Guidelines for use of personal data by Kiwi firms under review
A year after the launch of the guidelines, the authors are seeking valuable feedback from the business and technology community
A year after the launch of the guidelines, the authors are seeking valuable feedback from the business and technology community
New Zealander workers greatly underestimate the extent to which their roles will be replaced by robots, according to a survey undertaken by the Massey Business School and Auckland University of Technology.
‘We are challenging old models to find solutions that have economic and social value.’
Maori and Pasifika New Zealanders are less likely to use the Internet with 14 per cent of people being non-users, compared to 7 per cent of New Zealand Europeans and 3 per cent of Asians.
How many cops in New Zealand have recently turned into geeks, thanks to mobile devices that were handed out by the police department?
Teleworking is now mainstream, but organisations do not necessarily have structures and policies around it, according to a new trans-Tasman survey.
AUT University has launched a new core network, which is already being used to monitor SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft, and run day-to-day networking on its campuses.
Lincoln University
The KAREN network will play a key role in the inaugural Australia-New Zealand virtual e-telescope event, which takes place tonight.
Two technologies currently under research by IBM may hold the key to processing and storing the exabyte (1018) of data expected to flow per day from the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) telescope project.
The most striking New Zealand statistic in a study of international internet use published yesterday is arguably the 35% of users here still on dial-up modems.
AUT has just signed an agreement with the CSIRO, which is leading the development of Australia’s SKA Pathfinder telescope — a precursor to the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) giant next-generation telescope.
A University of Canterbury team has won this year's Imagine Cup — the New Zealand leg at least.
“Computing can be regarded as having succeeded beyond everyone’s wildest dreams,” says Ajit Narayanan, the new head of the School of Computing and Mathematical Services at the Auckland University of Technology (AUT).
Auckland University of Technology and the New Zealand RFID Pathfinder Group have signed a memorandum of understanding aiming to drive the adoption of standards-based radio frequency identification (RFID) technologies in New Zealand