LATEST ARTICLES

Digital literacy and security of identity will beat back scammers

Digital literacy and security of identity will beat back scammers

The global arms race between cybersecurity experts and scammers is still raging and increased digital literacy is needed to ensure all Australians can securely navigate digital systems, according to experts at an Optus and Australian Financial Review roundtable. Developments such as voice-activated technology could make digital navigation easier for Australians who lacked digital literacy, said …read more

Checks and balances key to clearing AI obstacles

Checks and balances key to clearing AI obstacles

Few Australian business leaders feel ready to take advantage of artificial intelligence and adoption of the technology has been slow and often reluctant, according to a roundtable of experts. At the same time, criminals and trolls have taken to AI with alacrity – spawning a barrage of fraud and deep fakes. Recent research by digital …read more

The university institute helping Indigenous students feel at home

The university institute helping Indigenous students feel at home

More than 2,000 full-time and part-time Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students are now studying at the University of Newcastle in NSW, the highest number enrolled at any university in Australia. The university’s Wollotuka Institute has been a haven for Indigenous students for 42 years, making it one of the oldest institutes of this type …read more

Work on rare childhood cancers earns Emerging Leader award

Work on rare childhood cancers earns Emerging Leader award

Matt Dun has devoted his career to researching the rare and most fatal of childhood cancers including acute myeloid leukaemia and diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (known as DIPG), a paediatric brain cancer. Dun’s young daughter died of DIPG, a disease which is almost always fatal within a matter of months.  As Professor of Paediatric Haematology …read more

From wine to art: When collectables pay off (and when they don’t)

From wine to art: When collectables pay off (and when they don’t)

Buying into so-called alternative investments – often collectables – can be a chancy business, warns Capital Partners principal and financial adviser Rakesh Shah. “While it’s true that some investors have made fortunes in this space, these success stories are the exception rather than the norm,” he adds. One client’s collectable coins had been properly valued, …read more

AI in the workplace is everywhere and evolving at speed

AI in the workplace is everywhere and evolving at speed

From listening to doctor-patient conversations and writing up the medical notes, to creating multi-level lesson plans for a high-school class, to offering to make text messages “funnier” – generative artificial intelligence is everywhere and evolving at speed. The modern professional needs to understand the scope and potential pitfalls of genAI to take full advantage of …read more

Heavy trucks hit the switch to a net-zero future

Heavy trucks hit the switch to a net-zero future

A battery-pack system to power heavy trucks, potentially transforming a sector of the transport industry widely considered one of the most difficult to decarbonise, has been pioneered by Janus Electric Ltd. The battery packs fit on the side of prime movers in the place of diesel fuel tanks and they can be swapped for recharged …read more

How a passion for tech led Angela Gadaev to the far side of the world

How a passion for tech led Angela Gadaev to the far side of the world

Angela Gadaev arrived in Australia in 1991 with one suitcase and one dollar. Born in Belarus, 100 kilometres from Chernobyl, she had degrees in mathematics and computer science from Francisk Skorina Gomel State University in her home country, a passion for technology and the performing arts, and not much English. She knew, though, she wanted …read more

How this leader turned around a suffering retail brand

How this leader turned around a suffering retail brand

Christelle Young has been the managing director of boutique tea brand T2 Tea for about a year and she has already overhauled the management structure, closed several under-performing retail stores and cut redundant items from the product line. With 62 retail outlets across Australia, New Zealand and Singapore, T2 Tea sells a variety of specialist …read more

Opening doors to career path and better life for students

Opening doors to career path and better life for students

Western Sydney is Australia’s epicentre of growth and opportunity with a burgeoning population of 2.7 million people and a booming demand for higher education, says Western Sydney University (WSU) vice-chancellor Professor George Williams. Two-thirds of the Western Sydney University’s students are the first in their families to have taken the plunge into higher education. “We …read more