Vox Proudly Attains Google Verified Peering Provider Status

Vox Proudly Attains Google Verified Peering Provider Status

A significant accolade in the local ISP landscape

Vox is proud to announce that it has become a Google Verified Peering Provider, one of a select group in the South African ISP arena. The Verified Peering Provider (VPP) Programme identifies a group of internet service providers (ISPs) that have demonstrated diverse and reliable connectivity to Google. ISPs are awarded a Verified Peering Provider badge based on technical criteria related to their connectivity depth with Google.

“The Verified Peering Provider Programme is a recent accreditation from Google that recognises ISPs with high-quality, optimised connectivity into Google’s global network,” says Chris Burrell, Head of Network at Vox. “The Programme identifies providers that meet stringent technical and capacity standards, including diverse peering links to Google, ensuring faster access, improved performance, and greater reliability for customers using Google services.

“The Verified Peering Provider Programme is basically a ‘trusted partner’ list. Networks on it can connect directly to Google to access the content in a way that’s fast, safe and of the highest quality. You could think of it as a shortcut to get premium, direct access to Google services and content.”

Vox Customers using Google services such as YouTube, Gmail, Google Workspace, Google Meet and applications hosted on Google Cloud infrastructure will experience improved performance, reduced latency, and greater service reliability.

We unpack how the Google Verified Peering Provider Programme works and the benefits customers can enjoy.

 

‘Let’s Shake Hands…’

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Burrell notes that in today’s Cloud-focused world, Google customers need simple and highly available connectivity solutions to reach publicly available Google resources such as Workspace and other internet-facing applications.

He explains: “Peering is like two networks shaking hands and saying, ‘Let’s share traffic/content directly with each other, instead of sending it through a middleman.’ It makes internet usage, including websites, videos, voice and Cloud apps, faster and more reliable for users, providing higher quality of experience.

“Many customers connect to Google Workspace, Google Cloud, or Google APIs using Direct Peering or via Route Server infrastructures at Internet Exchanges. These solutions provide network operators interconnectivity to Google.

“However, not all Google customers today are able to manage the complex connections of Peering, or they don’t meet the relevant requirements to maintain the high-quality standards required by Content providers. Against this context, using a Verified Peering Provider to connect to Google simplifies connectivity to Google’s network, and removes the complexity of managing Direct Peering connectivity.”

By leaving Direct Peering to the ISPs, the Verified Peering Provider programme enables Google customers to access all Google services without the complexities of Direct Peering. Verified Peering Providers manage Direct Peering with Google over dedicated private connectivity with redundancy requirements for each enrolled provider.

When Google customers connect to a Verified Peering Provider to reach Google, they are choosing a provider that has verified diverse connectivity to Google, which enables highly available access to Google services.

 

Benefits of the Google Verified Peering Provider Programme

 

Vox Proudly Attains Google Verified Peering Provider Status

As Burrell outlines, Google evaluates networks that would like to be peering partners: “Vox went through a stringent application and technical review process showing that we meet their performance, network stability, reliability and capacity standards,” he says. “As a result of our successful application, we are able to offer our customers a number of benefits.”

This includes the following:

  • Simplified connectivity: There is no need to meet Google’s peering requirements; instead, customers can leave the complexities of peering arrangements to Vox as a Verified Peering Provider.
  • High availability: The Google badge shows that the ISP has a highly redundant connectivity to Google.
  • Enterprise grade connectivity: Customers can connect to Google through internet products designed for enterprises; further, they can access Google with or without the need for border gateway protocol (BGP) or an autonomous system number (ASN). In addition, customers can work directly with the ISP’s customer services teams and operational escalations

 

Burrell clarifies that Vox’s Verified Peering Provider Programme is suitable for enterprises and businesses running Google Cloud apps, ISPs or partners reselling internet services, and any tech-savvy user streaming, collaborating or relying on Google services.

He adds: “Because Vox is a Verified Peering Provider, this ensures Google traffic is routed over well-engineered, high-capacity direct interconnects, reducing unnecessary transit paths and improving consistency. It’s part of Vox’s ongoing investment in network quality and reliability.

“Vox is truly proud of this accolade, because it’s a mark of trust from Google, and not every local ISP will be able to qualify. It shows that Vox meets high technical standards and can deliver premium internet performance for Google services, making service better for our existing and future customers,” concludes Burrell.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Google Verified Peering Provider?
A Verified Peering Provider is an ISP that has met Google’s technical and capacity standards for direct peering, offering optimised and reliable access to Google’s services.

