Technology reporter
Tamara Chuang
Tamara Chuang is a former Denver Post business writer.
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Kevin Mitnick was the FBI’s most wanted hacker in the ’90s. He was hiding in plain sight in Denver.
While the FBI was hunting down notorious hacker Kevin Mitnick in the early 1990s, a newcomer named Erik Weisz showed up in Denver, moved into an apartment on 16th Street...

Pedestrian bridge that collapsed in Florida was recently tested by structural firm from Louisville
Details of its work on the new bridge at Florida International University were hard to come by since BDI deleted its earlier Twitter post praising the effort.

Facebook confirms it’s expanding in Denver but says no lease has been signed
Facebook is hiring in Denver and, apparently, moving into a much larger space.

Grocery delivery competition speeds up as King Soopers adds 2-hour service in Colorado
King Soopers, which has offered grocery delivery to local residents for about a decade, is speeding up service to match competitors' two-hour delivery. It's also expanding its delivery area to...

Microsoft Edge users are complaining that some “Favorites” sites have disappeared. Now what?
If a Windows update misplaced your Microsoft Edge internet bookmarks, they may still be on your computer.

Level 3’s Jeff Storey to start CenturyLink CEO job eight months earlier than expected
Jeff Storey, who headed up Broomfield-based Level 3 Communications, will start his new gig about eight months earlier than expected.

Pueblo hospital downsizes, cuts 34 percent of staff, or 272 jobs, in restructuring
The hospital will close its medical and surgical floor though such services will be available on a smaller scale, according to The Pueblo Chieftain.

PHOTOS: Google’s new Boulder campus shows off the perks of working for a tech giant
Google's new Boulder headquarters opened with flourish -- and a pizza oven, an arcade games room and climbing wall.

Panasonic’s mini city in a lonely building near DIA offers a peek at futuristic technology
A look at a possible city of the future, complete with connected cars, smart street lights and lights embedded with data.

Amazon is coming to Colorado with a physical bookstore
More than two years after Amazon opened its first physical bookstore, Colorado is getting one of its own.