AI wearables are advancing fast, but affordability and functionality will keep smartphones firmly in charge for now.
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Tesla plans to more than double capital spending to a record high of more than $20-billion this year.
Samsung Electronics has forecast a worsening chip shortage this year driven by the AI boom.
Government is seeking to boost local automotive manufacturing while Chinese brands weigh investment versus market risks.
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A planned new undersea cable called T4 and linking Africa, Indian Ocean islands and Asia, will improve redundancy in the region.
The failure of an effort to save thousands of jobs at the embattled Post Office has been described as disappointing.
Heavyweight technology firms have reported better-than-expected sales at their cloud computing units in recent days.
South Africa has strong institutions that can buttress its economy, the head of research at Standard Chartered Bank said.
Changpeng Zhao has pleaded guilty to violating US laws against money laundering at the world’s largest crypto exchange.
The average ransomware payment by South African companies is in the order of R18-million, new research has found.
World News
The announcement signals a major escalation of the US crackdown on China’s technological capabilities as tensions bubble over the fate of Taiwan.
Twitter is internally testing a widely requested edit button, a feature that will be rolled out to paid subscribers in the coming weeks.
SpaceX will launch five more astronaut missions to the International Space Station for Nasa at the end of the decade under a $1.4-billion contract.
Apple’s top privacy executive will be leaving the company soon, stepping down from a high-profile role at the iPhone maker.
Every decade or so, the wireless industry rolls out a new cellular communications standard that can transmit more data more quickly. Already under development is the next round, called “5G” because it’s the fifth
From the spears hurled by Romans to the missiles launched by fighter pilots, the weapons humans use to kill each other have always been subject to improvement. Militaries seek to make each one ever-more lethal and
































