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
Reforms in South Africa’s energy sector, while proceeding glacially, are setting the scene for clean, private power generation.
Many financial institutions are held hostage by legacy systems that consume the lion’s share of their IT budgets.
Streaming platform Viu, which includes Canal+ among its investors, is looking to expand its content offering in South Africa.
South African scientists have launched a cost-effective air-quality monitoring system built on IoT and AI technologies.
These are the articles, videos and podcasts that caught the TechCentral editorial team’s eye over the past 24 hours.
Elon Musk’s absolutist version of free speech has thrown the world’s richest man into the crosshairs of nation states.
World News
Microsoft headed into a showdown with EU antitrust watchdogs by insisting its $69-billion takeover of Activision Blizzard will “bring more competition” for gamers.
The world of stablecoins is suddenly looking shaky after a US move left investors questioning the future shape of the market.
Key members of China’s most influential scientific body have outlined the country’s plan to circumvent US chip sanctions for the first time.
The memory chip industry is going through an historic decline in demand, with two of the worst quarterly drops on record at the end of last year.
The Chinese Internet giant seems set on building out the long tail, maximising value beyond mainstream usage of its core products.
The smartphone market is following the growth-challenged path of PCs. That won’t please executives at Samsung Electronics and Apple, but their pain might be great for consumers.

































