MIT Media Lab Tightens Its Belt 212
Forbes Magazine has this story about the MIT Media Laboratory's current "burn rate" problem. It seems that the Media Lab is feeling the same big draft at its posterior that dot-com companies felt last year after years of go-go growth and seemingly unlimited funding. The Media Lab is particularly sensitive to this downturn due to its heavy reliance on corporate sponsorship, as well as its fondness for unconventional, even eccentric, research. Items that will no longer receive funding according to a January 5th internal E-mail from the Lab's Executive Director Walter Bender: cellular telephones, first-class air travel, food at internal Lab meetings, and furniture. Other more serious cutbacks for the Lab include layoffs for 29 staff members and reduced funding for students, including salaries for "Undergraduate Research Opportunities" (UROP) positions. The Media Lab had previously paid such positions $8.75 and up in order to remain competitive with industry offers that even not-yet-graduated students were receiving.
Must Be A Typo... (Score:2, Funny)
$8.75 per? Hour? Day? Year?
Perhaps this submission should have been polished a bit before being unleashed on the unsuspecting (and fact-hungry) public.
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:2, Informative)
Opportunities Program appointment at MIT. It's always seemed
rather low to me. If you have a professor paying for your UROP appointment,
then he can give you more money, and I think a lot of profs will do that.
Keep in mind that this is undergrad student pay, and can be done during
the term. Plus you get to work with researchers, etc etc.
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:2, Funny)
They paid $8.75. And they paid that much to remain competitive. Damn those slashdot editors for daring to think their readers were smart enough to figure it out for themselves.
Or maybe, just maybe, the phrase '$8.75 per hour' in the story was supposed to be a clue.
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:1)
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:2)
I believe that there is also some reduction in fees which is actually far more valuable.
The main reason the students do UROPs however is that it is a good way to get experience with a research group if you want to do a Masters or Doctorate.
OK so you might get paid as much sorting mail or the like, but doing a Media Lab UROP looks much better on your CV.
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:1)
Cahones.
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:1)
Still, it is possible for those who have not graduated to get contracting work with IT companies for upwards of $40 to $50 an hour, but that depends on skill level and (more importantly) having the right connections.
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:2, Interesting)
The AI lab and Media lab were usually paying in the $8.50-9 range, which back in 92 before the boom we thought was a decent salary.
Then of course we took one look at off-campus jobs, as the boom started, and realized we could consult for $50/hr as freshmen to some mom-and-pop business that wanted to connect to that internet thing.
eric
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:1)
RTFA!
correction (Score:1)
that would obviously be hour
Re:Must Be A Typo... (Score:1)
undergraduate pay is prevailing minimum wage (Score:2)
Since student's families are paying around $35K a year to go to MIT, hey are paying about $20 / hour (based on MITs own calculation of a 45-hour study week) for the privilege of going to MIT. To get some back, is another privelege.
Wow. (Score:4, Funny)
Limo to and from the airport - $400.
Building designed by I.M. Pei - $4,000,000.
Inventing the "smart" potholder - priceless
OH NO! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:OH NO! (Score:1)
Re:OH NO! (Score:3, Funny)
No ... but it might mean less clean laundry [mit.edu] [mit.edu] (Same dorm.... gosh, living there was fun :-)
Re:OH NO! (Score:1)
$8.75 (Score:2, Informative)
Assuming that is per hour - it is still a paltry sum.
I believe even Taco Bell pays it slaves $9/hr.
Re:$8.75 (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:$8.75 (Score:2)
Re:$8.75 (Score:3, Informative)
These are students. Their primary concern is education and graduation. Along with that, they get (often as a part of financial aid) on campus or school related jobs.
The media lab offers work that is in a related field, the opportunity to see cutting edge research up close, the opportunity to work with the best researchers and learn how it's done. That is what they are mostly getting. that's why it is called Undergraduate Research Opportunities. Oh and by the way, they also get a little cash on the side.
