au
Why a telco outage has stopped some trains but not others
Trains relying on the 4G network of freight rail track operator ARTC went down amid the Telstra failure. Source link
Live: Telstra investigating secondary network fault affecting Triple Zero
Telstra is investigating a secondary network fault affecting Triple Zero callers since yesterday’s outage. Follow the day’s events and insights from our business reporters on the ABC News live markets blog. Source link
St John of God Health Care shrinks size of its application estate
Under a multi-year consolidation and simplification effort. Source link
India a 'top-tier' security partner for Australia as nations deepen defence ties
Anthony Albanese says Australia will increase coordination with India’s military forces following talks with the nation’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Melbourne. Source link
Reform demanded after Telstra becomes latest telco to suffer outage
Advocates have demanded changes to how telecommunication companies are regulated and held accountable for outages after Telstra became the latest telco to suffer a large-scale network failure. Source link
Cost-of-living crisis 'hits from two directions' as major musicals close
As two more major musicals bite the dust, the local theatre industry hopes a live performance incentive modelled on a successful UK scheme will provide salvation. Source link
A surprisingly detailed look at the physics of a lugworm's poop
Feedback is delighted by a study of how many animals produce poop that echoes the look of the poop emoji – even the lugworm, which does it upside down Source link
Telstra runs hundreds of welfare checks after mobile network outage
After core and ‘secondary’ issues. Source link
Australians face record-high rents as agents see 'enquiries flooding in'
Rents are soaring in several capital cities as low vacancy rates collide with rising interest rates and population growth. Source link
Why Schrödinger's 1944 classic What Is Life? still feels prescient
Pioneer of quantum mechanics Erwin Schrödinger’s look at living organisms is one of the most influential popular-science books of the 20th century. So how does it hold up today, asks Karmela Padavic-Callaghan Source link