Hands on: Kogan Agora quad-core smartphone review By Nick Broughall published 21 October 13 Not yet rated Kogan's latest smartphone delivers quad-core power at a budget price.
Bose gets touchy-feely with sound and its new streaming speakers By Nick Broughall published 11 October 13 Bose plans to bring streamed music to the masses with some new speaker systems and a refreshed lineup.
How next-gen made Call of Duty: Ghosts better for the current generation By Nick Broughall published 3 October 13 Interview Raven Software's Derek Racca explains how the shift to next-gen consoles will make the Call of Duty experience better for everyone.
Amazon sets a Mojito ablaze with new Fire OS 3.0 update By Nick Broughall published 25 September 13 Amazon's latest Kindle Fire tablets will be rocking an all new operating system, Fire OS 3.0 Mojito, with key new features integrated at the OS level.
Microsoft buys Nokia's phone and services division By Nick Broughall published 3 September 13 Just when you think Ballmer is done at Redmond, he goes and buys Nokia's products and services divisions, giving Microsoft a proper hardware division.
Kobo takes impressive gamble to out-power and undercut tablet rivals By Nick Broughall published 28 August 13 With a new software package and a really impressive hardware set, the new Kobo Aura and Arc tablets and ereader range look great... on (e)paper at least.
Parrot Asteroid Smart review By Nick Broughall published 6 August 13 Parrot promises a connected entertainment experience in the car, but the product doesn't quite live up to the promise.
How Microsoft showed it only cares about the US market By Nick Broughall published 23 July 13 Opinion On two sides of the world, two conferences featured the Xbox One - and revealed a lot about Microsoft's strategy.
The Oculus Rift is going to change gaming, one headset at a time By Nick Broughall published 22 July 13 PAX Aus After spending time with the HD prototype Oculus Rift at PAX Australia, there are no doubts that this is going to change gaming completely.
Sony brings its A-games to the PS4 keynote at E3 By Nick Broughall published 11 June 13 E3 2013 After a two hour keynote, nobody can criticise Sony for not announcing any new PS4 games at E3 this year.
Hands on: LG Optimus F5 review By Nick Broughall published 6 June 13 Not yet rated LG's attempt to bring 4G to the prepaid market through the Optimus F5 could be exactly what the telcos need for mass 4G adoption.
Achievement unlocked: August turns your phone into your house key By Nick Broughall published 30 May 13 The days of having to carry around your house keys are coming to an end with the launch of smart locks like the August.
Police make an exploding 3D printed gun, warn of dangers By Nick Broughall published 24 May 13 Australian police today confirmed they had printed and fired the Liberator 3D-printed gun. Also, it exploded.
Legacy upload limit bug tumbles Flickr's new 1TB capacity By Nick Broughall published 21 May 13 In the excitement to announce its new 1 terabyte storage capacity for all Flickr users, it seems Yahoo forgot to switch off the legacy upload limit.
Tumblr to stumble into Yahoo for $1 billion? By Nick Broughall published 17 May 13 Yahoo boss Marissa Mayer has reportedly been in serious negotiations to acquire the blogging platform Tumblr for $1 billion.
Kim Dotcom gets mega-scared of 3D printed guns, pulls plans from site By Nick Broughall published 13 May 13 Mega internet entrepreneur, Kim Dotcom, has pulled public listings of the Defense Distributed printed gun from the site, calling them 'scary'.
World of Warcraft loses another million subscribers By Nick Broughall published 10 May 13 Activision Blizzard admits to investors that 1.3 million World of Warcraft subscribers left the game between January and March this year.
How Life of Pi made 3D work By Nick Broughall published 9 May 13 INTERVIEW Oscar winner Bill Westenhofer explains to TechRadar how to make 3D technology work well in a film.
Google Australia's office hacked by researchers By Nick Broughall published 7 May 13 A pair of security researchers have easily gained access to the building control system of Google's Australian office.
Jawbone getting Up to speed with open API and app integration By Nick Broughall published 2 May 13 Jawbone Up users have 10 more reasons to use an iOS device, with the company announcing its new Up platform for developers.
Ratings show Android users don't want Facebook messing up their Home By Nick Broughall published 29 April 13 After two weeks on the Play Store, it appears that not everyone feels there's 'no place like Home'.
Amazon opening up App Store to 200 new countries By Nick Broughall published 18 April 13 Amazon has just announced the expansion of its app store to an additional 200 countries worldwide, perhaps as a precursor to a global launch of its Fire HD tablet.
Funny or Die's iSteve now online, is the Apple Newton of Steve Jobs biopics By Nick Broughall published 17 April 13 BLIP After a short delay, Funny or Die's Steve Jobs biopic iSteve has hit the tubes. Like MobileMe, you'll probably want to avoid it.
CSIRO shooting heritage sites with lasers (to digitally map them) By Nick Broughall published 15 April 13 The CSIRO has unveiled Zebedee, a new handheld laser 3D mapping system used to preserve some of Australia's most significant heritage sites.
Movie studios sending Google take down notices of their take down notices By Nick Broughall published 5 April 13 Movie studios aren't too happy with Google's transparency about DMCA requests, and so have sent takedown notices of their take down notices.