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  2. Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachusetts_Institute_of...

    Act to Incorporate the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Acts of 1861, Chapter 183 Stereographic card showing an MIT mechanical drafting studio, 19th century (photo by E. L. Allen, left/right inverted) Original Rogers Building, Back Bay, Boston, c. 1901 In 1859, a proposal was submitted to the Massachusetts General Court to use newly filled lands in Back Bay, Boston for a "Conservatory of ...

  3. MIT License - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIT_license

    The MIT No Attribution License, a variation of the MIT License, has the identifier MIT-0 in the SPDX License List. A request for legacy approval to the Open Source Initiative was filed on May 15, 2020, which led to a formal approval on August 5, 2020. By doing so, it forms a public-domain-equivalent license, the same way as BSD Zero Clause.

  4. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology occupies a 168-acre (68 ha) tract in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. The campus spans approximately one mile (1.6 km) of the north side of the Charles River basin directly opposite the Back Bay neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts . The campus includes dozens of buildings representing diverse ...

  5. Beautiful Soup (HTML parser) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beautiful_Soup_(HTML_parser)

    Beautiful Soup represents parsed data as a tree which can be searched and iterated over with ordinary Python loops. Code example. The example below uses the Python standard library's urllib to load Wikipedia's main page, then uses Beautiful Soup to parse the document and search for all links within.

  6. Spyder (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spyder_(software)

    Spyder (software) Spyder is an open-source cross-platform integrated development environment (IDE) for scientific programming in the Python language. Spyder integrates with a number of prominent packages in the scientific Python stack, including NumPy, SciPy, Matplotlib, pandas, IPython, SymPy and Cython, as well as other open-source software.

  7. Python (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_(programming_language)

    Design philosophy and features. Python is a multi-paradigm programming language. Object-oriented programming and structured programming are fully supported, and many of their features support functional programming and aspect-oriented programming (including metaprogramming [69] and metaobjects ). [70]

  8. Scratch (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scratch_(programming_language)

    Scratch is used as the introductory language because the creation of interesting programs is relatively easy, and skills learned can be applied to other programming languages such as Python and Java. Scratch is not exclusively for creating games. With the provided visuals, programmers can create animations, text, stories, music, and more.

  9. Internet of things - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_of_things

    The term "Internet of things" was coined independently by Kevin Ashton of Procter & Gamble, later of MIT's Auto-ID Center, in 1999, though he prefers the phrase "Internet for things". At that point, he viewed radio-frequency identification (RFID) as essential to the Internet of things, [24] which would allow computers to manage all individual ...