MIT Professional Education Offers New Professional Certificate Program in Industry 4.0
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Unique online learning program equips technology & engineering professionals in manufacturing with the knowledge to excel in the digital age
Our multilingual Professional Certificate Program in Industry 4.0 will enable professionals to acquire the digital strategies and tools they need to redesign product operations, business models and customer support in an environment that is evolving more rapidly than ever before. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (PRWEB) May 06, 2021
MIT Professional Education has launched a new Professional Certificate Program in Industry 4.0. Taught exclusively online over 12 months by renowned MIT faculty, this unique program will equip technology and engineering professionals in the manufacturing space with the tools, skills, and knowledge they need to excel in the digital age.
The multilingual program is taught exclusively online over 12 months by MIT faculty. May 6, 2021 Canadian Plastics
MIT, in Cambridge, Mass., has developed a new professional certificate in Industry 4.0 for manufacturing professionals.
The program is taught exclusively online over 12 months by MIT faculty, and is designed to equip technology and engineering professionals in the manufacturing space with the tools, skills, and knowledge they need to excel in the digital age.
“From the Internet of Things and artificial intelligence, to smart manufacturing and product platforms, technological innovations are powering widespread transformation across the industrial sector,” said Clara Piloto, director of Digital Plus and Global Programs for MIT Professional Education. “Our multilingual Professional Certificate Program in Industry 4.0 will enable professionals to acquire the digital strategies and tools they need to redesign product operations, business models a
Never bean there: International Coffee Hour continues global exploration virtually udreview.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from udreview.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
IMAGE: Penn State
“Throughout his long and successful career at Penn State, Rob Crane has championed the need to situate his research and academic discipline in the global context. His legacy to all the students who he has taught and advised is extraordinary, and faculty and staff consider him a knowledgeable, inspiring and gracious colleague,” said Roger Brindley, vice provost for Global Programs.
Brindley continued, “In recent years he has become a critical voice as Global Programs worked to enhance global engagement within the values and goals of the University. His thoughtful but always calm and caring demeanor is respected across the commonwealth and around the country, and Global Programs will miss an exemplary leader and a good friend when Rob retires.”
April 27, 2021
You are here: Home / World Economic Forum / Ensuring supply chains are deforestation-free is still a priority. This is why
Ensuring supply chains are deforestation-free is still a priority. This is why
(Credit: Unsplash)
This article is brought to you thanks to the collaboration of The European Sting with the World Economic Forum.
Author: Jeff Milder, Director of Global Programs, Rainforest Alliance & Leah Samberg, Senior Scientist, Rainforest Alliance
No-deforestation supply chains still belong at the top of the agenda and at the heart of responsible business as we move into a new decade of sustainability action.
Ensuring supply chains are protective of forests, other natural ecosystems and land rights is often the clearest route to achieving a range of other sustainability priorities.