Emile Burger is stepping down as CEO of Tarsus Distribution. He had been in the role for just 14 months.
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Former communications minister Dina Pule presided over one of the ICT sector’s darkest chapters.
Permits are secured but the project has yet to break ground, with finer details of the plan still undisclosed.
Palo Alto CIO Meerah Rajavel tells TechCentral why going slow on AI is no longer an option for security teams.
More News
Ford South Africa has used its South African centenary event to launch a range of new cars. TechCentral was there and filed this video report.
Vodacom and the WWF have teamed up to “pilot solutions to safeguard marine mammals against entanglements”.
Eskom will use a portion of $12.5-billion in multilateral loans to deliver power to areas where the grid is overloaded.
OpenAI’s board fired the company’s CEO, Sam Altman, sending shockwaves across the tech industry.
Vodacom is experimenting with different forms of satellite connectivity but thinks direct to mobile will be most disruptive.
Germany will soon sign an agreement to lend South Africa €500-million to help it transition away from coal-fired electricity.
World News
Ireland hit Facebook’s WhatsApp with a record €225-million fine on Thursday following an inquiry into the messaging app’s transparency around sharing personal data with other Facebook companies.
YouTube has signed up more than 50 million paid subscribers to its music service, a major milestone for Google’s video site that has long been criticised by record labels and Hollywood studios for giving away their work for free.
Apple will loosen rules on its App Store that have banned companies like Netflix from providing customers a link to create a paid account to bypass Apple’s in-app purchase commissions.
Zoom shares tumbled nearly 17% on Tuesday after the video-conferencing company signalled a faster-than-expected drop in demand and analysts questioned its future plans.
The SABC staggers from one crisis to the next. It has been politically contested from apartheid days, used by ruling parties as a valuable propaganda tool since its formation in 1936. The broadcaster has been extremely contentious in recent years
The 16,9m people receiving welfare payments from South Africa’s government into bank accounts should have the right to choose between financial services companies, according to the country’s central bank. A contract awarded by the South
































