Roland Moore-Colyer
Roland is a passionate newshound whose journalism training initially involved a broadcast specialism, but he’s since found his home in breaking news stories online and in print. Originally starting his career in PR, Roland has gone on to report and edit for some of the UK’s leading technology publications and has managed teams of reporters while covering large events domestically and overseas.
He held a freelance news editor position at ITPro for a number of years after his lengthy stint writing news, analysis, features, and columns for The Inquirer, V3, and Computing. He was also the news editor at Silicon UK before joining Tom’s Guide in April 2020 where he started as the UK Editor and now assumes the role of Managing Editor of News.
Roland’s career has seen him develop expertise in both consumer and business technology, and during his freelance days, he dabbled in the world of automotive and gaming journalism, too.
Latest articles by Roland Moore-Colyer

Google launches Cloud Dataprep public beta
By Roland Moore-Colyer published
News Cloud Dataprep is aimed at making data preparation easier for analysts

AMD Ryzen Pro CPU launches with big PC partnerships
By Roland Moore-Colyer, Clare Hopping published
News AMD aims to bring innovation back into the processor market

Government seeks early data sharing deal with EU
By Roland Moore-Colyer, Zach Marzouk published
News Brexit might mean Brexit, but the UK is aiming for common data regulations with Europe

Google 'cancels memo meeting amid abuse fears'
By Roland Moore-Colyer, Clare Hopping published
News CEO says workers fear they could face online abuse for speaking up - report

Microsoft reveals Coco Framework blockchain service
By Roland Moore-Colyer published
News The enterprise-grade blockchain service is supported by Intel hardware and software

Intel's 18-core Core i9 processor will land in September
By Roland Moore-Colyer, Adam Shepherd published
News New processors will look to fend off competition from a reinvigorated AMD

Lax cyber security measures could cost CNI firms £17m
By Roland Moore-Colyer published
News Government proposes tough fines to protect essential UK services from hackers
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