For all the concern about young women turning away from science and technology, a snapshot of gender equity in NSW has revealed an unexpected bright spot.

More women than men completed postgraduate degrees in fields relating to science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM) in 2014, according to the Women in NSW Education report.
smh.com.au|By Kelsey Munro

Telcos have made comments that suggest they believe consumers have "unrealistic expectations" about internet speeds, according to the consumer watchdog.

ACCC chairman Rod Sims said there were high levels of consumer complaints, confusion and frustration about broadband performance.
smh.com.au|By Esther Han

Comment: Whether you like their players or not, Cronulla's win was a great sports story. The problem is, rugby league doesn't have any left.

The Sharks were the last historic club to etch their name on the title, and rugby league now charges into 2017 bereft of a 'curse'.
smh.com.au|By Phil Lutton

1. Pumpkin risotto

2. Mushroom risotto

3. Any vegetable risotto

Why should vegetarians still be relegated to the category of annoying afterthought? We live in an age of superfoods and Meat-Free Mondays.
goodfood.com.au|By Larissa Dubecki

NSW greyhounds continue to suffer injuries at similar rates to historical levels despite promises the sport had reformed its approach to animal welfare, new figures suggest.

Industry figures identified 205 injured and 13 killed dogs in the seven weeks after Premier Mike Baird announced the sport would be banned from next July.
smh.com.au|By James Robertson and Michaela Whitbourn

Harvard University researchers have used a metre-long petri dish to show the frightening speed at which bacteria can evolve and develop resistance to modern antibiotics.

It took bacteria just 11 days to spread from a section of a large petri dish with very little antibiotic to a section with 1000 times the amount.
smh.com.au|By Matt Baker

A submerged boat belonging to a man missing for four days in floodwaters has been found but there is still no sign of its owner.

Robert Linnane was last seen driving through the small town of Burcher, west of Forbes, and towing a boat on his trailer on Friday.
smh.com.au|By Ava Benny-Morrison

"When I saw he was asking for $US4 million, I had to laugh," she said. "I thought it was a joke."

For four years, 24-year-old Yee Xiong fought to put it all behind her. Just when she thought it was all over, it seems to be starting again.
smh.com.au|By Lindsey Bever

The Australian Federal Police has dropped its investigation into the copying of former speaker Peter Slipper's official diary and won't charge controversial former MP Mal Brough or staffer James Ashby.

Police raided the homes of Mr Brough and Mr Ashby, now chief of staff to One Nation senator Pauline Hanson, in November 2015.
smh.com.au|By Tom McIlroy

With women emerging as the make-or-break demographic in Election 2016, much of what passes for debate has become a gender war, hinging on how to make women voters more disgusted with either candidate, writes Paul McGeough.

The past week has been a graphic revelation of Trump's Neanderthal perception of women – his obsession with how they look and how they should behave.
smh.com.au|By Paul McGeough

Update: The Commonwealth Bank of Australia has said no one has been disciplined over the scandal at the bank's life insurance arm, despite terminally ill patients being refused legitimate claims.

Mr Narev began his opening address highlighting the strength of Australian banks, which he said underpinned the economy.
smh.com.au|By Mario Christodoulou

In some parts of the world $700,000 will go a long way when it comes to real estate - perhaps even stretching to an island in the South Pacific or a European castle.

While the other Australian capital cities might give you more bang for your buck, in Sydney $705,000 is the median price of a two-bedroom apartment.

domain.com.au

A truck has jack-knifed on a Sydney motorway causing havoc on the road and leaving traffic backed up for 11 kilometres.

At 1.45pm on Tuesday, all northbound lanes of the M7 were closed and southbound lanes just reopened after the truck crashed on the M7 at Prestons, near Liverpool.
smh.com.au|By Ava Benny-Morrison

Comment: I have been married for a year and I still stutter before I call my husband "my husband". It's a geographical stutter, one that switches on and off depending on where I am and to whom I am talking.

What little difference a year makes. Today I find myself, like many gay and lesbian Australians who have married overseas, in a state of marital limbo.
smh.com.au|By Joel Meares

The agreement had always been a tug of war between peace and justice, and in the end, the demand for justice won.

"We don't know whether to be happy or to worry. But we voted with conviction."
smh.com.au|By Kirk Semple and Nicholas Casey

A closer look at factors that are specific to the bank, including what may happen, and what probably won't, starting with the scary prospect that Deutsche Bank's woes could become a "Lehman moment".

Time is running short for Europe and the banking sector to contain and minimise the risk of other collateral damage and unintended consequences.
smh.com.au|By Mohamed A. El-Erian

Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce said the airline wanted to "reinvent airline travel", just like Airbnb has done for accommodation.

The battle for customer loyalty is heating up, with Qantas announcing a "world-first" partnership with hotel industry disrupter Airbnb.

smh.com.au|By Esther Han

Soft enough to rest your face on, delicious enough to sink your teeth into.

Bun fun.
goodfood.com.au|By Myffy Rigby

"Now that it's happened, I'm quietly thrilled that the British people have resolved to claim back their country."

Mr Abbott said Brexit would enable Britain to pursue free trade deals that were "absolutely free" rather than simply freer than the status quo.
smh.com.au|By Michael Koziol

Comment: The reaction to the Kardashian West robbery has, in many quarters, been unkind. But that's not because people don't have empathy for a woman, a mother, a wife. They just don't have empathy for a hollow brand.

Talk to anyone on the streets of Paris or at fashion shows, and you'll hear rumblings that it was all a stunt.
smh.com.au|By Robin Givhan