The company highlighted that the AI infrastructure operating in South Africa will be governed by Microsoft’s AI Access ...
Johannesburg, 06 March 2025 – Microsoft today announced plans to spend ZAR 5.4bn by the end of 2027 to expand its cloud and AI infrastructure in South Africa to meet the growing demand for Azure ...
President Cyril Ramaphosa has seemingly thrown a jab at the United States (US) amid simmering tensions between US President ...
Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) will invest 5.4B rand (about $296.81M) more in South Africa by the end of 2027 to expand its cloud and AI infrastructure to meet the increasing demand for its Azure cloud ...
The pricing of Microsoft 365 has increased by around 165% in South Africa in the past 12 years. However, South Africans should look closer to home for what is to blame for the big increases.
The company will also fund 50,000 people to follow further courses and certification exams in cloud architecture ...
President Cyril Ramaphosa has described Microsoft South Africa's investment of billions of Rands in artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure as a momentous occasion which has come at the right time ...
The company continues to address sustainability challenges as it grows its infrastructure globally and locally, reinforcing ...
Microsoft announces a groundbreaking R5. 4 billion investment in South Africa, aimed at training one million citizens in AI and creating vital employment opportunities through technological ...
Cyril Ramaphosa, the President of South Africa, greeted the news as evidence of faith in the nation's economy. Microsoft will pay certification tests for 50,000 South Africans in AI, data science ...
Microsoft has committed to investing ZAR 5.4 billion ($298.6m) in cloud and AI infrastructure in South Africa by 2027. This builds on the ZAR 20.4 billion ($1.13bn) Microsoft has already invested in ...
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AFP) — Tech giant Microsoft will invest $298 million on artificial intelligence (AI) and data centre infrastructure in South Africa, the company’s vice-chair said ...