We must have the courage to fail in a troubled world
The new world of innovation runs on the belief that 'if it's worth doing, it's worth doing badly'.
The new world of innovation runs on the belief that 'if it's worth doing, it's worth doing badly'.
When I first heard Elon Musk had asked his audience if they were willing to die in a great endeavour, I assumed he was speaking to shareholders.
Samsung's disastrous launch of its latest smartphone is a symptom the family controlled company's structure, according to a leading figuring in South Korea's start-up scene.
SpaceX is developing an interplanetary rocket and capsule to transport large numbers of people and cargo to Mars with the ultimate goal of colonising the planet, company chief and tech billionaire Elon Musk said.
Musk's keynote address, entitled 'Making Humans a Multiplanetary Species,' will tackle the technical challenges and "potential architectures for colonizing the Red Planet,"
During eight years on the share market, TPG has been the reliable goose that laid the golden egg. But this week, TPG's share price started tumbling.
Airbnb has raised at least $US555 million in new funds, valuing the company at some $US30 billion.
Idea theft is happening even when confidentiality agreements, design registrations and patents are in place.
A "business generation lab" takes aspiring entrepreneurs from the idea stage through to a graceful exit, preferably with a fat cheque. But first, there's Survivor with spreadsheets.
A small payment from one banker to another is part of a massive change in the way money moves around the world.
A software engineering PhD student has created the 'Uber' of unused data.
Few things motivate Samsung employees like the opportunity to take advantage of weakness at Apple Inc.
What if the world's richest gave their money to start-ups? How many businesses could be created? Quite a lot, according to the 2016 Robin Hood Index.
Yes, people did queue outside Apple stores around the world to get their hands on the latest iPhones. But it was a far cry from previous launches.
Apple fans from Sydney to Shanghai cheered as they left stores on Friday, but crowds were smaller than in past years.
Someday neither I nor anybody else will sit in the driver's seat of a car again.
The iPhone 7 Plus has sold out globally with fans unable to buy the device in-store Friday.
Tesla Motors has sued a man it said was the chief financial officer of a firm that works for the oil industry, accusing him of trying to impersonate Elon Musk in an email to get non-public data about the car maker.
Local manufacturing businesses are embracing new technologies such as requiring factory staff to use wearable devices to monitor fatigue, helping to prevent workplace accidents.
LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman is the latest Silicon Valley heavyweight to get his money involved in politics. He's offering to donate as much as $US5 million to veterans if Republican nominee Donald Trump releases his tax returns in time for the final presidential debate.
Ford intends to start selling driverless cars to the public by about 2025, CEO Mark Fields says.
There's a $440 billion pool of capital for start-ups in China, and Andrea Myles wants young Australians to plunge in.
New "much more effective use of radar" could have prevented death, says Elon Musk.
BMW's management board is skipping the Paris Motor Show to hold talks aimed at breaking a deadlock over whether to produce new electric cars, including a battery-powered Mini.
Qantas, Jetstar, Virgin Australia and Tiger Airways have banned passengers from using or charging Samsung Galaxy Note 7 smartphones on planes over concerns their batteries could explode or catch fire.
Facebook users should not rely on their Newsfeed for all the information they need, one of the company's vice president said during a briefing celebrating the product's tenth birthday.
Your belt already has a built-in mechanism that prevents overeating: When you've had too much, you have to loosen it. But this is taking it to another level.
Construction led the technology revolution in business when it drove the adoption of the first "brick" mobile phones.
Think of it as Big Brother meets the boss: An employee bug can now measure your office conversations and more with the goal of giving employers better information to evaluate your performance.
Qantas is banning passengers charging the new Samsung Galaxy Note7 on all flights because of fears devices with faulty batteries could catch fire.
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