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

Cadillacs and Chevy Volts join car-sharing options as GM’s Maven launches in Denver
As Lindsey Whiddon prepped for this week's launch of General Motors new car-sharing service Maven, she plunged into city life to study traffic flow and talk to residents about how...

A supersonic jet faster than the Concorde will get public design debut in Centennial
If all goes well, Boom's passenger supersonic jet could fly its first paying customers in the 2020s.

Why Microsoft Outlook and other e-mail services know the motel you’re staying at
This morning I received an e-mail from Microsoft informing me that Outlook added an event (motel reservation in October) to my Outlook calendar.

Need OEM parts? Heck yeah, Digabit is from Englewood!
PDFs are so last decade! Englewood's Digabit is trying to help some of the last paper pushers -- original equipment manufacturers -- move to the present with its Documoto software...

The internet of old-timey things mixes analog and digital to forecast the weather
Don't take things so seriously. At least that's how the team at Viget in Boulder approaches the internet of things.

Five startups win CU Denver business competition and get to meet Jake Jabs
Five startups won the University of Colorado Denver's business competition Thursday and not only picked up prize money but got to meet American Furniture Warehouse founder Jake Jabs.

Study confirms Denver’s desire to turn National Western Stock Show area into agribusiness epicenter
Returning the aging National Western Complex to the framework of its original self is what might actually be needed to revitalize the north Denver neighborhood.

This Denver startup wants to make sure you’ll always find a parking spot downtown
When driving to an event in downtown Denver, all you really need is one available parking spot. That's the thinking of ParkiFi, the parking technology startup that aims to make finding...

Dish sheds 116,000 customers as it adapts to how people pay for TV
Adding a lower-priced TV plan wasn't enough to stop Dish Network from losing more paying customers. But in a conference call Wednesday, the Douglas County satellite TV provider talked about...

Golden, Lafayette and 24 Colorado communities vote yes on broadband internet alternatives
The cities of Golden, Lafayette and 24 other Colorado municipalities approved ballot measures Tuesday allowing them to explore the idea of offering their own broadband internet service.