Netflix has taken a small but significant step with the launch of its first-ever daily highlights show for the Afcon football.
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Naspers and Prosus chairman Koos Bekker has sold shares in both companies worth about R2.5-billion over three trading days.
The Competition Tribunal has approved the sale of Herotel to Vumatel, but subject to an extensive set of conditions.
The Competition Commission has approved a deal that will see Open Access Data Centres expand its local footprint.
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President Cyril Ramaphosa has been told to cut bureaucracy and focus on fixing the country’s energy crisis if he wants to revive the economy.
It will cost R2.5-billion to fix the Eskom generating unit that exploded at the Medupi power station last August.
Apple is said to be planning a new service that will let small businesses accept payments directly on their iPhones without any extra hardware.
TallOrder Solutions, a technology company co-founded by South African IT industry veteran Dana Buys, has announced it has raised R47-million in additional funding.
Customs is investing in technology to improve the facilitation of trade, revenue collection and compliance by import and export traders at South Africa’s borders.
Sun Exchange, a South African firm that crowd-sources funds for solar panels and leases them to customers, plans to expand to other countries on the continent.
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A number of 8K-resolution televisions and an Alexa-enabled shower head are among the first products to be announced at CES.
Apple CEO Tim Cook made $125-million in the company’s 2019 fiscal year, less than the year before due in part to a lower bonus.
Bill Gates, the world’s second richest person, has said he wants his fellow billionaires to pay much higher taxes. Gates, 64, has a net worth of $113.7-billion.
Advanced Micro Devices shares rallied on Thursday, with the stock hitting an intraday record – the chip maker’s first such milestone in nearly two decades.
Despite a number of retail price skirmishes in South Africa’s mobile telecommunications industry in 2013, the prepaid tariffs levied by South Africa’s two incumbent mobile operators, Vodacom and MTN, remain “expensive” relative to the rest of the
As parliament this week shines a spotlight on the cost of communications in South Africa, it has emerged that Vodacom’s high-end, all-in-one contract packages are significantly more expensive than similar products at other Vodafone-owned operations around the world. An investigation by


































