Commonwealth Bank backs UNSW quantum computing research
The Commonwealth Bank intends to invest a further $10 million in the University of New South Wales’ Centre for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology.
The Commonwealth Bank intends to invest a further $10 million in the University of New South Wales’ Centre for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology.
The Commonwealth Bank of Australia and research organisation COALA are teaming up to host a series of Sydney workshops that will examine the potential of blockchain-based technology.
Civil proceedings launched in the US targeting the Commonwealth Bank look set to stretch well into 2016. The legal action centres on US$2.5 million alleged by Australian police to have been used to bribe former IT executives at the bank.
Innovation is valued more by smaller organisations and one in four mid-sized business say they don’t have the data required to make strategic business decisions.
The Commonwealth Bank said it has rectified problems that affected a number of services including EFTPOS, credit card payments and NetBank.
A focus on productivity and technology helped drive the Commonwealth Bank's investment spend to $1.25 billion for FY15. That figure represents an increase of 5 per cent on the prior year.
The NSW Crime Commission has launched court action against a former Commonwealth Bank IT executive alleged to have accepted kickbacks worth millions for awarding contracts to US company ServiceMesh.
A Samsung Galaxy S4 is no longer required to tap and pay using the Commonwealth Bank mobile app for Android.
The Commonwealth Bank has announced statutory net profit after tax of $4.535 billion for the half year ending 31 December, up 8 per cent compared to the half ending December 2013.
Leading on technology is a “life-and-death matter” for Commonwealth Bank, according to CEO Ian Narev.
Security concerns have delayed the release of Commonwealth Bank’s Android-based EFTPOS terminal, CBA executives have revealed.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) has beefed up its mobile wallet offering with three additions to the app, including one that enables consumers to withdraw cash using their smartphones from 3,000 of the bank’s ATMs.
Commonwealth Bank (CBA) has rolled out mobile payment technology at 17 Australian schools, in a program it claimed is a world first.
Physical wallets and paying with cash or credit and debit cards will be (mostly) a thing of the past in less than a decade if the results of a survey sponsored by the Commonwealth Bank are to be believed.
Not to be outdone by one of its fiercest competitors, Commonwealth Bank (CBA) today unveiled an enhanced app using near-field communication (NFC) technology that allows users to bank and pay for products and services with their mobile phone.