NZ lays claim to engineering world first
University of Canterbury students have created a 3D-printed titanium engine.
University of Canterbury students have created a 3D-printed titanium engine.
OPINION: We have everything we want almost literally at our fingertips.
There's nothing wrong with being a little weird, scientists say.
Speed employment startup Outfit is making waves in New York.
Car can distinguish between thousands of different objects and take action
Netsafe is encouraging people to report scams as online fraud becomes more sophisticated.
How we type on phone keyboards reveals our age — something designers can improve.
You can make your life a lot more efficient for less than the cost of a weekly shop
The tech giant may be planning to kill off the iPhone's home button.
COMMENT: How the new mozzie emoji can create buzz to battle mosquito-borne disease.
Using music to psych yourself up before a big game is hardly new. But does it work?
Atari's shares have jumped more than 60 per cent this week.
Solar storm could disrupt power grids, spacecraft and satellite operations.
Tracking a solar storm through the solar system. Source: NASA
A single character from a language used in India could send your devices into a frenzy.
Apple has admitted its new HomePod smartspeaker can damage wooden surfaces.
Regulator looking at rules around new generation of plant and animal breeding techniques.
Electric car-sharing scheme wheeled out in Christchurch.
Artificial intelligence could evolve to be "billions of times smarter" than humans.
The council website was one of more than 4000 sites internationally that were affected.
China's top websites are under investigation for inappropriate online content.
COMMENT: Carrot and stick commuter approach the sensible way to go.
COMMENT: NZ government and private sites also served up malicious code.
An exciting scientific breakthrough could spell the end of chemotherapy in the future.
The innovation's purpose is collecting fog to provide good-quality drinking water.
The inventor of the World Wide Web is working to reimagine the internet.
The company spent over $3 billion on digital advertising.
Back then, there were only 176; now, there are more than 2600.