Tech billionaires promise AI abundance underwritten by a basic income. Run South Africa’s budget and the thesis unravels.
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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.
Emile Burger is stepping down as CEO of Tarsus Distribution. He had been in the role for just 14 months.
More News
Joburg has secured bids from private producers to provide 92MW of electricity.
Investing in Karpowerships for 20 years is not in the best interests of South Africa, the Western Cape cabinet has resolved.
Blue Label Telecoms has cautioned shareholders that Cell C will be a drag on its full-year earnings.
The Wacs and Sat-3 cables should be repaired next month, according to telecoms companies.
Eskom said its transmission company will be operational by the first quarter of its 2025 financial year.
The Brics bloc has invited Saudi Arabia, Iran, Ethiopia, Egypt, Argentina and the United Arab Emirates to join.
World News
SpaceX will launch the “Doge-1 Mission to the Moon” in the first quarter of next year, with Elon Musk’s commercial rocket company accepting the meme-inspired cryptocurrency dogecoin as payment.
Sony has warned that the PlayStation 5 will remain in short supply into next year, suggesting the company will be constrained in its ability to boost sales targets for its latest games console.
The value of dogecoin dropped sharply in early US hours on Sunday after Elon Musk called it a “hustle” during his guest-host spot on the Saturday Night Live comedy sketch TV show.
Top US fuel pipeline operator Colonial Pipeline shut its entire network, the source of nearly half of the US East Coast’s fuel supply, after a cyberattack on Friday that involved ransomware.
Netflix has sent the world into a frenzy of anxiety by announcing through its blog that it will be trying to restrict users to only viewing content licensed to the country where they are physically located. This effectively means stopping customers from using a variety
If government decides to get serious about SA Connect, its wide-ranging broadband policy published two years ago, it will result in one of the largest telecommunications projects ever embarked upon































