$2.6 billion streaming service shuts down after six months
They had high hopes and made big promises. But now they're closing down.
They had high hopes and made big promises. But now they're closing down.
New York Times: Sundar Pichai faces the internet giant's biggest threat in its 22 years.
Google has long defended itself against charges of monopoly.
A new report found a mismatch between kids experiences online and parental awareness.
Pandemic-era working-from-home boom has fuelled demand for cloud computing.
Washington wants to break up Google, claiming it has illegally crushed competition.
Machines and humans could be split equally by 2025.
A return to some semblance of normality has slowed Netflix subscriber growth.
Google is in the crosshairs of a lawsuit accusing it of wielding too much power.
iPhone 12's next-gen system solid but tech needed to unleash it still in pipeline.
After the mosque shootings, the $49 billion fund pressured social media platforms.
2020 has brought with it several notable hacks, illustrating why we need a bold new Act.
OPINION: This year is really one of opportunity and potential.
The Reserve Bank is taking steps to ensure banks improve their cyber security.
Queenstown is joining forces with Xero to explore driverless shuttle options.
Customers are unable to log-on to the online self-service portal.
Communications system to be on the lunar surface by late 2022.
Financial Times: Operators pin hopes on iPhone 12 kickstarting long-promised shift to 5G.
New York Times: YouTube played a big role in moving QAnon from the fringes to mainstream.
Auckland company positions itself for human-machine interface future. $20m raise planned.
Vodafone NZ, Spark and the multinational Dole are early customers.
New York Times: False news is on the rise. We can fight the spread with a simple exercise.
Startup serves "high-value" patients - many in lower socioeconomic groups.
Six months after controversy first struck, Cabinet meetings could finally be secure.
NZ-based radar will tell scientists if two pieces of space junk miss or collide tomorrow.
Typo brings much mirth to election run-in.
Nokia's chief technology officer Marcus Weldon is optimistic about the future.
New York Times: Google has some very particular rules about what workers can say.