|
Telstra's annual Innovation Challenge took place on the weekend, with Australian teams building IoT solutions for very interesting health and wellness challenges, with one winner a true belter.
AMSL Aero, one of the companies in Telstra's muru-D start-up accelerator programme, is building what it calls a Verti-plane that can take off and land vertically like a helicopter but fly fast like a plane.
Cyber security, real-time analytics, containers and microservices, digital team collaboration and a digital twin are the trends, so how does Telstra chief technology officer Håkan Eriksson explain how businesses of all sizes will feel the effects of these technologies?
"The first patches for Rust support in the Linux kernel have been posted and the man behind the kernel says[…]
Raven or Activision in the week of the 16th of March changed their policy forcing anyone without 2 factor authentication[…]
Google proving yet again that in the last two-three decades, technocrats have only learned how to better exploit division in[…]
I have unlimited 100/40 with tpg for $89 a month (about the same as or less than ADSL with TPG[…]
She didn't walk away empty handed, she got a partial win which meant she got 50% of the prize value