How many of you have turned down more money to get a job that is more fun, in a more interesting area, or has better environment? I have. If these students want more money, they can quit school and get super wage jobs. That's not why they are there.
Re:$8.75 - Depends on where you are... (Score:2, Interesting)
In other words, $8.75 per hour is probably right in line with the region around MIT where recruiters were trying to pull people into... starting pay that is. Let's not forget all the other benefits like 401K, good dental, vision, and health insurance, etc. A lot more than just an hourly/weekly wage goes into a job package - even in these economic times.
$8.75? (Score:2, Funny)
Cut everything else back, but save the salaries (Score:5, Informative)
Imagine if something like this had happened to the folks at Bell Labs? Even with all the layoffs Lucent had, business there went on pretty much as usual. Throughout history, the true innovators were rewarded for their knowledge, not penalized for something they didn't really have anything to do with. Poor spending is poor spending, but save the salaries...
I expect to hear from people on my innovators of history part, but bear in mind I said most....
thanks
Re:Cut everything else back, but save the salaries (Score:2)
I agree entirely. While finishing up my CS degree, my friends and I all had internships with companies for between $15 and $20/hr.
We didn't even have to go to MIT
Just another case where there are a few people sitting at the top reaping the benefits of hard work done by others whom they care very little about.
Re:Cut everything else back, but save the salaries (Score:1)
You didn't say "most".
Re:Cut everything else back, but save the salaries (Score:2)
Actually, I did, but those damned pains I keep getting from touching my mouse caused me to forget to write it down.
thanks for pointing that out for me though
Re:Cut everything else back, but save the salaries (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Cut everything else back, but save the salaries (Score:2)
Re:Cut everything else back, but save the salaries (Score:5, Insightful)
No, they're "kids". The cutting edge innovators are the professors and research fellows.
The UROP is the Heart of the Media Lab (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Cut everything else back, but save the salaries (Score:2)
The problem is that the university administration charges an utterly ludicrous overhead. The student gets $8.75 an hour, the administration deducts $35 an hour from the grant.
So even though the Media lab is 'loosing' money, MIT is still raking in cash hand over fist.
Such Difficult Cuts (Score:2, Troll)
Its legions of techies have eagerly spent money donated by corporate sponsors since the lab opened its doors in 1985. The money--an annual budget of about $40 million--went not only to sometimes wild ideas like "smart" potholders, dice, chairs and animal building blocks, but also apparently to fund some dot-com-style largesse. . . . won't be paid for out of the laboratory till: cell phones, limos, first-class flights and furniture. (It's not clear whether this applies to new chairs and couches that "think.")
Oh such brutal cuts. And less than two years after the private sector had to cut such frivolities as . . . everything. I know my company sympathizes with them.
The Gardener
Re:Such Difficult Cuts (Score:2)
You are absolutely correct. No academic I knwo would spend money flying first class out of their research budget (altho' they will happily accept it if a company wants to fly them in as a speaker).
The Media Lab has coasted on its reputation for a long time, and has produced a lot of column inches in Wired for Negroponte, but let's face it, not much else. Any undergraduate knows the basic law of economics, you can't have your cake and eat it.
Lego chairs... (Score:4, Funny)
Among the things Bender says won't be paid for out of the laboratory till: cell phones, limos, first-class flights and furniture.
and...
But why is the Lab unhealthy in the first place? Unlike other academic institutions at MIT and elsewhere, the Media Lab gets the bulk of its money from corporate donors. Among them: IBM, Intel, Gillette, ChevronTexaco and LEGO .
Damn, so now all those MIT researchers will be forced to build their own Lego chairs and tables? Sounds like the kind of perfect ergonomic environment we all need. Don't like the height of the table? Just snap off the legs and away you go.
