Technology reporter
Tamara Chuang
Tamara Chuang is a former Denver Post business writer.
All Stories

Interior design site Havenly to offer free personal design help with new registry service
Mixing data analysis and human curation, Denver-based interior-design startup Havenly is rolling out a new bridal registry Wednesday that offers brides -- or anyone who wants to create their own...

Rocky Mountain Information Security Conference kicks off — women and girls seen as cybersecurity’s future
The Rocky Mountain Information Security Conference, which starts its two-day conference Wednesday, is hosting its first women-in-security panel.

Tuition help for fast-food workers? Heck yeah, Guild Education is from Denver!
Denver startup Guild Education figured out how to get employers to offer a perk beyond free food to frontline workers. How about a college degree?

Don’t tell unwanted emails they’re unwanted, and other Tech+ answers to questions
Readers sound off on an influx of spam, inability to send email and (over)confidence about Macs’ resilience against viruses.

Comcast jumps into securing internet of things devices with new xFi system
Now that the majority of Americans have access to broadband and people who pay Comcast for internet outnumber those who pay for video, the cable provider is rolling out a...

Boeing’s Jeppesen partners with Texas technology firm to improve mobile apps for pilots
Jeppesen Sanderson, the Arapahoe County-based division of Boeing Co., said Thursday it will beef up its flight-navigation mobile app by partnering with ForeFlight, the Austin, Texas-based developer of a flight-planning...

Golden-based HomeAdvisor doubling size of its New York operations, also plans to double staff
HomeAdvisor is doubling the size of its New York City sales office by moving into 43,000 square feet at 330 West 34th Street, the Golden-based home services company confirmed this...

Sprint shares why its mobile data speeds improved in Denver: the Magic Box
Sprint's rollout of new technologies, including something it calls the "Magic Box," improved the quality and speed of its mobile service in Denver and five other cities, the company said...

Hulu’s new $40 live TV service launches, but not all local channels available in all cities
Hulu has stood alongside Netflix as one of the most prominent subscription video-streaming services and a driving force behind cord cutters ditching pay TV for online viewing. Now Hulu is...

As Dish Network loses 143,000 TV customers, its pivot to wireless moves forward by targeting “internet of things”
Dish Network on Monday reported that it lost 143,000 paying TV customers in the first three months this year. But CEO Charlie Ergen is more focused on a wireless network...