Why Australia can't afford to miss out on the Internet of Things wave
The Internet of Things represents the biggest technology wave for years to come.
The Internet of Things represents the biggest technology wave for years to come.
Women in tech panels seldom have anything to offer besides fortune-cookie wisdom and repackaged logic.
Apple CEO Tim Cook steps up his condemnation of a new religious freedom law in Indiana.
Start-ups should be given the regulatory support to take risks and turn Australia into a true knowledge and software-led economy.
Relying on email and all the other available collaboration tools may be affecting the quality of your work.
OPINION: Alastair MacGibbon argues access to metadata is vital for criminal investigations, provided proper oversight is in place.
Microsoft had been slow to adapt to a new economic landscape, but Joe Sweeney argues, its latest move signals it can change.
Despite the overall strength of the tech sector, employers in the computer industry saw the heaviest downsizing of 2014, announcing a total of 59,528 planned layoffs.
While we can argue Australia will have a second-rate version of a National Broadband Network, the reality is that with the new $11 billion deal with Telstra inked, this will be as good as it will get for the foreseeable future.
Even if technology won’t make you happy, it should at least make you smile sometimes.
The fact US app developers are beginning to turn their backs on Google Glass, as recently reported, comes as a big surprise to me.
Craig Gamble believes some pre-digital inventions will never lose their edge.
Digital technology is evolving so quickly and opening so many possibilities it is hard to predict what the next big thing will be, writes Craig Gamble.
How can we turn Australia from a country that once rode on the sheep's back, and now rides a mining boom, into an innovation nation? Fresh from raising serious cash, Sam Chandler has some ideas.
Malcolm Turnbull won't necessarily catch many terrorists with his new Data Retention Bill, argues Sandeep Rao.
Microsoft has released a fitness band and a health app. But why? Joe Sweeney explains.
Craig Gamble column
It is only fair to allow ordinary everyday Australians to benefit from the wealth of entrepreneurial drive in this country, argues Tim Heasley.
When things go right, no-one notices, when things go wrong, yours is the proverbial 'one throat to choke', writes a former sysadmin.
The growth of the mobile web and third-party services is making data breaches more common and users more vulnerable.
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