How will this improve performance for Google services?
Direct peering reduces the number of network hops and potential bottlenecks, resulting in lower latency, faster load times and more consistent performance for apps like YouTube and Google Workspace.

Do Vox customers need to change anything to benefit?
No. Vox manages the peering relationship with Google. Most customers will see improved performance without changing their configuration.

Is this available to all Vox customers?
Benefits depend on routing and service configurations, but the VPP status enhances overall connectivity for enterprise and business customers across Vox’s network.

Can resellers and other ISPs use Vox as a Verified Peering Provider?
Yes. Resellers and partner ISPs can work with Vox to provide their customers with optimised access to Google services via Vox’s peering infrastructure.

Does this replace direct peering for larger customers?
No. Organisations that already operate direct peering can continue to do so. VPP provides an alternative path for customers who prefer Vox to manage peering complexities.

How does Vox ensure redundancy and reliability?
Vox maintains diverse, redundant links and operational processes that meet Google’s VPP requirements, ensuring high availability and predictable routing for Google-bound traffic.

Which Vox Internet Option is Best for You this Holiday Season?

Staying connected as end-of-year down-time arrives

Our summer stories are starting to happen and the end of the year is really here! But even when we’ve packed our suitcases and made sure the pets are taken care of while we move into down-time, we still want (and need) to stay connected this holiday season.

Summer in South Africa means more streaming, online shopping and banking, video calls with family and online gaming – so choosing the right home Internet, and being aware of Internet options offered by your holiday location, can have an impact on your festive connectivity.

The good news is that, just as we all want a variety of ice cream options at the beach, so Vox has a connectivity option – and speed – to suit every home this holiday season. And in the spirit of the holiday season, we’re running some current and ongoing promotions to sweeten the deal even further.

Vox offers a mix of Fibre, Fixed Wireless, LTE/5G and Satellite options, with each option suited to different needs. So here’s a guide to help you pick the best option for your home, do your research on your holiday Connectivity options, and also make the most of current Vox promotions.

Let’s take a look.

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Fibre To the Home: Best for Top Speed and Reliability

Fibre to the Home delivers high-speed, low-latency Internet directly into your home (or holiday home).

Benefits include very fast symmetrical speeds, which is excellent for 4K streaming, multiple devices and video calls. Uncapped options are available and performance is consistent.

  • It’s ideal for large households, heavy streamers, gamers, households with multiple remote workers (if you must work during the holidays! or when the holiday season is over…).
  • Availability depends on Fibre rollout in your neighbourhood. Installation may take time in new areas.

 

Current promotions linked to Vox Fibre to the Home include Vox Rewards and Fibre Frenzy!

Vox Rewards

  • Vox Rewards is our super-exciting, recently-launched loyalty programme for qualifying Vox customers, offering perks and rewards for staying connected with Vox through home fibre connections. Depending on the tier that you qualify for, you could enjoy a variety of discounts and savings on groceries, fashion, takeaways, tech, travel and more! See vox.co.za/vox-rewards for eligibility and benefits.
  • Fibre Frenzy is a limited-time campaign on Vox’s Home Fibre packages so do check vox.co.za for current Fibre Frenzy deals and exact terms – you can also click on this link for more information.
  • For landlords providing Connectivity to guests, check out our Guest Wi-Fi hospitality bundle.

 

LTE / 5G Mobile Broadband: Flexible and Quick to Set Up

holiday Internet South Africa

LTE / 5G uses mobile networks (LTE or 5G) to deliver Internet to a home router or portable device.

Benefits include fast setup and mobile flexibility. This option is suitable for temporary needs or where Fibre isn’t available yet. 5G can offer very high speeds in covered areas.

  • It’s ideal for urban areas with strong 4G/5G coverage as well as short-term stays and holiday homes.
  • Speed and latency depend on mobile network coverage and local congestion; fairness policies may apply depending on the package.
  • Vox and Telkom are currently running our Uncapped LTE promotion, starting from R589 per month, and including a pocket router as a R199 once-off – check it out.

 

Fixed Wireless (Licensed or Unlicensed Spectrum): Dependable Rural and Suburban Option

fixed Wireless home Internet

Fixed Wireless using microwave signals provides a point-to-point or point-to-multipoint radio link between a home-mounted antenna and a local tower. Its benefits include good speeds and stable connections where Fibre isn’t laid, but line-of-sight to a tower exists. It is often faster and provides a lower latency than Satellite.

