South African shoppers can now search Amazon using images, screenshots or barcodes with Amazon Lens.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.
South Africa’s new immigration white paper proposes a sweeping, tech-driven overhaul.
The decision by Leon Schreiber to hike fees for accessing home affairs’ online verification system will be reviewed in court.
Amid stiff competition, DStv is cutting hardware costs and letting households split subscription payments.
More News
Vodacom Group will spin off its South African tower portfolio into a separate business and may seek partners for the newly created entity.
Vodacom Group may consider a separate listing of its financial services business in South Africa to unlock value.
Telkom burned through close to R1-billion cash in the most recent six months.
Vodacom Group is targeting a 27% expansion in its financial services customer base to 73 million by March 2024.
ZARP is pegged to the price of the rand and is available on the Ovex cryptocurrency exchange, Curve, and Keep3rV1 Network.
Vodacom’s capital expenditure in South Africa jumped by 11.1% year on year, pushing spending on its network to R5.6-billion from R5-billion a year ago.
World News
Goldman Sachs is growing concerned about Apple, and it is not alone. While shares of the iPhone maker have been stronger of late, the advance comes in contrast to a darker view toward the stock from analysts.
Volkswagen is bundling its software operations with an investment plan of about €8-billion over the next three to five years, another step in the electric and connected-car shift that’s heralding massive change across the entire industry.
The European Central Bank warned Facebook that the bar for regulatory approval of its planned libra project has been set very high as governments in the region express concerns about digital currencies.
The European Union’s antitrust chief called for more rules to rein in how companies collect and use information, offering the first clues into how she may use new powers to target big technology firms.
Intel, the world’s largest chip maker, is at a crossroads. The company, with Microsoft, dominated the client-server era of computing. Its chips power most servers and PCs sold today. But the action in the computing industry is no longer in desktops and laptops, but rather in smartphones
Could pay-TV operator MultiChoice, which owns DStv, be forced to allow rival broadcasters access to premium sports and entertainment content that it has bought rights to? If communications minister Dina Pule gets her way, this could happen.Pule told parliament on Tuesday
































