Jarfi said:
Well it's just that always when I hear about technological advances or breaktroughs in science, it all seems to come from stanford,MIT, it's like they are the ones doing all the important work.
I rather suspect that this is partly a misconception of yours. Like a self-feeding attitude in that you know these two names and therefore realize when they are mentioned in some scientific context (possibly even by giving a scientific result more merit if it came from there), and not associating the mentioning of other universities or research institutes with "not MIT/Stanford" (which of course would indeed be a strange way for a brain to work). It's a bit tiresome, but since I find the question somewhat interesting myself I have checked the origin on a few of the last years' Nobel prizes (all information from Wikipedia, location refers to location of scientific discovery that was awarded the Nobel prize):
2011: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Saul Perlmutter), Mount Stromlo Observatory Canberra (Brian Schmidt, Adam Riess)
2010: Manchester Centre for Mesoscience and Nanotechnology (Andre Geim, Konstantin Novoselov)
2009: Standard Telecommunication Laboratories in Harlow, England (Charles K. Kao), Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey (Willard Boyle, George E. Smith)
2008: University of Chicago (Yoichiro Nambu), Kyoto University (Makoto Kobayashi, Toshihide Maskawa)
2007: Research Center Jülich, Germany (Peter Grünberg), Université Paris-Sud (Albert Fert)
2006: NASA (John Cromwell Mather, George F. Smoot)
2005: Harvard University, US (Roy J. Glauber), National Institute of Standards and Technology, US (John L. Hall), Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics, Garching, Germany (Theodor Hänsch)
Nobel prizes are of course not awarded for recent research activities, but I hope this short list still gives you an
objective impression that the scientific world does not exclusively rotate around the few famous universities that the fantasies of teenage nerds seem to revolve around, and that there's quite a few more places where proper scientific research is being conducted.