  • It’s ideal for suburbs, small towns and rural areas with a Vox radio site nearby.
  • Fixed Wireless requires a professional site survey and performance depends on line-of-sight availability and network capacity.
  • You can find out more on Vox Fixed Wireless to the Home.

 

Satellite: Providing Coverage where Nothing Else Reaches

Satellite Internet South Africa

Internet delivered via Satellite dishes is ideal for remote or rural properties beyond terrestrial networks. Its benefits include coverage that is available almost anywhere, making it perfect for some coastal areas, farms and remote homes, including holiday rentals.

  • It’s ideal for houses outside Fibre and mobile coverage areas, where connectivity is otherwise unavailable.
  • Higher latency means that it’s not ideal for competitive gaming. In addition, weather can affect reliability, and costs/data policies may be higher than terrestrial options.
  • Find out more on Satellite connectivity.

 

Considerations for the Holidays (and Beyond)

A few factors should be considered as you think about your Connectivity options for the holiday season and even next year, if you want to take advantage of our Vox Rewards programme.

 

Vox launches Kiwi Wireless

  • If you stream 4K, game and have many users, Fibre is your best bet.
  • If you need a quick setup or a temporary solution, LTE/5G works well.
  • If you’re in a small town or on the fringe of Fibre rollout, Fixed Wireless often gives the best compromise of speed and reliability.
  • If you’re remote and need coverage regardless of location, Satellite is the reliable fallback.

 

Practical Tips Before You Switch

Vox usually runs localised or seasonal promotions (discounted installation, bonus data or limited-time bundle savings). Check the Vox website regularly, including the promotions pages, for the most up-to-date specials and Ts and Cs. Here are some tips:

  • Check coverage: Use the coverage tool on vox.co.za to see what’s available at your address.
  • Match package to use requirements: Choose speeds that suit your household’s peak usage.
  • Ask about promos: Promotions can change monthly, so ask a Vox consultant about current offers and how long they run, and you can also check here.

 

Check coverage and current Fibre Frenzy or Vox Rewards offers at vox.co.za or on the latest deals page, or call Vox Consumer Support on 087 805 0530 for a personalised recommendation.

South Africans work hard and they play hard also, and never more than during our end-of-year summer holiday season! Stay connected with Vox – we have a solution for your location and your needs, no matter what time of year it is.

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You always have choices – and sweet deals! – with Vox!

 

FAQs

Which Vox option is best for streaming and gaming during the holidays?
Fibre is best for low-latency, high-speed needs like 4K streaming and gaming. If Fibre isn’t available, 5G or fixed Wireless are the next-best options.

What is Vox Rewards and how do I join?
Vox Rewards is a loyalty programme for qualifying customers. Visit vox.co.za/vox-rewards to see eligibility and benefits.

What is Fibre Frenzy?
Fibre Frenzy is Vox’s limited-time promotion on selected Fibre packages. Check the Vox website for exact bundles and promotional periods.

How do I know if Fibre is available at my home?
Use the coverage checker on vox.co.za or contact Vox support to confirm availability for your address.

Is Satellite Internet good for a holiday home?
Yes, Satellite brings connectivity to remote holiday homes, though latency and weather impact should be considered.

Can I use LTE/5G as a permanent home solution?
Yes, in areas with strong coverage LTE/5G can be a permanent solution, especially where Fibre isn’t available, but check data fairness policies.

How long does installation take for Fibre or fixed Wireless?
Installation times vary by location and demand — ask Vox for a projected install date when you sign up.

Can I switch between Vox services if I move or change needs?
Yes. Vox offers different home connectivity products and can advise on switching based on coverage and your new address.

Harnessing Technology’s Power to Transform Lives

Meet our Experts: Spotlight on Theo van Zyl

At Vox, we value, support and actively engage people with the levels of expertise that we require to keep us moving forward as a company. In this edition of ‘Meet our Experts’, we find out more about Theo van Zyl, who heads up the Wireless Department. Theo reflects on a lifelong relationship with communications technology, his journey into product leadership and his ambitions for extending connectivity across South Africa.

