Episodios
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An experiment with artificial intelligence being used to work out corner kick tactics in football, saw experts from Liverpool FC favouring AI over existing plans. But is this fair to all? Newsable talks to Dr Teo Susnjak a computer scientist at Massey University and a former tennis pro.
Plus a former billionaire crypto wunderkind is facing a potential 100 year prison sentence, the Sal's NBL basketball season has kicked off. and the sick baby hedgehog, that was actually a piece of clothing.
Kua whakamātautia te hinengaro rorohiko hei whai rauhanga pai mō te whana koko i te poiwhana, me te mea nei ka whai mārika ngā kaiwhakaako Liverpool FC i ngā hua matihiko. Engari he tika tēnei ki te katoa?
E kōrero ana a Newsable ki te Tākuta a Teo Susnjak he mātanga rorohiko ki Te Kunenga ki Purehuroa, he mātanga tēnehi o mua hoki.
Āpiti atu: anō te hinga - he tangata tino whairawa o mua, he mātanga ki te moni whitirangi hoki, ināianei he mauhere mō te rautau pea; ka timata te kaupeka poitūkohu Sal’s NBL; kua pōhēhētia he hetiheti pīwari e māuiui ana engari he ngetangeta kē.
Translated into Te Reo Māori using the power of Microsoft AI and Stuff's Kaiwhakamāori Joel Maxwell -
After the revelations about hacking attacks on New Zealand's parliamentary system, will our relationship with China change? Newsable speaks to our Chief Political Correspondent, Tova O'Brien.
Microsoft New Zealand’s CEO talks about the company’s latest AI technology that will increase exposure to Te Reo Māori, plus the strange traditions that surrounded dying in the Victorian era and changing your name to protest the candidates standing in the US Presidential Elections.
I muri i ngā whakaohoreretanga inanahi mō ngā pāhua mūrere i runga i te pūnaha paremata o Aotearoa, ka panoni te whakawhanaungatanga ki a Tiaina?
E kōrero ana a Newsable ki tō mātou kairīpoata tōrangapū rangatira, ko Tova O'Brien.
E kōrero ana te tumuaki o Microsoft Aotearoa mō te hangarau hinengaro rorohiko hōu kia whakanui ake te paoro o te reo Māori ki ngā pito e whā, ā, kātahi ka aro ki ngā tikanga rerekē e pā ana i te matenga o te tangata i te wā Wikitōria, kā rua, ka pēhea te tīni i tō ingoa kia porotū ki ngā kaitono e tū ana i te Pōtitanga Perehitini o Amerika.
Translated into Te Reo Māori using the power of Microsoft AI and Stuff's Kaiwhakamāori Joel Maxwell -
¿Faltan episodios?
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The Government has revealed a cyber attack on New Zealand's parliamentary network in 2021 by a Chinese state-sponsered actor...a claim rejected by China.
The head of the spy agency, the GCSB, Andrew Clark has spoken about what happen and whether any sensitive information was taken. -
Instagram’s automatically limiting the political content it recommends. Newsable finds out what this actually means for your Insta feed.
The reaction from Hawkes Bay to a Cyclone Gabrielle report that says the national emergency system is letting people down, plus what is going on with camera surveillance at Woolworth's self check outs and flexible work and how it affects stress. -
New Zealand’s national emergency system ‘sets up good people to fail.’
That’s the damning finding of an independent review into the Civil Defence response to Cyclone Gabrielle in Hawke’s Bay.
The review - which was carried out by former Police Commissioner Mike Bush - flags what it calls a lack of 'situational awareness', and adds that the system is currently not fit for purpose.
Stuff Audio's senior journalist Aaron Dahmen joins Imogen Wells to talk about the report, and what it means for future emergency responses. -
The strict instructions to leave the Princess of Wales alone after her shock announcement that she was undergoing treatment for cancer.
Labour leader, Chris Hipkins, joins Newsable to talk about the party's decison to re-visit tax rules, plus the Wheel Blacks miss out on selection for the Paris Olympics, but celebrate holding a major international competition on home soil. -
Kate, the Princess of Wales, has revealed she has cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy.
Her condition was disclosed in a video message after weeks of speculation on social media about her whereabouts and health.
Kate asked for “time, space and privacy” while she is treated for an unspecified type of cancer. -
Newsable can reveal Police dished out $65,000 for a podcast it released on the staff intranet, a total figure higher than the salary of a training officer. The cost is also six times that of a similar product produced by the New Zealand Defence Force. So why won't people ever get to hear it for themselves?
Plus, how many Kiwis suffer from migraines in their day-to-day lives, the plane etiquette of peeling an orange, and start your engines, it’s Formula 1 time across the ditch. -
As New Zealand returns into a technical recession, with GDP falling 0.1% in the December quarter, the axe is falling on hundreds of jobs across New Zealand’s public service.
