While EVs remain the focus in this episode of Watts & Wheels, the conversation also turns to something far less planet-friendly.
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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
TCS Legends, the new video podcast series from TechCentral, launches this Monday with the first of a special double episode.
BMW, working with Anglo Platinum and Sasol, has launched a fleet of hydrogen-fuelled vehicles for testing in South Africa.
The Post Office has signed a contract with Ethiopian Airlines to provide airmail services to international destinations.
Eskom remains in deep financial trouble, a new report tabled in parliament by national treasury has shown.
Blue Label Telecoms said its underlying core headline earnings will decline by R100-million in its latest reporting period.
TechCentral has compiled a list of five blog posts we believe every aspiring programmer should read.
World News
Tom Cruise isn’t simply taking on what appears to be Russian-made fighter jets in his remake of the 1986 classic Top Gun: he’s also angering China.
Decentralised-finance investors are betting on ethereum’s revamp to help thaw out the market’s more than two-months-long crypto winter.
China has released details about the final stages of work on Tiangong, an under-construction orbiter started after the US barred Beijing from participating in the International Space Station.
Bitcoin, stuck in a range around $30 000 lately, has some market watchers wondering if it’s vulnerable to further drops.
Intel said on Wednesday that most of the processors running the world’s computers and smartphones have a feature that makes them susceptible to attack. The largest chip maker is working with rivals and partners on a fix, but
AMD is the sad sack of semiconductor makers. A security hole in its biggest rival’s computer chips gives it a small opening to change its fortunes. The bad news for Intel was a report that a design flaw in its widely used computer chips
