 

“The thing was called ‘fire’, and it was brought back to the cave by Og the inventor, who said he found it eating a tree. You had to keep it in a little cage of stones, he said.” ~ From ‘How It All Began…’ by Terry Pratchett

Question: What do Theo van Zyl, Head of Wireless at Vox, and Og the Inventor, also known as ‘the first caveman to cultivate fire’ and brought to us by author Terry Pratchett, both have in common?

Answer: They are both obsessed with the latest technology of the day, and how it can be used to help people and improve their lives.

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(Editor’s note: You can read the short story of Og and his lifelong quest to master early technology here. Be warned: you will probably laugh out loud.)

Moving onto a more serious note…

People have been fascinated by the technology of the day for as long as we’ve been human, and for Theo, a life-long and highly practical love of technology began when he was still a child. Today, as Vox’s Head of Wireless, he is focused on building nimble teams and customer-first products, as well as bringing affordable connectivity to South Africa’s citizens, no matter where they are in the country.

We speak to Theo and find out more about how technology is front and centre in his life, both at work and at home, on a daily basis.

 

Telecomms in His Veins

Theo was still in primary school when his passion for electronics and communication began, and he describes fixing radios and building circuits as a child.

How and Why Wonder Books 1 | Vox | Harnessing Technology’s Power to Transform Lives

“My interest started with the ‘How and Why’ book range, especially electronics,” he explains. “As a child, I built electronic projects that did actually work, and I was always dismantling electronic equipment to understand the underlying processes. As a teenager, I made pocket money by repairing and building electronic circuit boards.”

That early curiosity matured into technical depth across analogue telephony, telex, data modems and later fibre, LTE and satellite. He also studied e‑commerce at Unisa and was involved in early online billing and payment gateway projects. His breadth of experience shows through in his product approach: he is comfortable with legacy systems and keen on combining them with modern ideas.

 

A Multi-Disciplinary and Empowering Team Leader

With more than three decades’ experience, including some 15 years heading up another ISP, Theo is a veteran of the telecommunications industry.

He explains: “From running around fixing analogue data copper line services, I have also spent time as a lecturer in data communications, mathematics and electronics. I then moved into practical roles in electronic data interchange, IP network design and product management across multiple disciplines – which is what I love the most, and where I’ve now been for around 25 years.”

He says: “Today, my job focus includes defining product strategies and managing the life cycles of products, leading the Wireless product team members, and ensuring that company strategic and financial goals are met. A key piece of the puzzle in delivering an end-to-end product portfolio includes cross-functional collaboration with areas across the business, including systems, marketing, PR, sales, channels, finance, networks and service delivery.”

Theo aims to keep his team at a manageable size so he can stay engaged with each area without losing control. He leads a compact team, organised around specialist areas, as follows: “Craig oversees Wi‑Fi for both consumer and enterprise; Chris and Kaylee look after LTE, 5G and APN products; Kathleen manages satellite services; Nikita handles microwave wireless; and Kolofelo manages manual feasibilities and operational tickets.”

Theo Craig Kathleen CROPPED | Vox | Harnessing Technology’s Power to Transform Lives
L to R: Craig, Theo, Hendrik (Q-Kon account manager for Vox Satellite) and Kathleen

 

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L to R: Chris and Theo

Daily work for Theo is very collaborative. He coaches and empowers his team, preferring to avoid micromanagement, and values bringing the broader team together to get multiple perspectives on a problem: “Micromanagement kills creativity,” he says. “I prefer to give people the freedom to try, possibly fail, and learn. I actively support piloting and experimentation, provided it doesn’t breach regulatory or company policy!”

 

Vox and Theo: The Perfect Fit

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With Theo’s leadership characterised by empowerment, rapid decision‑making and a tolerance for well‑informed risk, he was understandably drawn to Vox’s culture and strategy, which embraces being nimble and cultivating a low‑red‑tape environment that gets things done quickly.

“Here at Vox, if the boss says do it, then you do it because you know you have the go-ahead!” he notes, contrasting Vox with organisations that can take 18 months to bring a product to market.

“This ability to act rapidly, combined with a collaborative culture where colleagues readily help each other, is what I value most. At Vox, things happen fast. I believe we are better positioned than many competitors because we can move quickly, learn speedily from experiments that don’t work, and then try another approach if need be.”

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Theo positions product management as an end‑to‑end responsibility: “As our esteemed CEO, Jacques du Toit, is known to clarify, ‘You need to be the CEO of your own product’, meaning end to end, across every cost, every vendor, every customer interaction.

