Naspers and its European spin-off, Prosus, expect full-year core headline earnings to jump by up to 28%.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
General Atlantic is backing Westcon-Comstor as investor and lender, freeing R7.1-billion for a planned special dividend.
Meta Platforms’ paid WhatsApp messaging tier adds stickers, themes and custom icons for R28.99/month.
Visa is readying South African banks for AI shopping agents, and its OpenAI deal adds further momentum.
More News
AMD just had its best week since November, outpacing even AI darling Nvidia.
Experts say that although the matric results this year were pleasing, they should be “taken with a pinch of salt”.
South Africa’s energy insecurity presents the biggest risk to the ANC’s election prospects, justice minister Ronald Lamola said.
Dan Marokane will take the reins at troubled state-owned electricity utility on 1 March, group chairman Mteto Nyati announced.
Huawei Technologies will not support Android apps on the latest iteration of its in-house Harmony operating system.
The introduction this year of “AI PCs” is the biggest development in the PC industry in 25 years, Intel has said.
World News
Bitcoin hit another record high and is flirting with $69 000 for the first time after inflation data bolstered the argument that the cryptocurrency is a hedge against rising cost pressures.
Tencent posted a 3% rise in third quarter profit, beating analyst expectations even as it flagged heightened regulatory scrutiny and a slowdown in advertising.
Kenya’s biggest telecommunications operator has lowered its full-year forecast for earnings due to its investment in Ethiopia.
Electric vehicles are a powerful weapon in the world’s battle to beat global warming, yet their impact varies hugely from nation to nation.
There’s been nothing but trouble for much of Africa as the price of oil plummeted 55% during the past two-and-a-half years. But there’s a brighter side to the sub-Saharan continent. Unlike Nigeria, where oil accounts for more
America just endured its first presidential election in which the majority of the electorate got its news from social media. And the outcome is already prompting soul searching by the companies that shaped it. Facebook will have to contend with mounting dissatisfaction

































