Quantum primacy: Is it real (and if so, does it matter)?
Developers of quantum computers are vying to show that theirs can out-perform classical computers but perhaps not replace them.
Developers of quantum computers are vying to show that theirs can out-perform classical computers but perhaps not replace them.
The IEEE is working on a standard that could enable Wi-Fi to track you through walls, right down to what you’re typing on the keyboard.
As I wrote earlier this week, the new Motorola Moto 360 is a beautiful device and the best of the three Android Wear smartwatches on the market.
Ever since Samsung emerged first as the dominant global seller of Android phones in 2010, and then as the world's largest seller of smartphones (in 2012, the South Korean electronics giant has been seen as a threat to Google, which licenses its open source mobile OS to Samsung and several other manufacturers.
Information and financial services giant Thomson Reuters has more than 55,000 employees spread over 100 countries.
The corporate world's response to the phenomenal growth of social media has ranged from enthusiastic embrace to abject horror.
You don't interview John Gage. You pose an initial question, and then sit back and listen as he launches into a 20-minute discourse that answers that first question and every other one you planned to ask. Gage is chief science officer at Sun Microsystems, and in a world filled with bogus Internet visionaries, he is the real deal. Besides co-founding Sun, he is also founder of NetDay, a project to wire computers in US schools to the Internet. Gage sat down to discuss the Internet, Java and Jini with IDG's Chris Nerney (who managed to get in a few questions anyway).
Domain name system close to the end
Innovation Awards is the market-leading awards program for celebrating ecosystem innovation and excellence across the technology sector in Australia.