“This means being hands-on across finances, marketing, vendor relationships, costing, sales enablement and customer experience. Customer experience is also a priority: if internal processes let customers down, product teams must own the problem, resolve a customer’s issues, and implement improvements into future workflows.”

 

Affordable LEO Connectivity for Wider Access

“Technology is teaching us to be human again… the ability to witness and experience the lives of others anywhere around the world, often in real-time, awakens in us our innate empathy for each other.” ~Simon Mainwaring, businessman and author

Theo has a vision of being part of the rollout of affordable connectivity to rural and underserved communities through Low Earth Orbit (LEO) Satellite services. He describes this as being a major personal and professional ambition: getting low‑cost, operational LEO services into South Africa so that rural citizens can access connectivity comparable to urban Fibre or LTE users.

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“I believe Vox is uniquely positioned to pursue this and capable of delivering services, with the success of GEO services bearing testimony to this. I am confident that Vox can achieve our goal of bringing connectivity to all rural citizens over time,” he says.

“I am passionate about the amazing possibilities that LEO satellite services could bring to the people of South Africa, bringing excellent connectivity to anyone across the country, no matter how remote they might be. My ambition is to launch an affordable LEO service so that rural South Africans can access connectivity the same way people in towns do.”

 

Hobbies and Hacking (You Can’t Make This Stuff Up…)

Away from work, Theo is an enthusiastic electronics hobbyist and home automation enthusiast. In the past, he’s also embraced amateur radio activity: he holds a ZR licence and recalls sending data between computers over radio long before dial‑up became widespread.

He has spent the last decade building smart home systems that incorporate voice‑enabled control for gates, lights, pool pumps, alarms and energy monitoring using remote cloud management, and is proficient at integrating different ecosystems such as Alexa and Google. For Theo, it’s not just a hobby but shows his passion for telecommunications in the workplace now brought into the home environment: “Home automation is not a gimmick for me – it’s about integrating ecosystems to make life easier and more efficient.”

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He’s walking the talk, in other words. He’s also been known to carry out at least one ethical hack in his time….

Theo once accessed a public Wi‑Fi system that was not secure when he was eating out at a restaurant in Brooklyn, Pretoria. Realising that their Wi-Fi was vulnerable, and being a regular at the restaurant, he quickly hacked into their system while browsing through the menu: “I printed a warning on the restaurant’s printer and alerted the waiter at my table about the need to separate their guest and internal networks…”

(Editor’s note: So, not your average customer when waiting tables then!)

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“Excuse me, but I think you just said that you hacked the restaurant’s Wi-Fi system, did I hear you correctly?”

The astonished waiter alerted the manager on duty and needless to say, the next time Theo went to eat there, the Wi-Fi network was significantly upgraded and stronger – although knowing Theo, he could probably have got in again if he’d really wanted to…

The incident underscores his practical focus on security and the real risks of poorly configured public Wi‑Fi.

It also underscores the fact that Theo really does know what he’s talking about – he combines deep technical knowledge with a pragmatic, people‑centred and fundamentally caring approach to launching and scaling services in a rapidly evolving connectivity landscape.

“I am grateful that my experience in the industry, starting with analogue telephones, telex machines, data modems and growing into today’s technology gave me exposure to areas that I never thought I would ever be involved in,” he says. “At Vox I can leverage on that experience and influence and create products that are customer centric and deliver real value, to help change and improve people’s lives.”

And just like the short story mentioned at the beginning: Isn’t technology and progress amazing?! Here at Vox, we are grateful for people like Theo who help us to keep moving forward. Never change, Theo!

“…several up-and-coming young apemen had got the idea and they invented Civilisation – eventually. The village grew. Some of the open plain was turned into fields. Pretty soon hunters like Hal were beginning to look a bit foolish. That’s how it all began.” ~ From ‘How It All Began…’ by Terry Pratchett

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Protect Your Older Parents Online with Norton from Vox

No, Mom – DON’T click on that link! 

I know an elderly lady who is dignified and respectable, with grown-up children and grandchildren. She is, as they say, a ‘pillar of her community’. She also, rather startlingly, has some, shall we say, unfortunate images on her phone at the moment, involving various anatomical closeups of naked people.

But this is not an article about a seemingly-sweet old lady who is at the helm of a mafia-style criminal empire – no, that’s not it at all, because she actually has NO IDEA that these images are currently on her phone (and her family members haven’t yet had the courage to tell her).

