While EVs remain the focus in this episode of Watts & Wheels, the conversation also turns to something far less planet-friendly.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
The Ilitha Telecoms CEO has argued that meaningful connectivity is what South Africa needs to unlock economic participation.
The partnership aims to use the scale of the SABC Plus platform to expand the reach of Microsoft’s AI training programmes.
Frogfoot has expanded its footprint in KwaZulu-Natal through the acquisition of fibre assets from Mitsol.
More News
The Information Regulator on Monday confirmed that is has received two notifications from the IEC.
African countries must not restrict or hinder digital nomads and skilled workers from crossing their borders.
Planet42 has raised debt and equity funding from Standard Bank to help the rent-to-buy start-up repay costly euro loans.
Guardrails must be put in place to make AI as accessible to non-technical people as possible, IBM South Africa has said.
TechCentral has a look at the 10 biggest utility-scale wind farms in South Africa and how much electricity they produce.
Brett and Mark Levy will have to cough up tens of millions of rand each after Blue Label’s plans to expand in India went awry.
World News
Samsung Electronics has begun mass-producing chips with advanced 3-nanometre technology, the first to do so globally.
Napster, the brand that became synonymous with free music to a generation of consumers, plans to rebuild its business around cryptocurrencies.
An uncrewed Chinese spacecraft has acquired imagery data covering all of Mars, including visuals of its south pole.
Arm has unveiled a set of new chip technologies aimed at making videogames on smartphones look better while preserving battery life.
The term “addiction” is often bandied about when we think someone spends too much time on something we deem detrimental to their health and well-being. From checking our phones repetitively, to playing with specific
For years, brothers Ajay, Atul and Rajesh Gupta were ranked among South Africa’s most prominent businessmen and socialised with the ruling elite, including their friend, then-President Jacob Zuma. They weathered accusations that
































