Apple seeds India for future iPhone growth
As Apple prepares to launch its biggest and smallest flagship iPhone, India has emerged as a critical market for the tech giant.
As Apple prepares to launch its biggest and smallest flagship iPhone, India has emerged as a critical market for the tech giant.
In this instalment of Griffith University’s A Better Future for All series, Kerry O’Brien talks with the award-winning investigative journalist and podcaster Hedley Thomas.
We all have things that are broken around our homes. Old iPhones, microwaves, fridges, washing machines or everyday consumer devices, such as our fitbits, tablets and computers. If we can’t fix them, they usually end of going into the rubbish and then ending up as landfill. Did you know that there are over 140,000 tonnes of e-Waste generated by Australians every year?
Teenagers who spend a few hours online after a stressful experience fare better than those who spend too much time or none at all.
Participants in a recent 10-week Leadership for Gender Inclusion program delivered by Griffith in Laos with funding from the Australian Government have praised the unique opportunity.
An iPhone might be the best companion for a gallery visit.
PhD candidate Maria Zelenskaya is exploring the impact interactive digital humans can have on protecting the environment in Redlands City.
Griffith music alumni based in London and Berlin are collaborating on a transcontinental virtual concert series.
There has rarely been a greater test of our structures of governance than the flurry of lawmaking amidst the declared...
The inability to repair our modern tech gadgets has not gone unnoticed. Consumers are frustrated at their inability to repair...