America’s technology giants will not face heavy-handed regulations in Europe’s digital rule overhaul, sources said.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
Top News
Silicon is transforming battery and charging technology, leading to thinner devices, larger capacities and faster charging.
Physical AI dominated CES this week, yet questions persist over affordability, usefulness and mass market demand.
Google is rolling out a wave of AI features in Gmail, aiming to turn the e-mail service into a proactive “inbox assistant”.
More News
Inflation fell more than expected in July, opening the way for interest rate cuts from next month.
Blue Label Telecoms said on Wednesday that its full-year core headline earnings per share will take a knock.
These are the articles that caught the eye of TechCenral’s editorial team in the past 24 hours.
OpenAI is releasing a new feature that will let corporate customers customise GPT-4o.
Telecoms industry body ACT has called for ‘Fair Share’ and lighter regulations to help sustain infrastructure investments.
To understand the current generation of AI tools and where they might lead, it is helpful to understand how we got here.
World News
The chatbot battle is heating up, and Mark Zuckerberg is making it clear that Meta Platforms is focusing on artificial intelligence-powered tools, too.
Elon Musk has approached artificial intelligence researchers in recent weeks about forming a new research lab, a report said.
MWC Barcelona is the scene of a fight between Big Tech companies and telecoms operators over who should fund the rollout of 5G and broadband.
The GSMA has announced a new united interface that will give developers universal access to all of their networks.
With the proliferation of smartphones, it’s easy to assume that the era of the paper map is over. That assumption is wrong.
The Soviet system ultimately collapsed under its own weaknesses – lack of innovation, a chronic shortage of consumer goods, inept central planning. None of these are obvious Chinese failings.

































