Adelaide Uni open sources venerable Ludwig editor
The University of Adelaide will release the source code of the Ludwig editor, originally developed for use on VAX minicomputers.
The University of Adelaide will release the source code of the Ludwig editor, originally developed for use on VAX minicomputers.
The University of Adelaide is investing $1 million to boost the performance of its supercomputer.
Candice Reed – Australia’s first baby conceived by in vitro fertilisation (IVF) – is now in her late 30s. Since her birth in Melbourne in 1980 more than 200,000 children have been born here as a result of IVF-type treatments.
eResearch South Australia is preparing for the imminent retirement of its Tizard supercomputer, officially launching a high-performance computing system dubbed TANGO and preparing to unveil a new cloud infrastructure service.
University of Adelaide researchers have used deep-learning image analysis techniques to determine patient lifespans.
The University of Adelaide has recruited SA Water’s chief information officer to be its second-ever CIO.
The University of Adelaide has begun a global search for a new chief information officer as its inaugural CIO, Mark Gregory, prepares to depart next month.
A project from University of Adelaide post-grad Lachlan Kang aims to find the most powerful fingerprint techniques and build better defences against them.
Eight months after handing out iPads to students enrolling in a science degree at the University of Adelaide, the Faculty of Science executive Dean, Bob Hill, said the project has improved communications and driven down student costs.
Trinity College and The University of Adelaide share their iPad rollout story
The University of Technology Sydney (UTS) has become the latest in a long line of Australian universities to announce plans to move to Live@edu, after announcing its webmail email system will be upgraded to provide improved online communications to its some 30,000 students.
The National Broadband Network (NBN) is not just about consumer take up of faster Internet speeds. It’s about ubiquity, according to one of the expert panel members that evaluated the now abandoned fibre-to-the-node (FTTN) tender for the network.