America’s technology giants will not face heavy-handed regulations in Europe’s digital rule overhaul, sources said.
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Top News
Silicon is transforming battery and charging technology, leading to thinner devices, larger capacities and faster charging.
Physical AI dominated CES this week, yet questions persist over affordability, usefulness and mass market demand.
Google is rolling out a wave of AI features in Gmail, aiming to turn the e-mail service into a proactive “inbox assistant”.
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South Africa’s main stock exchange will probably continue haemorrhaging listings, the CEO of A2X said in an interview.
New shares will be offered in the ratio of 227 rights offer shares for every 100 ordinary shares held, the IT services group said.
Load shedding is proving to be a hugely expensive problem for South Africa’s mobile operators.
Microsoft plans eliminate 10 000 jobs and take a $1.2-billion charge as its cloud computing customers dissect their spending.
The most severe power cuts ever experienced in South Africa are threatening food and water supplies and disrupting the lives of millions of people.
Telkom expects to play host to the launch of the first mobile virtual network operator on its network by year-end.
World News
Sea Ltd is one of those companies you either know, or you’ve never heard of. And investors the world over will be kicking themselves for missing the massive run-up in its stock.
A China-linked cyberespionage group has been remotely plundering e-mail inboxes using freshly discovered flaws in Microsoft mail server software, the company and outside researchers said on Tuesday.
India led the world last year in Internet shutdowns that affected hundreds of millions of people, as governments cracked down on political rivals and tried to suppress protests.
The Biden administration is moving to put semiconductors, artificial intelligence and next-generation networks at the heart of US strategy towards Asia.
MTN’s week began as badly as it had the week before – for the second Monday on the trot, it was greeted by a plunging share price. This time it was sold down by as much as 10% on the back of
Vast Networks, billed as Africa’s first open-access Wi-Fi infrastructure operator, plans big expansion in the coming years as it looks first to consolidate the networks it’s inherited and then expand

































