NZX reviews capital markets in bid to attract IPOs
The New Zealand Stock Exchange and the country's financial regulator have begun a review of its capital markets in a bid to rekindle interest in ...
The New Zealand Stock Exchange and the country's financial regulator have begun a review of its capital markets in a bid to rekindle interest in ...
Jacinda Ardern has assured Huawei of even-handed treatment after New Zealand blocked the sale of some Huawei equipment citing national security concerns.
As much as $23 million worth of crypto-currency may have been stolen during the recent security breach at Cryptopia, new expert analysis suggests.
I was reading some articles that I had tagged and saved over the holidays. Several of them were case studies that went into some detail ...
rhipe is the first NZ distributor to address the everyday challenges of the NZ ISV in a local forum. If you develop, market and sell your own software and apps, this event will provide you with the resources you need to scale your business.. Read more
In his last letter to shareholders, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer hammered on the same themes he and other execs struck three weeks ago before Wall Street analysts.
Steve Ballmer isn't necessarily a bad CEO. After all, Microsoft's on strong financial footing. But Ballmer made enough bad product decisions - Zune, Kin, Vista and perhaps Surface - to suggest that Microsoft employees, swayed by a forced-ranking employee rating system, told him what he wanted to hear, not what he needed to hear. If that culture doesn't change, Ballmer's replacement will fare even worse than he did.
CEO Ballmer and his predecessor shared a vision of how Microsoft could stay on top by focusing on Windows.
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer survived the flop that was Windows Vista, but he wasn't able to do the same after the disappointment of Windows 8.
Is Windows RT dead? We investigate the past, present and future of Microsoft's cut-down mobile Windows 8 operating system.
Windows 8.1 follows Windows 8 in typical Microsoft "version 2.0" fashion, changing a bit of eye candy and dangling several worthwhile improvements -- but hardly solving the underlying problem. Touch-loving tablet users are still saddled with a touch-hostile Windows desktop, while point-and-clickers who live and breathe the Windows desktop still can't make Metro go away.
Although the preview of Windows 8.1 fixes some of the problems users complained about in the previous version of the OS, is it enough? We take a close look at Microsoft's update.