The Competition Commission has opened the door to settlement talks over an alleged 2014 market-division pact.
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The economics of desktop computing have, for the first time in the PC’s long history, been broken by the data centre.
Airtel Africa has delayed its mobile money initial public offering to late 2026, citing war-driven margin pressures.
Stability is needed as Sita looks to re-establish itself as a trusted service provider for government IT services.
More News
Based on analysis, scientists believe the Eastern Cape meteorite, which caused a sensation, is a rare achondrite.
MultiChoice has cut the price of the streaming version of DStv Premium, provided customers commit to a 12-month contract.
These are the articles, videos and more than caught the attention of TechCentral’s editorial team in the past 24 hours.
Checkers Sixty60 has continued to grow strongly amid stiff competition. Now an app overhaul is imminent.
Huawei is preparing to launch new products at an event mere hours after Apple’s debut for the iPhone 16.
Communications minister Solly Malatsi has fired two members of the board of state-owned telecoms agency Usaasa.
World News
Twitter will tell employees by e-mail on Friday about whether they have been laid off, temporarily closing its offices and preventing staff access.
The US department of justice is preparing to open an investigation into the $20-billion takeover, Politico reported.
Elon Musk plans to retrench half of the social media company’s workforce, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
Mark MacGann, the whistle-blower behind the so-called Uber Files, said the company’s business model is still “absolutely” unsustainable.
For more than two years, a small and stealthy group of engineers within Google has been working on software that they hope will eventually replace Android, the world’s dominant mobile operating system.
Facebook bestrides the Earth. It attracts nearly 1.5 billion users a day, commands a fifth of global online advertising revenue and has a market capitalisation that exceeds the GDP of many countries. But breaking it up is the wrong approach.

































