physics, Nobel Prize, Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Nobel Peace Prize
YouTube, Alphabet Inc., Android (operating system), Software, Apple Inc.
Chemistry, Nobel Prize in Literature, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Nobel Prize, Nobel Prize in Physics
Manhattan Project, California Institute of Technology, Nanotechnology, Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Medicine, Nobel Prize, United States, Dna, Chromosome
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, List of Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty, List of Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni, MIT Media Lab, MIT Press
Boston University, Duke University, Harvard University, Brown University, Vanderbilt University
California, San Francisco, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts, Stanford University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT Media Lab, MIT Press, Lemelson–MIT Prize, Massachusetts Institute of Technology academics
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology academics, DSpace, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology academ...