Vox has teamed up with global cybersecurity expert company Norton™ to offer comprehensive protection for your devices and online privacy, for the whole family, all in one solution. Traditionally, people have worried about their own online safety as well as their children’s, but there is no reason why your older parents can’t benefit also.

In this article, we look at how so many older people today have absolutely no idea of the perils that lurk online. We discuss how to protect people of an older generation who didn’t grow up with technology at their fingertips.

And we look at how acquiring the right software can take away the stress of having to keep saying: “NO, Mom – DON’T click on that link!”

Elderly Exploitation | Vox | Protect Your Older Parents Online with Norton from Vox

 

Why Older People Are Especially Vulnerable Online

Criminals have always seen older people as being a soft target, and today’s digital world simply presents long-existing criminal tendencies in a brand-new wrapping. When the goal is to scam older people out of their hard-earned savings, the Internet, online banking and social media all just make it easier for cyber criminals, because many older people are just not that comfortable with today’s technology.

This is largely because, in contrast to younger generations, older citizens had to learn to use information technology when they were already adults. It’s something that was initially entirely new to them.

And so the relationship that today’s senior citizens have with technology can be an uneasy or uncomfortable one, as shown in this clip from the popular and acclaimed Netflix sitcom, ‘Grace and Frankie’.

In the video clip, we see clearly just how some of the older generation think about technology – Frankie is deeply afraid of it at first. (Grace, as a retired former CEO, does at least know how to boot up a new laptop.)

Take a look for a bit of show, not tell!

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The video clip raises another point: if so many of today’s older generation are uncomfortable simply with acquiring new technology, you can imagine that they’re even more vulnerable once they’re finally online.

Senior citizens can be particularly vulnerable to cybercriminals who use social engineering – deception intended to manipulate people into sharing confidential or personal information – to lure their victims into handing over valuable personal details.

 

Why The Older Generation Is Vulnerable Online

Online criminals prey on qualities shared by many older users, including a fear of technology that they don’t fully understand, loneliness as their children grow up and leave home, an ingrained respect for authority and institutions, and an increasing need to feel financially secure as they get older.

If this is all sounding just a bit too familiar and close to the bone, the good news is that there are ways in which you can help protect your older parent or relative against would-be online scammers.

 

Keep It Simple — Three Rules to Teach Your Parent

Firstly, share the following information with your older parent to try to help them recognise when a criminal is trying to steal their bank account information, passwords or credit card numbers, or otherwise trying to separate them from their money.

  • Trust no one: never click links or open attachments from unexpected senders.
  • Ask first: establish a rule — “Call or text me before you act.”
  • Don’t share security details: never send PINs, passwords or banking details by message or phone.

 

These short, repeatable rules are easier to remember than long lectures. Think of them as being the digital equivalent of “Don’t open the door to strangers.”

In summary: ‘Don’t click on every link that looks like fun or promises you a great bargain.’ It’s the Internet version of ‘If it looks too good to be true, it probably is.’

Things that Make It Difficult for Older Adults to Use Technology 1 | Vox | Protect Your Older Parents Online with Norton from Vox

 

How Norton from Vox helps — Straightforward, Family-Wide Protection

You can try to teach all the rules in the world, but intuitive software makes prevention easier. Stop the malware from getting in by blocking those seductive ‘Click here’ messages before they even reach your parent’s phone, tablet or laptop with their exotic and interesting click-bait messaging.

Norton’s software safeguards your entire family’s PCs, Macs®, tablets and smartphones from viruses, ransomware, phishing and other cyber threats while you bank, shop and browse online.

Norton 360 family protection provides multiple layers of defence against viruses, malware, ransomware and phishing, which are the common tools criminals use to target seniors. Key benefits for elderly parents:

  • Blocks malicious links and phishing attempts before they land.
  • Protects PCs, Macs, Android and iOS devices with one app.
  • Simplifies security for non‑tech users — automatic updates and background protection.
  • Centralised family protection so you can check that your parent’s devices are safe.

 

Buying Norton via Vox gives you a local, reliable channel to purchase and manage the licence, which is one less thing to worry about.

 

Practical steps for immediate protection

  • Install Norton on every device your parent uses and enable automatic updates.
  • Turn on email and web protection to block suspicious links.
  • Set up one shared contact (you) who your parent must call before sharing money or details.
  • Back up important files so ransomware can’t hold photos or documents hostage.

