Altron’s continuing-ops Heps is now seen rising 31-37%, with group-level outlook upgraded more meaningfully.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
Digital identity experts have welcomed new draft regulations as a good starting point but have flagged areas of concern.
Broadcaster-only election rules leave South Africa exposed to the AI-driven disinformation already shaping votes elsewhere.
As the so-called Magnificent Seven pour billions into AI, the chip makers selling them hardware are getting rich.
More News
Samsung Electronics plans to launch an ultrathin version of its Galaxy S25 phone in the first half of this year.
Angola plans to sell privatise its biggest telecommunications company, Unitel, in the coming months.
“Why don’t we hold strategic beef reserves, or mutton reserves, or apple reserves? Why bitcoin?” the Reserve Bank governor said.
Samsung has unveiled the Galaxy S25 series and revealed that the new models will cost less in South Africa than the S24 series.
There is growing interest from international buyers in South African tech and software companies.
Inflation came in lower than expected for December, with another interest rate cut next week now seen as likely.
World News
Meta Platforms has been hit with a record €1.2-billion fine by its lead privacy regulator in the European Union.
Apple’s rally in 2023 has brought it back to the brink of a historic threshold: a $3-trillion market valuation.
Recent advances in artificial intelligence are fuelling optimism over how businesses can operate more productively in the years ahead.
Nvidia has worked with the UK’s University of Bristol to build a new supercomputer using a new Nvidia chip that would compete with Intel and AMD.
When Apple went head-to-head with Spotify in 2015 by launching a music streaming service, things were always likely to turn ugly.
With $2-trillion added since Christmas, the Nasdaq 100 has a shot at beating the market for the 10th time in 11 years. But it may be taking on dot-com-era trappings.

































