‘Data science provides an endless career pathway’
How the NZ data community - through the Women in Data Science - supports the global movement to build a pipeline of professionals for one of the most sought after skills in the digital era
How the NZ data community - through the Women in Data Science - supports the global movement to build a pipeline of professionals for one of the most sought after skills in the digital era
The system taught itself that male candidates were preferable
How can IT leaders continuously reinvent the business - with technology at the core - to stay competitive and address internal and external stakeholder demands? Technology and digital leaders share insights on this and other challenges in the cloud era, at the CIO and Computerworld breakfast forum in Auckland, held in conjunction with Zoho.
Kiwi high school students join the first ever Skype tour of JPL NASA and encouraged to ‘dare mighty things’
The virtual mission to the red planet will take off from the Manukau Institute of Technology on Aug 11
Cigna's latest 360° Well-Being Survey reveals how NZ stacks up with the rest of the world in this area of healthcare
Claudia Batten named Flying Kiwi, Dexibit double winner @NZHiTechAwards 2018
Programme lets secondary students spend the day with female mentors who hold various technology roles.
Kate McKenzie starts role in February 2017
The group IT infrastructure manager at the engineering firm relaxes by getting a weekend job
The fairer sex within the technology industry of Auckland got together last week to share thoughts on the sector and their changing roles within it at the Women in Technology luncheon organised by the New Zealand Technology Industry Association.
Being one of only a few female CIOs has put Air New Zealand CIO Julia Raue in many interesting situations, for example being mistaken for the CIO’s wife, or being addressed in a manner resembling how an adult would talk to a child.
“Don’t drop maths” was one of the messages sent to 66 Auckland Girls’ Grammar school students invited to experience a day of working in technology last week.
The proposed ICTNZ alliance, a new umbrella organisation for New Zealand’s ICT sector, seems to have forgotten to include one of the major IT lobby groups in the industry, Women in Technology.
Women in Technology started in founder Carol Lee Andersen’s lounge in 2001. Today, the organisation has its own offices in Auckland and Wellington, and over 4,000 email members, according to Cheryl Horo, general manager of WIT.