America’s technology giants will not face heavy-handed regulations in Europe’s digital rule overhaul, sources said.
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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
South Africa will delay the launch of a procurement process for a new nuclear power station to allow for more consultation.
Thirty-three live games are scheduled to be aired by the public broadcaster – including on eMedia’s Openview platform.
Google’s dominance in search is giving it a decisive advantage in the brewing AI wars.
MTN and Omniaudio have announced the launch of a sports radio platform that’s zero-rated for data consumption.
These are the articles, videos and podcasts that caught the TechCentral editorial team’s eye over the past 24 hours.
Cell C has moved to signal that it remains a force to be reckoned with in South Africa’s telecoms industry.
World News
There were more than 200 e-books in Amazon’s Kindle store as of mid-February listing ChatGPT as an author or co-author – and the number is rising daily.
Microsoft has struck a 10-year deal to bring Call of Duty and other Activision games to Nvidia’s gaming platform if it’s allowed by regulators to buy Activision.
President Xi Jinping said China must resolve issues in key technological fields from the bottom up as the country deals with US export controls.
Macro events suggest bitcoin and other tokens should be beating a hasty retreat. Instead, they’re extending their 2023 rebound.
Huawei cut loose a sales director arrested in Poland on suspicion of espionage, moving swiftly to distance itself from a case that may crystallise fears the telecommunications giant helps Beijing spy on Western governments.
Allen Zhang stepped on stage to wrap up a long day of presentations at a Tencent Holdings conference. Four hours later, the WeChat founder had methodically torn apart his own brainchild before mapping out the next act for China’s premier super-app.

































