Latest fromThe Changing World
Finland's fortunes in balance as Nokia opens Windows
Finnish mobile giant Nokia is getting into bed with Microsoft.
More mums, same number of babies
NZers are only half as busy having babies as they were 40 years ago, but with today's larger population a similar number of babies - nearly 65,000 - were born last year.
Anna Sandiford: Credibility key for expert witnesses
Accreditation of individual expert witnesses in the courtroom would be a move in the right direction, says Dr Anna Sandiford.
Teenager takes on the telcos
Telco entrepreneur Luke McIntyre, 16, is pitching his IPTV concept for New Zealand hotels.
Fair Trade products selling well in NZ
Fair trade certified products are booming in NZ, despite rising food prices and low consumer confidence, latest figures reveal.
Hemlines rising as dress standards fall
Poor dress habits such as short skirts and untucked shirts are now common in even the most professional of offices.
Let there be (more) light, says Medvedev
There's not much the Kremlin can do to get rid of the long and difficult Russian winter.
Here comes the sun: 100pc renewables by 2050
Is a fully sustainable global energy system possible within reach, or a pipe dream?
Normal 9-5 jobs dying off
Jobs are disappearing and work is becoming transactional, a business futurologist says.
Latest star of 3D... the Sun
The Sun in all its illuminating glory has for the first time been photographed on all sides at once in an historic image.
Oysters being wiped out around the world
Enjoy your shucking while it lasts. Wild oysters are now "functionally extinct" in many places where they were once plentiful.
NZ's forests second most endangered in world
NZ's forest ecosystems are the second most threatened in the world and house only 5 per cent of their original habitat, according to an international report.