Surplus groceries, straight from the browser

Surplus groceries, straight from the browser

Still Good co-founders Lorenzo Parisi and Nabeel Gool A South African start-up is selling near-expiry groceries at up to 65% off through a web app built specifically around the realities of the local device market. Still Good launched in May 2025 after co-founders Steffen Burrows, Lorenzo Parisi and Nabeel Gool saw the success of Danish…

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Africa: Unesco-Linked NGO Flags Microplastics Threat to Africa’s Oceans

Africa: Unesco-Linked NGO Flags Microplastics Threat to Africa’s Oceans

MICRO and nano plastics penetrated seafoods are escalating health and ecological risks to Africa’s oceans with the continent’s exposure potentially double the global rate, a UNESCO-linked NGO, Youth Orientation for Development (YOD) has warned. At the launch of the National Ocean Microplastics Monitoring Initiative (NOMMI) Emmanuel Ejiogu, President YOD, said Africa’s marine ecosystems face mounting…

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Africa: Unesco-Linked NGO Flags Microplastics Threat to Africa’s Oceans

Africa: 131 Nigerian Companies Earn Africa Quality Mark in Major Trade Boost

ABUJA – The Federal Government has presented the Africa Quality Mark (AQM) certification to 131 companies for 220 made-in-Nigeria products, reiterating its commitment to supporting industrial expansion and export growth. This forms part of efforts to strengthen the competitiveness of Nigerian goods in regional and continental markets under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA)…

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SIU probes UIF’s end-user computing training deal

SIU probes UIF’s end-user computing training deal

The Special Investigating Unit (SIU) has been authorised to investigate allegations of maladministration and unlawful conduct linked to end-user computing training and other skills development programmes intended to benefit more than 7 000 learners across South Africa. President Cyril Ramaphosa has signed Proclamation 316 of 2026, empowering the SIU to probe the affairs of the…

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Africa: Unesco-Linked NGO Flags Microplastics Threat to Africa’s Oceans

Africa: Dozens of New Species Found in One of Africa’s Last Biodiversity Blank Spots

A major survey of Angola’s remote Lisima plateau has uncovered species unknown to science, including new dragonflies, grasshoppers, moths and butterflies, confirming the highlands as one of Africa’s most exciting biodiversity frontiers. High on Angola’s eastern plateau, in Moxico Province, lies one of Africa’s great almost-unknown treasures: the Angolan Highlands Water Tower. It’s a vast…

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Africa: Unesco-Linked NGO Flags Microplastics Threat to Africa’s Oceans

Africa: Ruto Urges African Businesses to Prioritise Intra-Africa Trade At Kenya-South Africa Business Forum

Midrand, South Africa — President William Ruto has challenged African businesses and entrepreneurs to stop looking overseas for markets and begin trading more aggressively in Africa. The President noted that Africa’s market is increasingly becoming the next biggest frontier for trade and investment, and innovation in the world. Addressing a joint Kenya-South Africa Business Forum…

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Iran says “no tangible progress” made in talks as Hezbollah rejects Israel-Lebanon ceasefire agreement

Iran says “no tangible progress” made in talks as Hezbollah rejects Israel-Lebanon ceasefire agreement

  12:05 AM From inside Iran’s Evin Prison, journalist Reza Valizadeh pleads for medical help for him and other American captives In a recorded phone call from inside Iran’s Evin Prison, Iranian-American journalist Reza Valizadeh made a plea to the U.S. government to obtain medical help for him and other Americans detained in Tehran’s notorious…

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What happens when AI no longer needs us to improve

What happens when AI no longer needs us to improve

Anthropic has warned that frontier AI developers should establish a coordinated, verifiable way to slow down or temporarily pause development if advanced systems begin improving themselves faster than society can manage the risks. AI that can build itself would be a major development in the history of technology, but “full recursive self-improvement also might increase…

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Africa: Unesco-Linked NGO Flags Microplastics Threat to Africa’s Oceans

Africa: School in a Hot World – What Research Is Saying About Children’s Health and Learning

Climate change is making southern Africa hotter. While much attention has focused on climate impacts like droughts, floods and food insecurity, another crisis is unfolding quietly inside classrooms. Research has shown that some schools are becoming dangerously hot places for children to develop, learn and play. Hot classrooms can affect concentration, memory, behaviour and academic…

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