How rugby player’s life changed in the blink of an eye In the blink of an eye, Teilah Ferguson’s life changed. When a sprig from a rugby boot entered her left eye during a game, little did she know the community she would gain. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 10:15am Enero posts steady FY25 EBITDA growth as agency teams win awards Enero Group posted a 2% rise in FY25 EBITDA, boosted by award-winning agencies Hotwire, BMF, ROI·DNA and Orchard driving steady growth and margins. 
© 2025 ITBrief 10:05am Crying emojis, taxpayer subsidies: Where next for Sydney’s start-ups? Entrepreneurs say they’ve been left in limbo, but critics of the defunct Sydney Startup Hub say it was a poor use of millions in taxpayer funding. 
© 2025 10:05am Rotorua mayoral candidates go head-to-head for first time A live online voting system asked attendees who impressed them the most on the night. Tania Tapsell came out on top, receiving a 72% share of the votes. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 9:25am Wairarapa bach 'totally destroyed' after fire Seven fire crews arrived at the scene on Ocean Beach Road. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 8:35am Watch: AMD talks ROCm and how it’s a game-changer for Radeon PCs You might not have heard about AMD’s ROCm. It (unofficially) stands for Radeon Open Compute PlatforM—a pretty terrible acronym—and it’s pronounced “rock ’em.” This is a way for programs to take advantage of the computing power in a graphics card instead of a CPU. Think of it as a software accelerator, sort of like AMD’s version of Nvidia CUDA. And it’s about to become a lot more relevant.
PCWorld contributor Will Smith got to speak with Andrej Zdravkovic, Senior Vice President of GPU Technologies at AMD. While ROCm is mostly relevant for large-scale “big iron” enterprise applications right now, the latest changes are making it more relevant for regular Windows users.
How so? Well, the new HIP (Heterogeneous Interface for Portability) SDK. It’s a bit of special sauce that lets programs designed to use CUDA and similar systems tap into ROCm’s power to leverage Radeon graphics cards. And it has the potential to be a huge game-changer. Basically, any local program that needs extra power—from AI applications to rendering to file processing and beyond—can benefit from this, with only small tweaks needed to get existing code up and running in most cases.
Check out the full video interview above for the technical ins and outs. And for more deep dives into the latest PC tech, be sure to subscribe to PCWorld and The Full Nerd Network on YouTube. 
© 2025 PC World 7:05am  
|
|
|
 |
|