Global demand for smartphones, PCs and gaming consoles is expected to shrink this year amid surging RAM prices.
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Astronomers have solved a cosmic mystery surrounding one of the most extreme stars ever observed.
South Africa is endowed with minerals needed by the tech industry, but they are not being exploited to their full potential.
As storage prices fall, South Africa’s renewables are pivoting from variable output to dependable, dispatchable power.
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The department of transport only expects the machine to be repaired to full functionality by the end of the month.
In a surprise development, MTN Group has announced the resignation of Godfrey Motsa, its South African CEO.
Eskom will make available large tracts of land it owns in Mpumalanga to investors wanting to build private power generation plants.
Eskom made a R9.2-billion net profit in the six months to the end of September, far higher than the R200-million in the year earlier period.
New research from Ookla has found that upgrading to a 5G Android handset in South Africa is hardly worth the money.
South Africa’s inflation rate jumped to the highest level in almost five years in November.
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Investors are getting constant reminders that it’s not cheap for technology giants to stay on top.
Google parent Alphabet is in talks for a potential acquisition of smartwatch maker Fitbit, a move that could bolster its hardware business while also increasing antitrust scrutiny.
Apple has announced a new version of its AirPods earphones, which will include noise-cancelling technology for the first time.
Chinese investors snapped up every blockchain-related stock in sight after President Xi Jinping said Beijing wants to speed up development of the technology.
Tweeting has become a serious business, with financial spin-offs if done right, so it’s no wonder that researchers continue to seek out the “tweet spot” when it comes to using Twitter effectively. It appears that everyone wants a piece of the action, and some users go to extraordinary lengths to rack up a high
Screamer Telecommunications, which is accused using spectrum in the 2,6GHz band without a spectrum licence, has pleaded innocence, with its lawyers arguing on Wednesday that a contract between it and signal distribution company Sentech entitled it to use the spectrum in question and that the real question

































