The Evernet, the natural outcome of the cross pollination of broadband and the Internet, is a buzzword worth your excitement. What does it all mean?
Sixty years ago, on 16 December, scientists at Bell Labs--William Shockley, John Bardeen, and Walter Brattain--built the world's first transistor and nothing has been the same since.
Eastman Kodak is expanded its venture capital arm into Silicon Valley, as the film giant looks to tap into new digital technology companies.
Rolling blackouts in northern California this week failed to disable critical data centres, but the power disruption caused many networking companies to close down office operations.
Have falling stock prices and the tech meltdown got you down? The road to the real tech recovery is paved with back-to-basics innovation.
StumbleUpon is one of most interesting and addictive new tools on the Web but administrators should immediately ban its use at work.
As the two giants tussle for domination of online advertising dollars, it's increasingly clear that this tug-of-war is really a test of each company's corporate culture.
BT, long considered a risk-taker in the telecommunications market, has laid a US$105 million bet to open its network to application developers in the hopes of creating innovative voice services. But will other phone companies take a similar gamble?
For a man a few months away from leaving his job, Bill Gates has a lot on his mind.
Can Ned Hooper keep the magic of Cisco's acquisition machine alive? The executive discusses how he plans to maintain the success rate
CEO Subrah Iyar explains why he thinks WebEx is worth more than YouTube and what's ahead for Web conferencing.
Tim Berners-Lee, considered to be the father of the Web, speaks with scientists and Silicon Valley executives at HP Labs in Palo Alto, Calif., about where he sees the Internet going in the next five years.
Netscape these days survives as a desolate outpost in the vast AOL Time Warner empire, something akin to banishment to Irkutsk. But what if history had a different twist?
Commentary: Google is one of the best things on the Web--but there are signs that it may be tempted into rank commercialism.
Conceding that its strategy of patching Windows holes as they emerge has not worked, Microsoft plans next week to outline a new security effort focused on what the company calls "securing the perimeter," a company executive said.
I think we can get over the notion that "wireless phones, pagers, and modems will surpass PCs as the most popular Internet access devices. It's pure rubbish, and the researchers who insist on claiming that a phone will be preferred to a computer as the way to access the Net should have their heads examined.
Gadgets featured at the Consumer Electronics Show 2003 make technology available anywhere, anytime. ZDNet Australia presents this special coverage of the show.
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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