In today's technology roundup: Nokia dumps Ovi mobile brand, Android phones allow credential theft, malicious e-mails torment UK govt, and MS Bing ups Facebook reliance.
The company's GoPayment service lets consumers pay for items using an NFC-enabled cellphone.
Consumers will use the wallet to make mobile commerce and e-commerce purchases.
The evolution of technology has played a significant role in enabling the possibility of the remote contact centre agent, says Paul Fick, MD of Spescom DataFusion.
Internet Solutions' CEO on telecommunications policies, economic growth and more.
Nokia's E5 is an excellent, and affordable business phone, with sleek design and social media integration.
The company impairs the unit, writing its value down to about R505 million, after buying it for R7.4 billion in 2008.
The company is almost done searching for a replacement for Shameel Joosub, says CEO Pieter Uys.
FNB doubles the number of users of its eWallet service, which is mostly used to send money to dependents in remote areas.
The provincial transport department will not be used as a guinea pig for the project, it says.
The company ups its capital spend to support increasing demand for data on its network.
RIM issues a recall on a batch of PlayBook devices that were shipped with a faulty build of the OS.
New products are in the pipeline as the company aims to grow its consumer base.