
Four creepy things your smartphone records
Apple's new ID features leave some users feeling deeply unsettled.
Apple's new ID features leave some users feeling deeply unsettled.
Any data sent out of New Zealand is subject to greater risk than if it was kept onshore.
There are concerns Russian brand of security software could be used for cyberespionage.
Ford is testing driver reactions to driverless cars by disguising a man as a car seat.
New $2000 phone launched yesterday but Apple argues devices only last one year.
IBM have made a breakthrough in the race to commercialize quantum computers.
Caroline Rainsford has been appointed country manager for Google New Zealand.
Artificial intelligence is evolving so much that it is now intelligence augmentation.
Could authorities unlock your iPhone X just by holding it to your face?
Comment: Apple throws back to Steve Jobs while carving a new direction.
While impressive, there is no way you should spend $2000 for the new product.
Xero is making the move from back office to front office with a range of new products.
It's supposed to be preparing for a long sleep, yet it's hurling an attack of hot plasma.
Driving an EV that charges as it moves around city streets could soon be reality.
COMMENT: The iPhone X feels like an evolution of the iPhone, but not of the smartphone.
Comment: Four things we learned from Apple's latest keynote.
Is this device the benchmark of new technology? Sophie Ryan reports freshly after the launch at the Steve Jobs Theatre in Silicon Valley
Apple announces new features, including wireless charging and Face ID to unlock phone.
COMMENT: Debacle of vanishing online top ups is an irritation for travellers.
Apple has suffered from one of its biggest leaks in history.
Samsung says it aims to launch a foldable smartphone next year.
What to expect from the new iPhone - and new updates for watchOS, macOS, and tvOS.
A new study has revealed Earth and the human race could be getting spied on.
The pace of change is growing faster, with the next five years predicted to be more rapid.
Coping with change will become just as important as core subjects says Kate McKenzie.
We could learn a lot from the Swiss model says Mercury CEO Fraser Whineray.
NZ CEOs are more concerned about the impact of cyber crime than nuclear instability.
'Technology is defining the way we live and work,' says Chapman Tripp executive partner.
Scientists explain the curious "silent quakes" set off by November's Kaikoura earthquake.