Graduate unemployment in South Africa has risen to 12.2%. The problem is a skills mismatch, not qualifications.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
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.
More News
The EFF is running a poetry competition to celebrate its 10th anniversary. TechCentral asked ChatGPT for help.
South Africa and France have entered into an agreement to improve the Special Investigating Unit’s cyber-forensic capabilities.
South Africa’s only driver’s licence card-printing machine has been fixed and is back in production.
Garmin has revealed local pricing for its new Fenix 7 Pro series, and athletes better be prepared to dig deep if they want one.
South Africa has extended a ban on scrap metal exports as government tries to combat theft of infrastructure.
The new date to complete the migration from analogue to digital terrestrial television is 31 December 2024.
World News
Hong Kong’s equity traders can’t get enough of Tencent Holdings, the $926-billion giant that’s on pace for its biggest ever monthly gain.
Google parent Alphabet is shutting down its Internet balloon business, Loon, which aimed to provide a less expensive alternative to cellphone towers, saying on Thursday that it was not commercially viable.
In the waning days of Donald Trump’s presidency, Jeremy Grantham warned that US stocks were in an epic bubble. He now predicts Joe Biden’s economic recovery plan will propel them to perilous new heights, followed by an inevitable crash.
Uganda will maintain its shutdown of Facebook, Twitter and other social media platforms until the government deems they’re safe from being used to inflame tensions, a report said.
The arrival of Microsoft Windows 95 on 24 August 1995 brought about a desktop PC boom. With an easier and more intuitive graphical user interface than previous versions, it appealed to more than just business, and Bill Gates’s stated aim of one PC per person per desk was set in
It has been a bad week for companies wanting to build businesses around making money from illegal movie downloaders. Last Friday saw an Australian judge refuse Voltage Pictures the right to send downloaders of Dallas Buyers Club a letter demanding an undisclosed payment. Justice Nye Perram decided that
































