With ‘Mobilegeddon’ here to stay, just how ‘mobile-friendly’ are .NZ domains?
If your website is not mobile-friendly, Google search results on a mobile device may not be your friend.
If your website is not mobile-friendly, Google search results on a mobile device may not be your friend.
"Teaming up together and using their considerable influence and resources to try and intimidate smaller players is not an inspiring way to try and win business."
“The Internet has brought the world to our doorstep and despite the almost limitless choices that people now have..."
Billed as a “watershed day” for InternetNZ’s second level domain name, from 1pm today Kiwis across the country will be able to register a new .nz registration option.
New Zealand Technology Industry Association (NZ Tech) conducted its AGM yesterday in Auckland. The AGM brought together vendors and industry stakeholders to discuss progess of NZ Tech and its initiatives. At the end of the AGM, the association facilitated a political panel discussion. It brought together representatives of some of the political parties in the country to discuss their ICT policy and detail the roadmap if they were chosen to lead the country in the next election.
The Commerce Commission (ComCom) has extended its timetable for determining wholesale prices under the final pricing principle (FPP) for both the unbundled bitstream access (UBA) and unbundled copper local loop (UCLL).
The Ministry of Economic Development still refuses to reveal the draft text of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) or fully define the position that New Zealand is taking in the negotiations.
InternetNZ is calling for a “notice and notice” system to replace section 92A of the Copyright Act.
It’s no news that the pool of available Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) addresses is running out. Thanks to the internet growing rapidly with increased broadband uptake, legacy over-allocations of blocks and with no effort to conserve remaining routable IPv4 address space, estimates say by 2011, or as early as the end of next year, none will be left.
After releasing a strongly worded statement in response to the French Constitutional Council’s striking down of internet disconnection as a remedy for copyright infringement, the NZ Federation Against Copyright Theft is still hanging on to the disconnection threat as an ultimate sanction.