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.
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Blocking Vodacom’s acquisition of a stake in Maziv would be hugely negative for the telecoms sector, experts have warned.
Sita is planning a maintenance and upgrade project this weekend that could impact some government services.
These are the articles, videos and podcasts that caught the TechCentral editorial team’s eye over the past 24 hours.
Basil Sgourdos will retire as chief financial officer of both Naspers and Prosus at the end of November.
Robbie Venter, the former CEO of Altron and the son of South African business pioneer Bill Venter, has died.
MTN Group is going through an exceptionally difficult patch, with Nigeria set to drag it into a huge interim loss.
World News
Investors have argued that Adobe overpaid for a company that was valued at about $10-billion in a private fundraising a little over a year ago.
Deputy President David Mabuza has told MPs that there are no plans to privatise Eskom, despite the difficulties facing the state-owned utility.
Adobe has agreed to buy software design start-up Figma in a deal valued at $20-billion to help it expand tools for creative professionals.
Ford’s glitzy introduction of a redesigned Mustang powered by fossil fuels runs counter to the industry narrative of ditching petrol-burning cars.
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

































