Thirty hours on the phone, four pairs of headphones, two laptops, three Disputes Tribunal hearings, and one giant victory for consumers everywhere.<br /> ...
Even AI true believers worry that we’re in a bubble – maybe even a ‘meta bubble’. Duncan Greive asks how New Zealand would survive it popping. Last week marked three years since OpenAI debuted its ...
If the OECD was a workplace, New Zealand would be the dead weight – the colleague who turns up each day, switches on their computer, makes a cup of tea and manages to achieve sweet fuck all for the ...
At least one thing is clear from the proceedings though: this case starkly reveals the shortcomings of our postal voting system. McIlraith repeatedly refers to its potential “frailties” and talks ...
This month, roadside drug testing is beginning in Wellington, to be followed by a rollout to the rest of the country next ...
After two years of major housing, infrastructure and planning reforms, Chris Bishop may have done more for the abundance agenda than any other politician on the planet.
Alex Casey spends a morning testing the many hydroslides at Parakiore, New Zealand’s new largest recreation and aquatic centre. Yesterday the ribbon was cut (awkwardly into abou ...
Two National finance ministers, three decades apart, are locking horns. But just how different is the political environment of today to the time of the juggernaut?
The Planning Bill and Natural Environment Bill promise simpler rules, faster consents and a sharper focus on property rights.
After two years of major housing, infrastructure and planning reforms, Chris Bishop may have done more for the abundance agenda than any other politician on the planet.
At the end he has to decide whether, on the balance of probabilities, the country’s most brazen and systematic electoral fraud has been carried out in pursuit of the ultimate political prize: control ...
The government is hailing a 'once-in-a-generation opportunity to finally unburden ourselves from the millstone weighing down our country'.