E-mail services to Telstra BlackBerry devices should be fully restored by tomorrow morning following the failure of international links to the technology's manufacturer Research In Motion in Canada on Wednesday morning, the carrier said.
According to new research from the OECD, Australia is ranked within the top ten countries for average advertised broadband speeds.
Telstra CEO Sol Trujillo has slammed the federal government's decision to award funding to Telstra competitor OPEL for a new national broadband network, decrying Australia as a nation that lacks any incentive for investment in telecommunications.
Research in Motion has backed the routing of BlackBerry e-mail traffic to Canada despite last week's disruption to users.
A proposal floated today by Telstra's major competitors to upgrade the nation's broadband infrastructure comes in four distinct models, all of which see the heavyweight playing a key role.
Hillary Clinton's nine lives are not yet depleted and, despite allegations that her stubborn refusal to concede defeat earlier has fragmented her party, she fought her battle to the very end. By placing bets several ways, that battle may just turn into gold for her down the track. Has Optus taken a leaf out of Hillary's book?
Comedian and occasional Optus chief executive Paul O'Sullivan took up the microphone again last week as he continued his campaign of targeting Telstra with bad jokes.
If there ever was an opportunity for a broadcaster to showcase the potential of internet video, this was it, and Seven has blown it. Perhaps its executives should have rung their mates at NBC in the US and gotten some pointers on online coverage.
Well, here we are. After years of bluster, measured progress and loads of annoyance, Australia's broadband users head to the polls on Saturday with a score to settle.
As mega outsoucing deals begin to lose their shine, is it time for selective sourcing to take centre stage?
Telstra's BlackBerry network outage was fixed last night and normal service should have returned this morning, a company spokesperson said.
Microsoft admits Research in Motion's BlackBerry device dominates the market in handheld e-mail provision, but contends its own solution can cut costs for enterprises -- a claim RIM denies.
Want to shop locally for IT services but don't want to compromise on quality? The local services industry is finding ways to outdo global giants.
IT, telecommunications and media companies are bracing for further industry fallout and doing intense soul-searching more than two years into the tech bust, according to a study.
There's an abundance of wireless-capable devices and a growing number of networks to service them. How do you make your corporate e-mail available to staff when they're out of the office?
You say you want a revolution? Emerging wireless technologies will make the Internet quicksilver-fast, more personalised and a whole lot easier to navigate, experts say. And Australia and Asia are leading the race.
Can Chrome give Internet Explorer a run for its money?
ZDNet correspondent Sumi Das talks with Senior Editor Sam Diaz about the perks and pitfalls of the newly relea… Watch it now
Mission-critical now a meaningless phrase
Telstra's BT coat doesn't fit
Australian security: the lucky country
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