New advertising and marketing practices are developed and applied online.
The Nepad e-schools will cost Africa $240 billion over a 10-year period.
Ericsson expands on the future of the local mobile industry, at the Digital Lifestyle Expo.
In today's technology roundup: Red Hat drops Linux OS plans, Silicon Valley hosts Net neutrality hearing, Xbox 360 claims 42% of Euro market, and inmate files restraining order against PC game.
In this World Wide Wrap: Heavyweights make LTE announcement, mobile exceeds fixed broadband, and iPhone gets VOIP.
There's a catch to iBurst's new pricing structure for its wireless broadband service.
The competition authorities lack the competence to rule on a market dominance complaint lodged by VANS, says the telco.
The major operators rubbish the DOC's guidelines for landing undersea cables.
The communications minister responds to criticism by a Ugandan minister over state involvement in cable projects.
The country asks the Nepad e-Africa Commission to evaluate the feasibility of implementing e-schools in Libreville.
SA is not as attractive as the rest of the continent at this stage, says the communications player.
The state-owned entity is to invest R300 million in satellite facilities, in part for the 2010 World Cup.