Amazon data centres in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain have been damaged by drone strikes in the Middle East.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
IT services group iOCO expects interim EPS between 27c and 30c amid restructuring success.
Weak foundational teaching, particularly in mathematics and languages, severely restrict secondary school Stem enrolment.
Sixty60’s R11.9-billion contribution places it among the most significant digital retail platforms in South Africa.
More News
The discounts will only be for Capitec customers: DStv Stream is being added to the bank’s cut-price Showmax plans.
Global bank messaging network Swift will trial live transactions of tokenised assets and digital currencies next year.
Bookmarks | Age of Empires at 25: the strategy game that inspired a generation of historians
These are the articles, videos and more that caught the attention of TechCentral’s editorial team in the past 24 hours.
South Africa is running out of power lines to transmit electricity from new projects, an official has reiterated.
The confirmed planet, called Barnard b, has a predicted diameter about three-quarters that of Earth.
Employees were praying outside StarSat offices on Wednesday as Icasa officials disconnected the company’s infrastructure.
World News
However, Morris Chang has warned that a reversal of globalisation would increase prices and reduce the ubiquity of chips that power the modern world.
The Biden administration has demanded that TikTok’s Chinese owners divest their stakes in the popular video app, the company said.
Samsung Electronics expects to invest $230-billion over the next 20 years to develop the world’s largest chip-making base.
OpenAI, creator of chatbot sensation ChatGPT, is beginning to roll out a powerful artificial intelligence model known as GPT-4.
Now, in the wake of two US criminal indictments, Huawei faces the task of working out the best legal strategy for allegations that could threaten the company’s very existence.
Recent evidence splashed across newspaper front pages and televised hearings about bribes and sweetheart deals suggest the rot runs far deeper than most people thought.
































