Last week saw the worldwide launch of Windows Vista, which caused quite a stir.
South Africans got their first glimpse of Windows Vista this week, while the Chinese showed how vulnerable the software is to piracy.
Windows Vista is a lot more than Microsoft's latest operating system. It points to future trends in computing innovation.
In my life, the banking wolf huffs and puffs and blows away all my money, without a brick structure to fall back onto.
Standard Bank has not bothered to ensure its new Internet banking user interface works with all browsers.
Microsoft, NEC, Seagate Technology, Siemens, Unisys and Xerox posted disappointing numbers last week.
The media giant's evolution towards becoming a technology company continued this week, and government task teams will investigate the local loop and ICASA.
Europe's office workers don't suffer from a lack of supportive technology, yet companies are struggling to boost productivity. What's gone wrong?
The latest blackout came like a bolt out of the blue, almost like last year, when Koeberg "broke", plunging Cape Town into darkness.
The problem with a trip to the airport is it always turns into an entire daylong debacle.
Much of last week's headline space focused on the disappointing results from some of the major players.
This week: News of former-ICASA CFO being suspended by her new employer, and the R500 million SAPS network is "on track".