The technology helping us to get a good night's sleep
Companies are coming up with new technologies to help us sleep better.
Companies are coming up with new technologies to help us sleep better.
AI-powered avatar designed to deliver classroom lessons, run activities, respond to student queries and record their answers.
Microsoft's co-founder Paul Allen sis pumping an additional $US125 million into his nonprofit computer research lab in an effort to teach machines "common sense."
Gold Coast's Gilmour Space Technologies has big plans for its nano satellites, but they're unlikely to be launched from Australia.
Less in-your-face but still just as functional, the new Crumpler wants its bags to suit the bar, the bus and the board room.
It started in a spare room in Perth, moved to Silicon Valley and now, 10 years on, Kanopy is coming back home in a big way.
A simple, intuitive form of customer feedback technology is proliferating around Australia, and is about to get much bigger following an injection of capital.
As credit card surcharges and minimum purchase amounts gradually disappear, contactless payments are becoming more practical for small purchases.
Does Alexa have the skills to pay the bills?
It might sound ridiculously expensive, starting at $7299, but the iMac Pro is a great deal considering the hardware you're getting.
These are among the best noise cancellers I’ve tried, but take them flying, as most people who buy noise cancellers do, and they’re unbelievably dumb.
It seemed like a good idea at the time, but unintended consequences are prompting a rethink of internet's foundations.
Along with sounding like an Aussie, Alexa will recognise regional accents and place names as well as offer local news, weather and sports scores.
Along with sounding like an Aussie, Alexa will recognise regional accents and place names as well as offer local news, weather and sports scores.
BlackBerry's flaw-detecting Jarvis software can apparently do in seven minutes what currently takes automakers 30 days.
The outspoken CEO, always looking out for the next trend, rates small drones but thinks all smart TVs are crap.
From radiation-blocking undies to robot air-fresheners, this year's CES was more 'no' than 'whoa'.
Stop sucking us into a distraction vortex, fix your own darn security and a few other prescriptions from CES for getting the gadget industry back on track.
Some places and companies have started using blockchain in a way that goes beyond currency changing hands.
The search giant's Assistant is showing up in everything this year, from TVs to headphones to cars.
Taking a break from damage control over the recently-disclosed flaws affecting its processors, Intel shows off the Volocopter 2X.
From TVs to vacuum cleaners, every appliance around your home is set to get smarter.
New attacks will utilise AI to form massive 'hive-nets' that can communicate with each other and execute hard-to-detect heists across the web.
This is the first time in several years that the titan has had a big, stand-alone booth at the show.
Company claims its phones and computers won't be slowed down by fixes, and its web browser will only take a small hit to performance.
Search pagination