Reaction from a UROPer (Score:4, Interesting)
Sad and yet not (Score:2, Informative)
The scariest part is the layoff of the staff. I hope that these weren't specifically research assistants (instead of admin staff). RA's (often unrecognized for their efforts) usually complete the necessary but inglorious tasks that really help get research done.
This should keep them focused... (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe we'll start seeing some more great things from MIT (and other schools) as the economy forces them to focus on their core goals again.
Re:This should keep them focused... (Score:5, Interesting)
It's tragic that a significant portion of the private sector takes this kind of a stance. The Media Lab, in it's day, was a unique place where sometimes extremely disparate companies were able to work together, share ideas, and advance not only their businesses, but technology in a much more significant way than they would have separately.
What happens when Intel sits down with Lego and some creative, bright students? Lego gets Mindstorms [lego.com]... Intel gets an entirely new product line [intelplay.com]. This was the place where corporate R&D hit the academic cutting edge. It brought you HDTV, Mindstorms, Electronic Ink (which is turning very quickly into printable transistors). It's working on building automation with cooperation from both appliance companies and building companies. MEMS, Education, Agents, News Delivery... Hell, students there even had a part in remeasuring Mt. Everest [nationalgeographic.com]. Worthless indeed.
As for "frivolous perks," the professors at the lab get paid academic salaries. Many of them, who consult with their sponsors as a condition of their sponsorship contracts, travel 150-200k miles /year. Have you tried logging that much travel in coach, without a cell phone?
Yes, there are significant parts of the Media Lab designed to make it "plush" for both sponsors and researchers, but you don't attract some of the brightest and most creative people on the planet by giving them a cinder block office $5.25 an hour.
Your perspective is limited, and so is mine... (Score:5, Insightful)
To me, that is valuable. Having a role in remeasuring Mt. Everst, Legos products, and other commercial innovations is interesting to be sure. However, if we don't afford our students a bit of hardship, then how are they to have enough character to make real contributions to the world and not just invent the next profit margin gimmick? MIT may have done some important things in the past (and are probably doing so right now in some ways), but it didn't do those because they had every convenience and plush toy available to them. Why should that be the case now? If I provide all those extras, who am I going to attract? Will I attract those with an interest in being among the elite? Or will I attract those with an interest in being merely comfortable? If I simply provide an education with a reputation for producing lean and mean technologists, who will I attract? I will attract those who are motivated to become better.
As for professors, I do not begrudge any professor their salary. They put up with way too much for the likes of me to badmouth them. But there's a limit there too.
Excessive comfort does not promote real innovation.
Re:This should keep them focused... (Score:3, Informative)
The majority of the research that was done at the Media Lab belonged in industry, and was of no academic significance (electronic ink being on of the few counter examples). The only real reason it was tolerated at MIT was 'cause the Media Lab brought in its own money (and a lot of it).
And no, HDTV was not created by the Media Lab, the EE department (Prof. Lim) worked on that.
Re:This should keep them focused... (Score:2, Interesting)
I always felt it spent too much of (our, I work for a sponsor) cash on frivolousness, and as someone who works at a corporate R&D lab, beleive me I can recognise a rigged demo when I see one.
The lego and the learning was the best stuff to make it out there -why did we have to pay for things like that wierd bloke with the webcam on his head, or Negroponte's endless travels to ask us for more money. Given we sponsors travel in coach and use our own cellphones, it is irritating to see the academics frittering away our stuff. That and buying computers from vendors like Dell who dont give them any money on the grounds they are cheaper: of course they are cheaper -they dont waste money on MIT.
I think this will give the group focus. If it doesnt, they will go the way of Interval Research
-steve
Re:This should keep them focused... (Score:1)
Meaningful equals, well, meaningful... (Score:2)
-Research which is sponsered by a 3rd party which is conducted largely for the purpose of enriching that 3rd party.
-Research for which the results do not contribute into lasting knowledge bases (e.g. assisting with measuring the height of Mt. Everest).
-Research which will not advance the state of the art, but will instead, merely produce a new invention that takes advantage of well known principles.
