Although it's rare nowadays to find something in print that cannot be found online, there's still a high wall between print and online.
Government should rethink its approach to “national broadband”, whatever that is. Throwing another half a billion at the problem won't make it go away.
First, Cell C lied to us. Now it's Nokia. If nobody trusts your company anymore, blame the lying marketers who come up with these "viral" campaigns.
The City of Joburg's billing crisis is not SAP's fault, the company says. I'm inclined to believe it, but it is certainly SAP's problem.
It's time to get serious about the fraud that mobile operators commit in cancelling data bundles after a given expiry date.
Every time a GeekRetreat takes place, a bunch of people who weren't there attack it in public forums for being elitist, insular, or otherwise beneath their dignity.
Forget the salacious red herrings about Julian Assange. Forget the popular distrust of the US State Department. WikiLeaks will hurt you.
A recent spat between readers of a tourism Web site ended up with the ISP taking the site down.
When charges were dropped against two teenage boys, the outcry was immediate and sustained. After all, they recorded the rape on a cellphone camera.
The Democratic Alliance must be as surprised as I am at the news that Roy Padayachie is the new communications minister.
Threats posed by proposed new media laws go way beyond the freedom of the press.
The implosion of the government's Companies and Intellectual Property Registration Office would be a very big deal. It would, at a stroke, reduce South Africa's entire economy to "informal" status.
The upside of social media is that it gives everyone a platform. The downside of social media is that it gives everyone a platform.