Stability is needed as Sita looks to re-establish itself as a trusted service provider for government IT services.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
Many mergers and acquisitions will now escape Competition Commission review – but a senior lawyer sees a tech blind spot.
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.
More News
President Cyril Ramaphosa’s opening of parliament speech highlighted infrastructure and digitisation as key to job creation.
A global issue caused by a software update at CrowdStrike has been blamed as the cause of Capitec’s downtime.
OpenAI is rolling out a more affordable, slimmed-down version of its flagship artificial intelligence model.
President Cyril Ramaphosa pledged on Thursday to revive South Africa’s flagging economy.
JSE-listed technology services group EOH Holdings has appointed a new chief financial officer.
Communications minister Solly Malatsi says luxury goods classification on smartphones inhibits digital adoption.
World News
The Vodacom Group parent has agreed to sell its Hungarian unit in a deal valued at €1.8-billion as part of its plan to simplify its sprawling business.
The much-anticipated upgrade of ethereum risks altering the power structure of what is arguably the most commercially important cryptocurrency network.
The core developers working on the upgrade of the ethereum blockchain firmed up 15 September as the likely official date of the so-called Merge.
Qualcomm is taking another run at the market for server processors, betting it can decrease its reliance on smartphones.
A key stumbling block in trade negotiations between China and the US has been Beijing’s extensive support for its technology firms. But if US President Donald Trump’s administration thinks that will change any
Mark Zuckerberg emerged mostly unruffled after two gruelling days of US congressional hearings, reassuring investors with his composure even as lawmakers scoffed at his apologies over failures to protect user

