Perhaps the question for any project shouldn't be "is it meaningful?", the question should maybe be "has it not been proven to be not meaningful?"
IMO - Universities ought to be concerned with the more theoretical matters and companies ought to be more concerned with the practical applications of those results. One will always feed the other, but they must each remain separate in order for both of them to accomplish their relevant organizational goals.
Bell Labs.. (Score:2)
But, we can thank our lucky stars that wasn't what happened.
Not to mention bad bookkeeping. (Score:5, Interesting)
The recent layoffs and cutbacks were spurred by the discovery that the Media Lab didn't have $6 or $7 million in the coffers, but were rather that much in the red.
Let me say that again: instead of a surplus of several million US dollars, they had a similar deficit. I can't fathom how anyone keeping the books -- even the most incompetent of accountants -- could make such a mistake. But it was made, and it's what sparked this whole trimming-of-the-fat. Worst bit is that some regular employees (not grad students, not UROPs) are having their hours cut, while the UROPs -- many of whom do nothing but sit on their asses all day long -- can work full weeks.
Let's hope some generous sponsor(s) will cough up the cash to get them back on track and not disrupt their research too much.
Re:Not to mention bad bookkeeping. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Not to mention bad bookkeeping. (Score:2, Funny)
"Dammit! I always miss some mundane detail!"
Re:Not to mention bad bookkeeping. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not to mention bad bookkeeping. (Score:2)
Back to the point, programs like Media Lab's Digital Nations eDevelopment are worth every penny spent. Go read about their research [mit.edu] before you spout such drivel.
Yep, this is exactly what I heard (Score:4, Informative)
I'm surprised it took this long... (Score:1)
It amazes me that companies cut jobs, but still give huge amounts of money to "media labs" and such, but I'm glad they do (although I wouldn't be glad if I was one of those that had my job cut).
There has to be some responsibility somewhere for how the money is spent, and if it means the employees/students can't take advantage of it with free meals and first-class flights, so be it.
$8.75 though, if that's per hour, is a pretty damn low rate for just about any job.
Hubris (Score:3, Flamebait)
Of course, I could be completely and utterly wrong.
Re:Hubris (Score:1)
Communication (Score:2, Insightful)
Students working for free? (Score:3, Interesting)
Memories of early Nintendo Powerglove hacking... Mmmmm.
Re:Students working for free? (Score:1)
The problem with the media lab (Score:3, Interesting)
On another note, does anyone think they'll need to tighten their lego budget [ericharshbarger.org]?
Re:The problem with the media lab (Score:1)
Re:The problem with the media lab (Score:2, Insightful)
Furthermore, while it may be true that the Media Lab is more frivolous than, say, LCS, it still outputs some truly great things - such as, as others have pointed out, LEGO Mindstorms. For more, check out their patents list [mit.edu].
Of course, there are the ideas that are... well, harebrained. The "smart" oven mitt, for example, that tells you if an object you touch is hot. Let me see, I'll go put on my oven mitt to take something out of a heated oven... well goddamn, it's hot. Better not touch it.
Maybe some ideas are better left as ideas. :)
Literacy on /. (Score:1)
Mod this however you want; I'm tired of the post-from-the-hip / can't-be-bothered-to-read-the-links / explain-to-me-the-nouns / can't-use-a-search-engine droolers.
Reality (Score:1, Redundant)
There is a budget. And its not infinite. A lesson that someone should have explained before we launched into the dot-com idiocy in the first place. I view the situation at the Media Lab as another opportunity to learn.
competitive? (Score:5, Interesting)
give me a break. these students who work at the media lab could make quite a bit more than $8.75 an hour in pretty much any field in existance. MIT pays a minimum wage on campus of $8 for undergrads. i suspect that this is the 'industry' that they are trying to remain competitive with.
but, then again, there is little chance that these students are there to cash in on the huge salary. i am currently an undergraduate assistant for a january class at mit (2.670) where students make a working stirling engine, and learn enough solidworks to make a working assembly of the engine. i could easily spend this time during january and work a real job solid modelling and make at least 5 times the amount.
but i like teaching. its not about the money.
