Emile Burger is stepping down as CEO of Tarsus Distribution. He had been in the role for just 14 months.
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Former communications minister Dina Pule presided over one of the ICT sector’s darkest chapters.
Permits are secured but the project has yet to break ground, with finer details of the plan still undisclosed.
Palo Alto CIO Meerah Rajavel tells TechCentral why going slow on AI is no longer an option for security teams.
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South African miners are battling a growing threat kilometres underground in the world’s deepest platinum shafts.
Eskom said it would reduce load shedding to stage 1 from 10pm on Friday evening, even though plant breakdowns remain high at 16GW of capacity.
The developers of the R4.6-billion property that would house Amazon.com’s Africa headquarters in Cape Town have been denied leave to appeal an interdict stopping construction.
Disney+, which will be launched in South Africa later this month, wants to more than double the number of global subscribers on the platform by 2024.
Inq., a technology company in Andile Ngcaba’s Convergence Partners portfolio, is acquiring South African cloud technology solutions provider Syrex.
Anglo American has unveiled the world’s biggest green-hydrogen powered truck at a platinum mine where it aims to replace a fleet of 40 diesel-fuelled vehicles.
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Apple could see a bigger-than-expected decline in the average selling price for the iPhone as consumers gravitate toward cheaper models, according to analysts.
Google has won a European Union court battle against plans to impose a global “right to be forgotten” in the latest landmark ruling over where to draw the line between privacy and freedom of speech.
Xiaomi introduced its first phones compatible with the latest 5G cellular technology in China, as the country’s once-biggest smartphone maker prepares for an uphill battle against domestic rival Huawei.
Adam Neumann, the charismatic entrepreneur who led WeWork to become one of the world’s most valuable start-ups, is stepping down as CEO after a plan to take the company public hit a wall.
On 10 April, communications minister Dina Pule stripped her director-general, Rosey Sekese, of a range of key powers. In a letter signed by the minister, which TechCentral today publishes in full, Pule assigned all human resources matters to one of Sekese’s deputies, Gift Buthelezi, just as the the DG returned to
The department of communications (DOC) is in a mess. Minister Dina Pule and director-general Rosey Sekese are no longer on speaking terms and, although Sekese has been back at work for the past two weeks following her recent suspension, she’s reportedly been locked out of her office































