Charging queues return as Easter road trips test Australia’s EV infrastructure
- AI, ai coding assistant, AI regulation, Artificial Intelligence, openai, Tech, Technology, Vehicles
- April 6, 2026

After Anthropic’s weeks-long standoff with the Pentagon, the company won one milestone: A judge granted Anthropic a preliminary injunction in its lawsuit, which sought to reverse its government blacklisting while the judicial process plays out. “The Department of War’s records show that it designated Anthropic as a supply chain risk because of its ‘hostile manner
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The Australian boating landscape is about to get a whole lot more interesting with the arrival of a new category of watercraft. Vector Water Craft has officially launched its range of portable electric mini jet boats (MJB) down under, promising a future where you can hit the water without the hassle of a trailer. For
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I was a late convert to air fryers, in part because I worried about versatility: Just how many wings and nuggets and fries does anyone need? (Don’t answer. The answer will incriminate you.) The Typhur Dome 2 is the air fryer that obliterated this worry, by adding pizza, browned meats, grilled asparagus, and toasted bread
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If you’ve been missing that familiar buzz of controllers clicking, tabletop dice rolling, and the unmistakable energy of thousands of gamers under one roof, it’s time to lock something into the calendar. PAX Aus 2026 is officially on the way, and early bird badges have just gone on sale, giving fans their first chance to
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When I speak to Blake Resnick, he’s walking around his drone startup’s newest office space in Seattle—a cavernous 50,000-square-foot facility that, Resnick estimates, won’t be fully set up until later in the year—potentially November. Still, the big (and for now, largely empty) building offers the promise of a fast-growing company intent on conquering its particular
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The world of agritech is constantly evolving, but every now and then, we see a piece of technology that truly feels like it’s moved the needle. New Zealand-based startup Scanabull is doing exactly that by bringing high-end computer vision and artificial intelligence to the paddock. They have just announced a A$1 million (NZ$1.1 million) funding
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