MIT researchers experimenting with drugs! (Score:5, Funny)
The Media Lab still has a place, but it may, during the economic downturn, see itself overshadowed by more concrete research--by tangible products like drugs.
Pass the bowl, I need to do some "tangible research"...
Hey big spender! (Score:3, Interesting)
It's probably a typo (on Slashdot? Nooo....), but $8.75 an hour is pretty close to the minimum wage here in Massachusetts. Is that actually what was meant here? If so, no wonder they were having staff problems :)
Re:Hey big spender! (Score:2)
Maybe the Harvard students in the Living Wage campaign ought to march down the street and stage a sit-in at the MIT Media Lab.
Re:Hey big spender! (Score:2)
Re:Hey big spender! (Score:2)
Re:Hey big spender! (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, I myself am right now trying very hard to get a job at another Boston area university, and while I'm really looking forward to it, it's going to be a pretty significant paycut from the job I got laid off from last fall. I'm choosing to go for it because my fiance also works, and between us we think we'll be able to cover the bills & mortgage, put a little aside, and not have to tighten our belts that badly.
But not everyone can do that. Sometimes it can come to a choice between an intellectually stimulating but low paying job, or a more monotonous one that will be able to pay the bills, and you can't have a say in the matter. (For an example, take a look at the protests over Harvard employees wanting to get a better "living wage" over the past few months.) It's unfortunate that the Media Lab effectively imposes this decision on their employees, and I wouldn't be surprised if their attrition rate is pretty high as a result of it.
Media Blab (Score:3, Insightful)
A Symbol of Elegance and Waste (Score:3, Funny)
From the beginning, the Media Lab was a monument to technical optimism--or maybe hubris. Its very building, designed by MIT alum and world-famous architect I.M. Pei, was a symbol of elegance and waste. On the outside, its tiled surface resembles nothing so much as a bathroom.
But inside, it is almost entirely empty, with a giant courtyard stretching up through its center--just because it looked cool. Maybe if that space had been filled with offices, the Lab wouldn't be spending money constructing a new building next door. And perhaps without the expense of the new building, the Lab wouldn't need to lay off staff now. At one point, Bender says he actually suggested filling some of the atrium -- which is four stories high -- with office space instead of moving staff out of the building. MIT nixed the idea.
(quoted directly from the article)
Just like the Internet bubble - spiffy on the outside, empty and nearly useless within.
Re:A Symbol of Elegance and Waste (Score:1)
Lovingly referred to as the "Pei Toilet."
When I was your age... (Score:3, Funny)
"Son, when I was your age, I had to walk 8 miles to school... in the snow... with no shoes... uphill... in both directions. We didn't even have classroom chairs in those days!"
Oh NO! (Score:1)
Even though money is gone (Score:1)
great "hacks" from them, albeit affordable ones
-- no more dough to lift a cop car.
Expect something like
IHey, Why not apply to.... (Score:1)
problem [slashdot.org] and maybe get a solution for that. Surely it would get them a lot of funds if they get them a solution.
Seriously:
The Media Lab should probably change their focus for more "grant awarded" concerns. They had gone with the hip and money of dotcoms and know should refocus.
Too much funding. (Score:2, Redundant)
Not that the rest of the dot-com wave didn't suffer from the same problems. And yes, when any college student who once turned on a computer could land a lucrative job in this industry, with all the lavish perks that go with it, I can see where MIT might have to compete on those grounds to attract that same talented individuals. But there would always be others. There would always be people to whom the research was more important then the perks. Yeah, you'd have to search a little harder, but I'm sure there were a few real starving college students at MIT that would have been happy for a $9 an hour starting salary job.
