News (96)

  • Bureau forecasts AU$14m data store

    The Australian Bureau of Meteorology will soon start building a AU$14 million storage facility to satisfy its expanding data requirements for the next five years.

  • Quantum leaps

    It's not Star Trek, but quantum computing looks set to revolutionise the way we do computing.

  • IBM expands flexible computing plan

    IBM added muscle to its "on-demand" computing push Thursday, with the debut of several efforts designed to help it defend its position in the technology world.

  • IT circa 2008: Spin your crystal balls

    How will we interact with technology around 2008. Readers debate remote versus local computing, and thin clients get the thumbs down.

  • Distributed computing: Power grid

    Distributed computing, which harnesses the power of multiple CPUs, grew out of scientists' and academics' needs for processing power, but it is rapidly developing commercial applications. ZDNet Australia examines the power grid.

Blogs (1)

  • What's the magic price point for SSDs?

    Ever since Anand Lal Shimpi described using SSD drives as the single most noticeable upgrade you can do to your computer, I've been looking for the right price point to follow his example and make the SSD move. But at what price?

Features and Case Studies (35)

  • Intel CEO looks to the era of tera

    video At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, the company's CTO, Pat Gelsinger, calls for an all-new computing architecture to support terabyte resources.

  • Distributed computing: Power grid

    Distributed computing, which harnesses the power of multiple CPUs, grew out of scientists' and academics' needs for processing power, but it is rapidly developing commercial applications. ZDNet Australia examines the power grid.

  • Four mid-range servers compared

    What's the best mid-range server on the market? We put machines from Dell, Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Lenovo through their paces in our labs.

  • Ten things holding back tech

    Ever get the feeling that we aren't quite yet where we want to be? Here are 10 factors that may be holding back the world's technological development.

  • Jonathan Schwartz on the future of Sun

    After a year on the job, Sun's CEO says the company is relevant again but still has problems to fix. In this interview, he admits losing sight of the developer community towards the end of the 1990s, and making what he described as a very bad decision about the company's commitment to Solaris.

Reviews (18)

  • Intel CEO looks to the era of tera

    video At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, the company's CTO, Pat Gelsinger, calls for an all-new computing architecture to support terabyte resources.

  • Quantum leaps

    It's not Star Trek, but quantum computing looks set to revolutionise the way we do computing.

  • Four mid-range servers compared

    What's the best mid-range server on the market? We put machines from Dell, Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Lenovo through their paces in our labs.

  • DtSearch Desktop 7.01

    Unless you need library-accurate file searches, DtSearch has perhaps too much power for the average desktop.

  • Gates: Windows to call on phones

    Microsoft's next conquest could be your telephone.

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Blogs

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    One year into its tenure, how has the new New Zealand Government performed on issues of technology and telecommunications?
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