AI, cross-border trade reshape e-commerce in SA

AI could soon choose what we buy, sustainability has shifted from nice-to-have to non-negotiable, and second-hand shopping is rapidly becoming mainstream, according to DHL’s E-Commerce Trends Report 2026. Based on survey findings from 29 000 online shoppers and 5 800...

How air transport industry plans to move 10bn passengers a year

It really sounds like a frequent flyer’s dream: Borders cleared in 10 seconds; weather delays cut by 65%; lost luggage down 90%; AI continually driving efficiency. But all this is becoming reality, says the SITA Impact Report 2025, documenting a year of customer-led...

Euclid space telescope marks a milestone in cosmic history

The European Space Agency’s Euclid space telescope has discovered 31 of the most ancient quasars ever found - and two of these giant and dazzling galaxy cores, powered by gargantuan black holes, are the earliest quasars yet observed in cosmic history. They shone with...

Mission on to catch and lift a sinking satellite

NASA NASA is attempting to stop a space observatory from dropping to earth. The Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory is NASA’s astrophysics multitool, capable of quickly observing a wide range of cosmic objects in visible, ultraviolet, X-ray, and gamma-ray light. All...

SASE continues robust growth

The worldwide secure access service edge (SASE) market topped $6-billion in 2022, representing robust 34% growth year-over-year (Y/Y). According to Dell'Oro report, in a crowded market with over 30 vendors, Cisco remained the overall SASE leader with a 17% revenue...

Consumers labour under debt burden

Sunday (26 March) will mark three years since South Africa went into lockdown, which had a devastating event had on the local economy. To add to this, South Africa was recently placed on the money laundering grey list, and economists are predicting a 45% chance of a...

Robotics and autonomous systems boost combat vehicles

Frost & Sullivan's recent analysis, US Military Combat Vehicle Market, Forecast to 2024, reveals that the US Army is significantly investing in enhancing its aging combat vehicle (CV) fleet while also developing next-generation vehicles that will operate...

New malware hijacks HTTPS traffic

Kaspersky researchers have discovered new malware that hijacks victims' interaction with HTTPS Web pages via patching the pseudo random number generator used in the process of establishing encrypted communication between the user and the website. Along with the...

Blockchain fails to live up to hype

Most blockchain technologies are still five to 10 years away from transformational impact, according to latest research from Gartner. The Gartner 2019 Hype Cycle for Blockchain Technologies shows that blockchain is sliding into the Trough of Disillusionment. The...

Conversational AI aims for great employee experiences

Kathy Gibson is at SAP TechEd in Barcelona - The humble chatbot can have a much bigger role to play in business operations as it gets smarter and more integrated. Omer Biran, head of conversational artificial intelligence (AI) at SAP, points out that chatbots – or...

Operations plus experience key for intelligent enterprise

Kathy Gibson is at SAP TechEd in Barcelona - The intelligent enterprise doesn't focus on just technology, but brings operations and experiences together. Juergen Mueller, chief technology officer and executive board member at SAP, talks about the convergence of O-data...

Business success derives from analytics, insights

Kathy Gibson is at SAP TechEd in Barcelona - Insight-driven business are more successful, which is why this is the end goal for digital transformation initiatives. SAP is taking its role in this transformation seriously, and aims to give customers the fastest way to...

SA company leaders ‘out of touch with customers’

As organisations worldwide celebrate Customer Service Week this week, South African executives need to be asking themselves: do we know what value we add to our customers? Nathalie Schooling, CEO of customer experience specialists nlighten, argues that the answer is...

Robots could learn human emotions

Robots could be taught to recognise human emotions from our movements, a new study shows. Researchers found humans could recognise excitement, sadness, aggression, and boredom from the way people moved, even if they could not see their facial expressions or hear their...

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Intermediate JAVA Developer at NEC XON Systems

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