And when the wave collapsed, MIT labs wouldn't be struggling, and wouldn't HAVE to cut back or cut jobs, and the people in those jobs would be VERY happy.
But hey. What can ya do?
-Restil
so they foolishly followed dotcom trends then? (Score:3, Insightful)
The problems I saw was excessive spending for un-important things thus taking funds away from many important projects.... gluttony at it's finest.
lessee (Score:1, Offtopic)
* fake police car
* knowing that will be your last penny
Questionable value of research (Score:5, Interesting)
Meejalab [tripod.com]
Re:Questionable value of research (Score:2)
I don't know who did their contracts, but if there was misrepresentation about the use of the money, this should be recoverable.
Value of Research (Score:4, Interesting)
MIT is more well known because of a few famous people who taught, graduate or worked there. People shouldn't put too much stock in prestiege. All degrees are only as valuable as the effort you put into it. Likewise, an university is only as good as it's students' ability to be resourceful. I don't know that having the world at your finger tips with first class flights really fosters a scrap dog mentality. If necessity is the mother of invention, having everything at your fingers tips (as MIT is accustomed to) might inhibit creative thinking.
Um. Right. Yeah. (Score:2)
They're going to cut back on FOOD and FURNITURE? Yes, of course, makes sense, have everyone sit on the floor and eat lint. Saves on cleaning costs too.
But they got free first class airfares and cell phones? Wish I coulda been there.
Re:Um. Right. Yeah. (Score:1)
So they get more creative... (Score:1)
:)
This article came as a surprise... (Score:5, Funny)
$5M in sponsorship for the "smart potholder"? Screw that. Throw some funding at the the "silent jackhammer."
The 8.75 is not a typo... (Score:5, Informative)
Also, as a former Media Lab UROP, I can strongly state that the UROPs in the Media Lab were the BACKBONE of work in the Media Lab. Another misconception from the article is that they UROPs had "projects" that they circulate looking for funding that the Media Lab would fund. Couldn't be more wrong. The UROPs are/were more like contract programming labor hired to support/flesh out the theories of the grad. students/professors. Cutting such is going to be the hardest cut to make...
To quote an AI Lab posting (Score:5, Funny)
UROP Payments (Score:1)
I'm not exactly certain whether it's 8.50 or 7.50 (but I'm about 80% sure it's $8.50 per hour.) But, I do know that they cannot pay students any less than that baseline.
Limos and First Class Flights (Score:3, Interesting)
Every company wants to donate money to a "successful" department and, like it or not, a lot of people controlling the money determine success by the outward signs. Likewise, good research that doesn't have some flash/publicity potential isn't worth a whole lot when it comes to getting donations. It's why some of the wierder projects are very important from a fund-raising point of view. They get you noticed.
Of course, you can go too far, start looking ostentatious and have your projects look like time wasters. It's a careful balance and not an obvious one at that.
Endowment (Score:1, Funny)
MIT has the cash if they want to keep the funding around , but apparently they have better places to spend their money. What papers have came out of the Media lab? I haven't noticed any particualy good ones. Not quite my field of expertise, but compared to other areas of research I would venture to say the department is lacking in the results it produces.
most sought-after work site on campus (Score:2)
satellite media labs in UK, India, Japan (Score:2)
They never did pay for furniture (Score:2)
We never did get any new furniture. If we'd wanted high-end workstations to sit on, we could have had those, but furniture was just impossible.
Probably now groups will take up a collection and buy themselves new furniture, since the lab isn't going to say they'dd buy it but not actually do so.
Re:And this is a troll exactly how? (Score:1)
Re:And this is news exactly how? (Score:1)
Why should I care? (Score:1)
I have heard of these projects before and I really don't see how they help me in the least in any way. *I* don't go to MIT and I really don't think I should want to (I like to get a balanced education and not just all technical). What about AI and all that being promised to do all manner of things. I havn't really even seen a decent say simple chat bot that even used a simplistic neural network.