When Meg Whitman was living in California and running first eBay Inc. and then HP Inc., the idea that Africa had some role to play in her businesses rarely crossed her mind. “I literally thought about Africa 1% of my time,” she says.
Such inattention is common at US tech companies, which generally decided that establishing significant operations on the continent wasn’t worth it, considering its unstable governments, oscillating tax regimes and patchy digital infrastructure. Changing that calculus is now a major focus for Whitman, who as US ambassador to Kenya is trying to help the US catch up in an area that’s become a key front in the intensifying technology rivalry with Beijing.
The familiar narrative is that artificial intelligence will take away human jobs: machine-learning will let cars, computers and chatbots teach themselves - maki
American Airlines announced that it is expanding the use of a new technology aimed at reducing the number of passengers who attempt to cut in line when boardin
American Airlines (Representative Image)Photo : iStockSneaking a little ahead of line to get on that plane faster? American Airlines might stop you.In an appare