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Received today β€” 16 August 2025

Rivian's CEO explains why he got a Ph.D. — and why he chose MIT over Stanford

15 August 2025 at 16:00
RJ Scaringe is pictured
Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe described picking between Stanford and MIT as being "recruited for a nerd sports team."

Amy E. Price/SXSW Conference & Festivals via Getty Images

  • Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe said that his Ph.D. from MIT gave him "credibility" when approaching investors.
  • Scaringe told the "Tosh Show" that he went to Stanford for a day before switching over to MIT for their automotive program.
  • "It was like being recruited for a nerd sports team," Scaringe said of choosing between MIT and Stanford.

Some people pursue Ph.D.s to work in academia or to attain lofty research positions. The CEO of Rivian got his so people would take him seriously.

RJ Scaringe founded Mainstream Motors β€”Β later renamed Rivian β€”Β in 2009. It took over a decade to collect capital, build manufacturing capabilities, and eventually distribute the company's first consumer electric vehicle, the R1T.

When pitching his EV company to investors, Scaringe had a rΓ©sumΓ© perk: his Ph.D. from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. On the "Tosh Show," Scaringe said that he figured the degree would put him in good standing in investor rooms.

"I thought, 'I'll need a lot of money. I don't have any money, and if I'm going to get other people to invest money into this thing that I want to build, me having a Ph.D. from MIT or equivalent makes that more likely,'" Scaringe said.

Pitching a vehicle company is difficult, as Scaringe described on the podcast. Given the upfront capital costs to make a basic prototype, EV entrepreneurs like Scaringe are often pitching an idea more than a discreet product.

Thus, EV founders need credibility β€” and Scaringe didn't want to wait decades.

"I didn't want to go work at a car company for 20 years and earn credibility," he said. "So I wanted to get like credibility as quickly as I could."

For Scaringe, that came in the form of a Ph.D. in automotive mechanical engineering.

MIT is a hotbed for entrepreneurs. Notable Ph.D. alums include Intel cofounder Robert Noyce and Boston Dynamics founder Marc Raibert. Amar Bose of Bose Corporation got his Sc.D. from the institution.

When picking his graduate institution, Scaringe had two options: MIT or Stanford University. Having graduated first in his class at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Scaringe said he had plenty of options and was being courted by various programs.

"It was like being recruited for a nerd sports team because MIT offered me this amazing role, Stanford offered me this amazing role," he said.

Scaringe accepted his offer from Stanford and enrolled for a day before switching over to MIT.

"I actually preferred the program at MIT," Scaringe said. "The reason I really liked what MIT had is that they had an automotive-specific program and a lab built around automotive, and I knew I wanted to start what eventually became Rivian."

Scaringe called his reasoning for getting a Ph.D. "wonderfully naive" β€” but "it worked."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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MIT student prints AI polymer masks to restore paintings in hours

20 June 2025 at 17:32

MIT graduate student Alex Kachkine once spent nine months meticulously restoring a damaged baroque Italian painting, which left him plenty of time to wonder if technology could speed things up. Last week, MIT News announced his solution: a technique that uses AI-generated polymer films to physically restore damaged paintings in hours rather than months. The research appears in Nature.

Kachkine's method works by printing a transparent "mask" containing thousands of precisely color-matched regions that conservators can apply directly to an original artwork. Unlike traditional restoration, which permanently alters the painting, these masks can reportedly be removed whenever needed. So it's a reversible process that does not permanently change a painting.

"Because there's a digital record of what mask was used, in 100 years, the next time someone is working with this, they'll have an extremely clear understanding of what was done to the painting," Kachkine told MIT News. "And that's never really been possible in conservation before."

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