How are you going to manage both your information technology team and corporate use of technology resources during the World Cup this month?
The drive to incorporate the Internet into education is undermining a child's ability to retain knowledge, a leading professor in psychology has warned.
The '60s and '70s were the decades of the mainframe. The '80s made up the decade of client-server computing. The '90s were the Internet years. Now we're entering the decade of the electronic butler.
The Internet helps speed information and research to the medical community as it searches for a means of prevention and cure.
Two weeks before its box office release, pirated copies of the movie American Pie 2, Universal Studio's sequel to the 1999 hit comedy, are circulating on the Internet on underground file-sharing services.
Pretty soon, the government will be screening and filtering our email as well as making blogs like this one disappear.
Second Life, with an alleged population of 7.979 million, is changing the way businesses think about what their customers want, and whether "virtual" is a viable way to give it to them.
New coalition to name companies that sneak ads and spying programs onto computers of unsuspecting Web surfers.
Sony has been in the news a lot in the last year, but mostly for the wrong reasons.
Two years ago, software engineer Shaun Walker got an e-mail from a Microsoft product manager, suggesting ways to keep Walker's development project from foundering.
The vast corpus of human knowledge could soon be published on the Internet. The problem now is how to wade through it.
The '60s and '70s were the decades of the mainframe. The '80s made up the decade of client-server computing. The '90s were the Internet years. Now we're entering the decade of the electronic butler.
According to market researchers, as the new millennium arrives, widespread free Internet access will arrive with it. Both Dataquest and Datamonitor are predicting that the year 2000 will bring on the era of free Internet access that many technology pundits have been predicting for years.
A Belgian professor doing research for Sony wants to teach robots to be more like people--but he's running into some resistance.
Why do some drivers crash while dialling their mobile phone, and others manoeuvre smoothly while applying lipstick, sending e-mail or fiddling with the radio in stop-and-go traffic?
How long will it be before your computer is able to read your facial expressions? Will a rude gesture become the next Control-Alt-Delete? ZDNet Australia investigates computing interfaces.
Ben Forta: All about Adobe
Take one ColdFusion veteran and mix in a healthy dose of prolific book writing, and chances are you will end u… Watch it now
Google CEO Eric Schmidt
Google's chief sits down for an extremely rare, wide-ranging interview and discusses Google's two operating sy… Watch it now
Telstra shareholders fear break up
What do Telstra shareholders think of the telco's new CEO David Thodey? And would they support the government'… Watch it now
Can not-so-smart meters help the NBN?
Can the Telco Reform Act be win-win?
Has New Zealand's smiling assassin delivered?
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