A severe geomagnetic storm has reached Earth, with Sansa warning of elevated space-weather risks on Tuesday.
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Low-cost uncapped fibre is reshaping South Africa’s broadband market, promising to narrow the digital divide.
“Q-Day” may be a years away, but there’s an urgent need to get serious about quantum security today, experts have warned.
Chinese vehicle brands are no longer just disrupting South Africa’s new-car market.
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Naspers has closed its OLX in South Africa, saying the move was done so it can focus its customer proposition fully on its property and motor vehicle platforms.
Moove, the African fintech start-up that partners with Uber, has announced its second major fundraising round in less than six months.
Standard Bank said on Tuesday that its customers are struggling to access its Internet banking platform and its mobile banking app.
South Africa has cut the isolation period for those infected with symptomatic Covid-19 to seven days from 10 and dropped the need for asymptomatic cases to isolate.
Six companies, including Telkom, have applied to participate in the disputed upcoming auction by Icasa of radio frequency spectrum.
The co-founders Skype and Flutterwave are among the big names backing a new tech growth fund aimed at investing in African “impact start-ups”.
World News
Sony is working around the clock to manufacture its in-demand image sensors, but even a 24-hour operation hasn’t been enough.
Samsung is investing heavily in the next step in miniaturising semiconductors, a process called extreme ultraviolet lithography. It’s by far the priciest manufacturing upgrade Samsung has ever attempted.
SoftBank’s bad year goes well beyond WeWork. Investors are starting to get the feeling that whatever Masayoshi Son brings to the public is troubled.
Elon Musk is getting a laugh out of a 503-day-old marijuana joke that securities regulators didn’t find so funny.
South Africans could soon find themselves having to wrestle with a new type of electrical plug following the adoption of an apparently much safer standard for plugs and sockets. SANS 164-2 was introduced as the “preferred standard” for electrical plugs and sockets by the South
HTC, Sony, Samsung, LG, Apple, Nokia, Huawei. The world’s big smartphone makers are all expected to unveil new flagship devices in 2014, many of them in the next few months. But what can consumers look forward to?


































