Technology

Tim Biggs

Tim is the editor of Fairfax's technology sections, as well as a writer and reviewer specialising in video game coverage.

Keeper found about 1.7 million accounts were protected by the password '123456'. Is yours?

The most common passwords of 2016

We've all heard the warnings about passwords — use a variety of character types, make it random, use a password manager — but many of us, it seems, still aren't listening.

<i>Beholder</i>'s art style, while simple, works well with the feeling of oppression.

Nanny state game depressing, oppressive, not unrealistic

Clearly modelled after a grim nanny-state vision of Russia, 'Beholder' tasks players with balancing two opposing goals: run an apartment building as a respectable landlord who is liked by his tenants, and keep your government employers happy by constantly monitoring, reporting and spying on said tenants.

When detached from the console, the Joy-Con can be fitted with straps that make them comfier to hold and stop you ...

Hands on with Nintendo Switch

The Nintendo Switch had its official coming out party over the weekend, as the world's press got its first chance to go hands on with the machine and put it through its paces.

Framed

How video games could become Australia's next big export

The results of a new independent survey of Australian video game developers suggests the industry has potential to become a "clean" national export, earning $114.9 million in the 2015–16 financial year, 81 per cent of that from overseas markets.

The Nokia 6 will be available soon, exclusively in China.

Zombie phone brands return from the grave

Thousands of tech enthusiasts descending on Las Vegas for CES last week may have felt like they'd seen a ghost or two, with smartphones bearing the names of Nokia and BlackBerry appearing like apparitions among the futuristic robots and shiny new things.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

Zuckerberg reveals his 2017 personal challenge

Mark Zuckerberg has revealed his annual personal challenge: he wants to have visited and met people in every US state by the end of 2017, in an effort to better understand the "division" he feels is growing between people that use the social network he founded.