Graduate unemployment in South Africa has risen to 12.2%. The problem is a skills mismatch, not qualifications.
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South Africa’s top universities have stopped policing AI and started redesigning how they teach, assess and certify.
BlackBerry lost while it was winning. South Africa’s would-be IoT platforms should heed the warning.
South Africa’s private sector returned to marginal growth in June, but business optimism sank to a five-year low.
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South Africa will provide fiscal support to the motoring industry to help it transition to producing electric vehicles.
The price of diesel will rise by a record R2.84/l on Wednesday, raising the spectre of a fresh round of inflationary pressures.
National treasury has warned government departments that it is confronting significant budgetary challenges.
South Africans with a Luno wallet or VALR Pay will soon be able to use bitcoin to buy their groceries.
MultiChoice Group has appointed Marc Jury as interim CEO of its Showmax business as Yolisa Phahle gears up for retirement.
Europe’s car makers have a fight on their hands to produce lower-cost electric vehicles and erase China’s lead.
World News
Cryptocurrencies fought to find a footing on Monday after even weekend cheerleading from Tesla boss Elon Musk seemed unable offset selling pressure from spooked investors.
Taiwan has suffered a sudden reversal of fortunes. The pandemic comes just as a drought triggers power outages, stoking economic uncertainty and threatening the world’s chip supply.
Elon Musk is again tweeting about technology and cryptocurrencies, and this time he’s clear on where his support is at.
Iran has enlisted intelligence officers in the government’s latest effort to crack down on illegal cryptocurrency miners, as the nation’s power grid struggles to handle rising electricity consumption.
WhatsApp, Skype and other “over the top” services should be regulated in the same way as telecommunications operators, especially as there is a risk that these new competitors will threaten cellphone companies’ ability to invest in their networks. That is the view of
The unthinkable has happened. BlackBerry, which has always developed phones that run its own operating system software, has released its first smartphone running Android. And if the
































