Google is rolling out a wave of AI features in Gmail, aiming to turn the e-mail service into a proactive “inbox assistant”.
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China’s AI sector is gaining confidence and risk appetite, but chip-making constraints still blunt ambitions to rival the US.
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.
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Elon Musk’s absolutist version of free speech has thrown the world’s richest man into the crosshairs of nation states.
Telkom subsidiary Openserve says ADSL will be eliminated from its network within the next two years.
Government has published a national policy framework for AI and is seeking feedback from stakeholders.
On 1 July, electricity costs for some of South Africa’s poorest people went up by as much as 60%.
These are the articles and videos that caught the TechCentral editorial team’s eye over the past 24 hours.
Capitec and Showmax have reached a deal that will see the bank’s clients paying just half of the normal subscription fee.
World News
Europe is where ChatGPT gets regulated, not invented. That’s something to regret.
Meta Platforms is testing a monthly subscription service, called Meta Verified, which will let users verify their accounts using a government ID and get a blue badge.
Twitter said on Friday it will allow only paid subscribers to use text messages as a two-factor authentication method to secure their accounts.
Snapchat’s social media app is adding users at a faster clip, reaching more than 750 million per month.
It is increasingly clear that the company’s base of loyal users isn’t an inexhaustible resource from whom it can forever extract a rent through its services offerings
Let’s not fixate on what’s gone wrong for Apple in China. The company has many other problems that it seems to be doing too little to address.

