 

Norton from Vox  offers robust, all-in-one protection against viruses, malware, ransomware and online threats – for the whole family, including your elderly parents. It’s Internet safety for the elderly – like the virtual equivalent of a home security guard, refusing to allow the criminal over the threshold while your mom or dad are blissfully unaware and watching their favourite show or match on TV.

And if your elderly family members aren’t downloading dodgy links, you don’t have to spend precious time cleaning up their phones at a later stage.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I start a sensitive conversation with my ageing parent?

  • Choose a calm moment, be honest but respectful, ask open questions and listen to their priorities

 

How can I suggest home-safety changes without upsetting them?

  • Frame changes as ways to keep them independent, offer choices and involve them in decision-making.

Secure Your Connectivity with our Fibre Plus Firewall Bundle October Special

Secure connectivity is about speed and protection.

 

South African networks face multiple threats on a daily basis. Recent reporting shows that Interpol detected roughly 230 million cyber threats in South Africa, which is a clear signal that homes and businesses must harden their borders.

Secure connectivity prevents unauthorised access, data loss and downtime, helping you to keep operations and productivity running smoothly within your business.

 

Sophos Firewalls with Vox

Vox has partnered with Sophos to offer next-generation firewalls to help you better protect your network, quickly and efficiently.

Sophos Gold Partner 1 | Vox | Secure Your Connectivity with our Fibre Plus Firewall Bundle October Special

With Sophos firewalls from Vox, you can enjoy no hidden costs – just great security, and you will find that it’s easy to use, even if you’re not technical.

The advanced threat protection blocks viruses, ransomware and hackers, leaving you with peace of mind. You can also block websites and non-work apps so that your employees’ efficiency is boosted, allowing you to boost security and productivity at the same time.

The solution is designed to promote a fast and secure network that continues running at high speed, which serves as another productivity value-add.

 

Why A Fibre Plus Firewall Bundle Is Crucial

Vox’s Fibre Plus Firewall bundle gives you both speed AND protection.

Our October 2025 special offer combines resilient Vox Fibre with next‑gen Sophos Firewall protection, allowing you to protect your devices, data and productivity with a single, easy solution.

 

Firewalls: Your First Line of Defence

Optimised SophosXGSSeries Web ValueAdd Banner V2 | Vox | Secure Your Connectivity with our Fibre Plus Firewall Bundle October Special

A Firewall monitors and filters incoming and outgoing traffic based on set rules, creating a perimeter between your trusted network and the internet. Modern, next‑generation Firewalls also:

  • Detect and block intrusions and malware (IDS/IPS).
  • Support VPNs for secure remote access.
  • Log activity for rapid incident response.
  • Block malicious websites and non‑work apps to protect users and increase productivity.

 

Why Pairing Fibre with a Firewall is a Great Idea

Fibre delivers fast, symmetrical bandwidth essential for cloud apps, video conferencing and backups. Pairing that connectivity with a dedicated Firewall ensures high performance isn’t offset by exposure to threats. The Fibre plus Firewall bundle gives you:

  • Speed and security in one purchase.
  • Simpler billing and deployment with Vox.
  • Managed support to keep both connectivity and protection performing.

 

Sophos Firewalls with Vox: What You Get

The key benefits include the following:

  • Advanced threat protection against viruses, ransomware and hackers.
  • VPN support for secure remote workers and branch offices.
  • Centralised logging and reporting for faster incident handling.
  • Options to block websites and non‑work apps to boost staff productivity.
  • Backed by Vox 24/7 support and clear pricing with no hidden costs.

 

October special: Fibre plus Firewall bundle

This October, Vox is running a limited‑time Fibre plus Firewall bundle special. It’s an ideal time to:

  • Move to faster Fibre connectivity;
  • Add enterprise‑grade Sophos Firewall protection; and
  • Consolidate services and simplify billing.

 

Enquire early to reserve bundle availability and special pricing.

 

How To Get Started

Assess your needs in terms of the required bandwidth, number of users and remote access requirements. Then:

  1. Choose a Vox Fibre package and Sophos Firewall level.
  2. Book installation and configuration with Vox support.
  3. Activate monitoring and policies with assistance from Vox 24/7 support.

 

Protect Your Network with Vox and Sophos

By protecting your sensitive data, devices and systems from threats like malware, hackers, denial of service attacks and malicious software, firewalls are a fundamental component of any network security strategy.

