Vodafone Egypt has spent R4.3 billion on a 3G licence, following protracted negotiations with the telecoms regulator.
Do not to expect too much, too soon from telecoms deregulation, says Jaco Voigt, MD of VoxTelecom.
In today's technology roundup: Apple plugs security gap, no wireless entertainment in-flight, IBM discloses code to open source project, and AMD strikes key market vein.
Internet Solutions (IS) has initiated a staff connectivity scheme offering various forms of connectivity for use outside of the office.
Pinnacle Micro and Workgroup have released the iPod AV-8200Wi, an audio/video station for iPod users.
In spite of the biggest vendors' best efforts, ERP customers will not be persuaded to upgrade during 2007, says Butler Group. [Local rep: MarketWorks]
The North African country is completing broadband wireless Internet technology regulations.
In today's technology roundup: OSDL and FSG merge to create Linux Foundation, Microsoft and Nortel plan comms bundles, and Sun to use Intel chips.
The iPhone is neither "revolutionary" nor "magical", says Arthur Goldstuck, MD of World Wide Worx. He tells us why.
Naspers will target broadband in China and North America as a growth opportunity, in a bid to expand its technology reach.
In today's technology roundup: Apple's lawyers target iPhone copycats, Dell Canada faces class action suit, HP touts nanotechnology chip advances, and British government looks at data shake-up.
SA's contact centre industry could take the world by storm if government would just give it a break. So it says, anyway.