China hacked eight major computer services firms in years-long attack
The global hacking campaign, known as Cloud Hopper, is attributed to China by the United States and its Western allies.
The global hacking campaign, known as Cloud Hopper, is attributed to China by the United States and its Western allies.
Steve Walker, Asia Pacific CIO for DHL, on how the logistics company is preparing for Industry 4.0.
“You have the opportunity and the knowledge to do it right now,” says Fujitsu executive Ramanan Ramakrishna.
Pictorial highlights from the Auckland and Wellington launch of our annual report on the top ICT chiefs in New Zealand
Lukasz Zawilski lives by this oft-repeated quote by management expert Peter Drucker: “Culture eats strategy for breakfast.”
Alternative chip architectures are taking some thunder away from Intel's x86 at this week's International Supercomputing Conference in Frankfurt. The ARM architecture, which dominates mobile-device chips, will appear in Fujitsu's next flagship supercomputer.
“Citizens and businesses will now be able to use Skype to message, talk to, and video call Government agencies."
If you take the concept of the paperless office seriously, Fujitsu has a meeting room just for you.
A supercomputer developed by China's National Defense University remains the fastest publically known computer in the world while the U.S. is close to an historic low in the latest edition of the closely followed Top 500 supercomputer ranking, which was published on Monday.
In another sign of the living spaces of elderly Japanese going hi-tech, seniors in Osaka are undergoing an Internet of Things (IoT) experiment involving cloud-connected air conditioners and motion sensors.
Fujitsu unlocks smartphone with iris ... Russian cybergroup stalks U.S. bank customers ... Online video pushes up cloud power consumption ... and more tech news
Japanese mobile carrier NTT DoCoMo has released a smartphone that can be unlocked with a mere glance.
Fujitsu has developed stamp-sized wearable sensor tags that can detect whether users have changed their location or posture, fallen down or are experiencing high heat.
Drones don't normally need wheels, but they can come in handy on upside-down roads.
Fujitsu has developed smartglasses that project imagery directly onto the user's retina with a laser, instead of using small LCD screens like other wearables.