Females in fintech program launched
Not-for-profit fintech hub Stone & Chalk has launched a program for women working in the financial technology sector.
Not-for-profit fintech hub Stone & Chalk has launched a program for women working in the financial technology sector.
Telstra has said it is seeking a Federal Court ruling over whether its upgraded payphones can be considered “low impact facilities” under the Telecommunications Act.
Bendigo and Adelaide Bank today launched what it claims to be ‘Australia’s first fully cloud-hosted bank’, called Up.
It can be difficult for big companies to remain innovative. Particularly 11,000 employee, $19 billion-valued, 42 year old companies like CA Technologies.
Tennis legend Evonne Goolagong Cawley, academic Dr Jakelin Troy and author Alexis Wright are among the “inspirational indigenous voices” sharing their stories via Google Assistant.
Researchers at the University of Melbourne say they have set a new world record by simulating the output of a 60-qubit quantum computer.
Merchant services, point-of-sale and mobile payments firm Square is expanding its Australian operation, by launching the company’s first engineering hub outside of North America in Melbourne.
After the NSW government scuppered Google’s plan to establish a headquarters in Sydney CBD, politicians from other states are stepping out to woo the tech giant.
The Blockchain Centre in Melbourne has launched a formal blockchain incubator program, said to be the state’s first.
Augmented reality technology looks set to disrupt architecture and design.
Engineers from Telstra, Ericsson and Ciena have demonstrated the ability to encrypt data while in transit between Los Angeles and Melbourne at 100Gbps.
AirTrunk today opened the first of two new hyperscale data centres in Australia aimed squarely at large scale cloud providers.
Victoria’s public transport agency is seeking a chief information security officer to replace the departing Carsten Boeving.
NBN Co on Monday said the rollout of the national broadband network had officially passed the halfway point with one in two Australians now able connect to the service.
NBN, the organisation rolling out the national broadband network, has begun rolling out fibre-to-the-curb (FTTC) technology, which it claims will benefit more than 1 million homes and businesses by 2020.