Home > MIT Media Lab and Bank of America Announce Center for Future Banking

News

MIT Media Lab and Bank of America Announce Center for Future Banking

4/7/2008

The MIT Media Laboratory and Bank of America have announced the creation of the Center for Future Banking, a five-year collaboration. The new center, which will be located at the Media Lab on the MIT campus, will explore new ideas in banking by inventing technologies that reveal and leverage insights across a wide range of physical and social scales, from one-on-one customer interactions to global transactions.

"We are bringing together the creative, multidisciplinary research of Media Lab faculty and students with the real-world business experience and deep-domain knowledge of our Bank of America colleagues--all in a highly innovative environment that promotes unconventional thinking and risk-taking," said Frank Moss, Director of the Media Lab and holder of the Jerome Wiesner Professorship of Media Arts and Sciences. "In doing so, we hope not only to discover the principles that will transform banking in the next decade, but also to advance our basic understanding of the rapidly changing relationship between people, technology, and society in the 21st century."

He said he believes the Center represents a powerful new model by which academia and business will partner to invent the future of entire industries.

In a statement the Center said researchers will address such questions as: How can every customer be empowered with the knowledge and tools to take better control of their financial futures? How will banking interactions evolve as a customer's physical and virtual worlds become completely intertwined? And how will social networks and mobile platforms transform customers' banking experiences, making it easier, more convenient, and better integrated with their daily lives?

"The Center sets the stage for potentially path-breaking research that will tap into core Media Lab capabilities and extend them in exciting new directions," said Professor Deb Roy, chair of MIT's academic program in Media Arts and Sciences and a researcher in the areas of cognitive modeling, communication theory and human-machine interaction. Roy will serve as the Center's founding director and principal investigator.

The bank has committed $3 million to $5 million annually to the project.


Dian Schaffhauser is a writer who covers technology and business. Send your higher education technology news to her at dian@dischaffhauser.com.

Cite this Site

Dian Schaffhauser, "MIT Media Lab and Bank of America Announce Center for Future Banking," Campus Technology, 4/7/2008, http://www.campustechnology.com/article.aspx?aid=60478

copy text (above) for proper citation



Recommended Reading
  • Microsoft Outlines Next-Generation Databases

    Microsoft is planning to enhance the BI capabilities in the next version of its flagship SQL Server database, the company revealed Monday. The company kicked off its second annual Business Intelligence Conference in Seattle by outlining plans for a new set of managed self-service analysis and reporting capabilities that will be integrated into the next version of SQL Server.

  • Red Hat Expands HPC Solution Availability

    Open source software vendor Red Hat went global with its high-performance computing (HPC) product Thursday. An announcement issued by the Raleigh, NC-based company claims that the Red Hat HPC Solution product is the "first" integrated Linux-based HPC platform.

  • IBM Aims To Boost Mainframe Competency with Scholarship Program

    As we reported recently, IBM is accelerating its efforts to bolster mainframe education in an effort to increase the number of professionals entering the workforce with mainframe skills. Now the company is putting additional money where its mouth is with a new scholarship program supported by itself and its partner ecosystem, along with higher education institutions.

  • Microsoft's 'Dublin' App Server Tied to .NET 4.0

    New Windows Server and .NET Framework 4.0 technologies aimed at developers who are building composite applications will be released at Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference, Oct. 26-30. The server technologies are the first to support Microsoft's upcoming "Oslo" modeling platform, according to Microsoft.

  • WoW: Microsoft, Cisco Continue to Cozy Up

    The ongoing relationship between Cisco Systems and Microsoft has become even closer, according to recent news that the Windows Server on WAAS (WoW)-- an appliance that merges Cisco's Wide Area Applications Services with Microsoft Windows Server 2008--is available to order.

  • Yahoo Fixing Zimbra Bug, Integrating with Exchange

    Web-search advertising giant Yahoo plans to resolve a password security vulnerability identified in late September in its Zimbra open source e-mail and collaboration software. On Wednesday, a Yahoo spokesperson stated by e-mail that the problem will be addressed in a few weeks' time.