At $1-trillion, South African-born SpaceX founder Elon Musk’s fortune is so large the human mind can barely process it.
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The JSE-listed telecommunications group’s annual report, published on Friday, gives no clue as to what it paid Nkosana Makate.
Shoprite couldn’t have planned the Covid-19 pandemic, but what it did to capitalise on it is the real story.
The platform buckled before kick-off, leaving soccer fans locked out for much of the first half of the World Cup opener.
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Microsoft will allow its customers to build autonomous artificial intelligence agents from November.
The SIU will probe allegations of corruption related to the sponsorship of the controversial breakfast events.
There is in fact a great deal at stake, certainly at the intellectual level and probably financially and politically as well.
These are the articles, videos and more that caught the attention of TechCentral’s editorial team in the past 24 hours.
Amazon.com workers’ complaints about company culture turned public last week.
The SABC has said it added 500 000 registered users to its free streaming platform in a little over three months.
World News
Democratic Republic of Congo authorities have sealed the offices and seized the accounts of Vodacom’s operations in the country.
The US has moved to block Microsoft’s $69-billion bid to buy Call of Duty maker Activision Blizzard.
Dutch officials are planning to enforce new controls on exports of chip-making equipment to China, a report said.
US President Joe Biden lauded TSMC’s investment in US chip-making facilities a “game changer”. It is no such thing.
Elon Musk’s stunning tweet that he wanted to take Tesla private and had funding secured was a classic Musk moonshot – given credibility only by the sense that if anyone could possibly pull such a brazen feat, he was the guy.
If you need proof that giant technology companies behave a lot like borderless governments, look no further than the brewing “app store taxes” debate.

