Around 180 roles are likely to be disestablished at the Ministry of Health, while the Ministry of Primary Industries is planning to cut 9% of its staff.
Sources at the Ministry of Education, ACC, WorkSafe, Crown Law, MBIE and other departments have also confirmed to Stuff that jobs will go.
Imogen Wells has all the details in a breaking news update from Stuff’s daily news podcast, Newsable. -
March has been pretty chilly in many parts, so are the frosty temperatures due to hang around? Newsable speaks to a weather expert.
GDP figures are out today so we check out how the economy is faring. Also on the pod: the special skills in a neurodiverse workforce and the special Easter egg saved, uneaten, throughout one person's life. -
It seems everyone is still talking about the weight loss drug, Ozempic, but what’s happening with it here in New Zealand. We speak to the Medical Director of New Zealand’s Royal College of GPs.
Plus who is donating to our political parties? What is going on with Donald Trump Jnr's planned tour downunder?... and A.I tests Joe Biden's cognitive abilities. -
Why are politicians seemingly so stuck in negative mode? We speak to a political expert to find out more.
Plus as Kategate rumbles on, we get details of how the Royal PR teams operate, the Queenstown house being sold to raise funds for Mike King's mental health charity plus the job on the ice involving post cards and penguin counting. -
Russian President Vladimir Putin is about to embark on a fifth term in power. We're asking what is the point of holding presidential elections there when the result is already known?
It's the freakish try we simply cannot stop watching - what the Storm’s weekend win over the Wahs reveals about the level of skill in the NRL.
Plus, why joggling could be the new sport for you. -
An animal welfare expert is opposing the proposed re-starting of live animal exports of breeding stock. A former Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries vet tells Newsable nothing could ever convince him live animal exporting can be safe.
The Crusaders are struggling. We hear from Sky commentator Jeff Wilson about what's going wrong for them in Super Pacific Rugby plus contemporary dance troupe, Black Grace are tackling colonisation in the Pacific and a US library is writing off book fines in return for cat pictures. -
Financial pressure on funders means Dave Brown Buttabean Letele is having to cut support to 500 families using his food parcel service, but he is now turning to helping people get into work.
This interview does cover issues of mental health and suicide. Here are some contact numbers for assistance if you or anyone you know needs help
Where to get help
1737, Need to talk? Free call or text 1737 to talk to a trained counsellor.
Anxiety New Zealand 0800 ANXIETY (0800 269 4389)
Depression.org.nz 0800 111 757 or text 4202
Lifeline 0800 543 354
Rural Support Trust 0800 787 254
Samaritans 0800 726 666
Suicide Crisis Helpline 0508 828 865 (0508 TAUTOKO)
Yellow Brick Road 0800 732 825
thelowdown.co.nz Web chat, email chat or free text 5626
What's Up 0800 942 8787 (for 5 to 18-year-olds). Phone counselling available Monday-Friday, noon-11pm and weekends, 3pm-11pm. Online chat is available 3pm-10pm daily.
Youthline 0800 376 633, free text 234, email [email protected], or find online chat and other support options here.
If it is an emergency, click here to find the number for your local crisis assessment team.
In a life-threatening situation, call 111.
New research out this morning suggests the snow cover on our skifields could be cut in half in decades to come, the memoirs of a surgeon on working in New Zealand's health system and the plague of starlings affecting an English village. -
Could you survive on an annual grocery bill of just $5000? We meet the woman who’s set herself that challenge.
Kiwi film royalty Lee Tamahori explains why his new movie is so timely.
Plus.. it’s the series of events that’s sent the internet into a frenzy - we catch up on all things Princess Kate Middleton. -
This week marks five years since the devastating terror attacks in Christchurch. In a special episode, community leaders discuss the ongoing - now inter-generational - trauma and whether security services are doing enough to tackle the sharp rise in hate offences against Muslims. Plus, analysis of the Government's stance towards the recommendations of the Royal Commission of Inquiry.
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We hear from a Unicef spokesperson in the Middle East about the struggles to get aid to families to prevent children dying from malnutrition.
A clinical psychologist and Massy academic has some solutions to overthinking, how to prepare for a play by play match commentary of The Warriors plus we preview the Oscars. -
The Government has confirmed landlords will again receive a tax-break on interest paid for rental properties, from April.
The move will reverse the prior Labour Government’s phasing out of interest deductibility for rentals.
Stuff's Money Editor, Susan Edmonds, explains what's involved. -
Another brutal day for New Zealand’s media landscape - with four of TVNZ’s flagship shows facing the axe in a major restructure at the broadcaster.
Up to 68 roles across the business are at risk.
TVNZ Chief Executive Jodi O’Donnell says there have been tough conversations for many around the business today, including the newsroom, but she maintains TVNZ needs to reduce costs.
Stuff Audio senior journalist Aaron Dahmen has the details. - Mostrar más