Alex Wissner-Gross, Ph.D. alexwg@post.harvard.edu

Alex Wissner-Gross is an Environmental Fellow at Harvard University. He has authored 14 publications, received 82 national and international distinctions, been issued 7 full and pending patents, and founded 4 companies. His research has been covered in Technology Review, BusinessWeek, USA Today, Scientific American, and The New York Times. In 2003, Alex became the last person in MIT history to receive a triple major, with bachelors in Physics, Electrical Engineering, and Mathematics, while graduating first in his class from the MIT School of Engineering. In 2007, Alex received his Ph.D. in Physics from Harvard for work on programmable surfaces, which dramatically increased the computational versatility of a range of materials. Before his science and technology career, Alex performed as a boy soprano with the New York City Opera.

2008.08.18   "How green is your website?"
Search Engine Strategies, San Jose, CA [Invited Talk]
2008.06.10   "How green is your website?"
Virtual Energy Forum [Invited Talk]
2008.05.29   "Measuring the environmental footprint of a website"
Ignite Boston 3, Cambridge, MA [Contributed Talk]
2008.04.12   "Physically programmable surfaces"
East Coast and Mid-West Hertz Fellows Retreat, Woods Hole, MA [Invited Talk]
2008.04.11   "Measuring the environmental footprint of a website"
MIT Energy Conference [Contributed Poster]
2008.04.02   "Measuring the environmental footprint of a website"
Wellesley College [Invited Talk]
2008.03.28   "Carbon neutral information and communication technology"
Down:2:Earth Conference, Boston [Invited Exhibit]
2007.11.19   "Physically programmable surfaces"
Department of Physics, Harvard University [Contributed Talk]
2007.09.11   "Multicolor symbology for remotely scannable codes"
International Symposium on Photo-electronic Detection and Imaging, Beijing [Contributed Talk]
2007.04.10 "Superhydrophilic stabilization of ice multilayers above room temperature"
MRS Spring Meeting, San Francisco [Invited Talk]
2007.04.03 "Surface stabilization of ice multilayers at human body temperature"
Harvard Physics Condensed Matter Theory Kids Seminar [Invited Talk]
2007.03.16 "Multiscale programmable surfaces"
Hertz Fellows Symposium, San Jose [Invited Poster]
2006.12.06 "Programmable self-assembly by component analysis of cellular automata rule classes"
Computer Science Department, Harvard University [Invited Talk]
2006.11.28 "Stability and biocompatibility of ice Ih on nanostructured diamond (111)"
MRS Fall Meeting, Boston [Contributed Poster]
2006.07.05 "Preparation of topical reading lists from the link structure of Wikipedia"
6th IEEE International Conference on Advanced Learning Technologies, Kerkrade, Netherlands [Contributed Talk]
2006.06.01 "Computational design for studying enhanced stability of ice on nanostructured diamond"
National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network/Computation Conference (NNIN/C 2006), Harvard University [Contributed Poster]
2006.04.01 "Automated preparation of physics reading lists"
Joint NES APS/AAPT Spring Meeting 2006, Boston University [Contributed Talk]
2006.03.17 "Complexity and structure in rule ensemble cellular automata"
APS March Meeting, Baltimore [Contributed Talk]
2005.12.12 "Dielectrophoretically reconfigurable nanowire interconnects"
Schlumberger-Doll Research, Cambridge [Invited Talk]
2005.11.28 "Dielectrophoretic assembly and reconfiguration of nanowire interconnects"
MRS Fall Meeting 2005, Boston [Contributed Talk]
2005.11.28 "Dielectrophoretic assembly and reconfiguration of nanowire interconnects"
MRS Fall Meeting 2005, Boston [Contributed Talk]
2005.04.01 "Dielectrophoretic control of semiconductor nanostructure growth and assembly"
Spring Meeting of the New England Section of the APS, MIT [Contributed Poster]
2005.03.19 "Electromechanical control of silicon nanostructures"
Fannie and John Hertz Foundation National Symposium, San Jose, CA [Invited Poster]
2002.10 "Surface intruder dynamics in granular fluids"
MIT Society of Physics Students Colloquium, MIT [Invited Talk]
2002.03 "Nanofabrication for connecting molecular devices"
Intel Student Research Symposium, Intel Santa Clara [Invited Talk]
1999 "Rapid granular fabrication of nanocircuitry"
First NASA-NSI Workshop on Sensors for Bio-Molecular Signatures, Pasadena, CA [Invited Poster]
1999 "Rapid granular fabrication of nanocircuitry"
Intel Science Talent Search Symposium, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC [Invited Poster]