Icasa has amended regulations in a move that will materially change how mobile data, voice and SMS bundles work.
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Starlink dominates South African headlines, but pricing and market realities raise questions about who it’s really for.
The improving currency should help drive down prices for software and hardware, including computers and phones.
Can artificial intelligence help you drive better and avoid accidents on the road? Discovery Insure thinks so.
More News
Luno is looking for a foothold in the US, the latest international platform to try and tap one of the world’s biggest populations of digital-asset investors.
Energy minister Gwede Mantashe said he suspended a community representative from the board of the regulator because he’s an opponent of atomic power.
Here’s how South Africa’s mobile operators stack up against each other when it comes to subscriber market share and average revenue per user.
Facebook’s announcement that user numbers had dropped for the first time laid bare a long-neglected vulnerability: it’s a one-trick pony.
South Africa has the second-fastest average mobile download speed in Africa at 19.2Mbit/s – beaten on the continent by only one other country.
Consultants became the gatekeepers and controllers of billions of rand in spending at state-owned enterprises.
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.
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?
Emerge Mobile, an ambitious start-up based in Umhlanga, north of Durban, has developed a smartphone-based mobile payments system similar to the US solution Square, and has secured certifications from international bodies. It now plans to launch


