Contact us today to find out more on how you can implement a firewall to protect your network.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Fibre plus Firewall bundle?

A Fibre plus Firewall bundle combines Vox Fibre internet connectivity with a managed next‑generation Sophos Firewall, to deliver both high performance and network security in a single package.

Why should I buy a Firewall if I already have Fibre?

Fibre gives you speed; a Firewall protects that connection. Without a Firewall, your fast connection can make attacks more damaging. A combined solution ensures both performance and protection.

What protection do Sophos Firewalls provide?

Sophos Firewalls include intrusion detection and prevention, anti‑malware and ransomware protection, VPN support, web and app control, and central logging for incident response.

Who is the Fibre plus Firewall bundle suitable for?

The bundle is ideal for small businesses and larger organisations that need reliable Fibre speeds with enterprise‑grade security and managed support.

When is the Vox October special available?

Vox will run the Fibre plus Firewall bundle special in October 2025 – contact us to confirm availability, exact pricing and terms.

Can Vox manage the Firewall for me?

Yes. Vox offers managed services and 24/7 support to help configure, monitor and maintain your Firewall and connectivity.

Will a Firewall slow down my Fibre connection?

Properly configured next‑gen Firewalls are designed to protect without significant performance impact. Vox matches Firewall capacity to your Fibre speed to preserve throughput.

How do I enquire about the October bundle?

Click here on the Vox website to request details and a tailored quote.

Turbocharge Your Business Operations with a Fibre Internet Line

How Fibre Internet can give your business – and your employees – a massive boost 

Does the Internet at your company’s premises tend to lag or go down more often than not – so your employees are often forced to spend time doing nothing, or else are flocking to the coffee facilities (and then taking ages to get back to work)?

 

coffee cups | Vox | Turbocharge Your Business Operations with a Fibre Internet Line

 

Perhaps your document saving and archiving is an on-premises administrative hassle, or else your on-prem PBX system is the weakest link when the power goes out.

If any of these scenarios sound familiar, then it could be that your organisation’s productivity would benefit massively from a Fibre Internet boost. Business operations today need fast, reliable Internet for everything from their business communication to customer service, and Vox Fibre to the Business is guaranteed to offer you the fastest speeds and most reliable service possible for your Internet connectivity.

 

The Extensive Benefits of Fibre-Based Internet

Vox offers scalable options with tailored value-adds to suit your business needs. Our Fibre to the Business (FTTB) offerings include Business Fibre, for broadband solutions at excellent prices; Premium Business Fibre, where you get more ‘bang for your buck’ with added value and an improved service; and Dedicated Fibre if your business requires uncontended connectivity and top priority service level agreements (SLAs).

 

business 2553884 1920 | Vox | Turbocharge Your Business Operations with a Fibre Internet Line

 

The benefits of a Fibre Optic Internet service for your business include the following:

  • Faster uploads and downloads: Fibre connections use Fibre Optic cables to transmit data at incredibly fast speeds, by using light pulses, meaning faster uploads and downloads for file sharing and other data-intensive tasks.
  • Reduction in downtime: Breaks in your company’s Internet service have a negative impact on all operations, including the critical elements of internal and external communication. Setting up a Failover option will help your organisation to remain ready for any challenges, by providing a secondary connection to your company’s Internet via diverse routes and/ or technologies.
  • Improved productivity: With limited downtime and faster Internet speeds, your employees can download faster, collaborate better, and increase their overall productivity. Reduced lag and latency also improve online video conferencing. Your employees can save on time out of the office by having more online meetings with quality video or VoIP calls, instead of having to meet face-to-face or over a PBX conference phone.
  • Cloud services and data backup: Fibre Optic Internet connectivity means better access to cloud-based services for storage and backup, as well as other collaboration tools. You can quickly and efficiently access any stored data for seamless business operations.
  • Increased security: Fibre Optic cables are extremely secure, giving you peace of mind that your sensitive data is better protected.
  • Cost savings: By eliminating speed issues, increasing the reliability of your Internet, and improving business productivity, you’ll save costs over time. In addition, cloud-based storage options, as well as the implementation of VoIP telecommunications, will save even more in the longer term.
  • Scalability: With FTTB, you can easily increase your Internet capabilities as the business expands.

 

Employer of the Year?

As 2025 enters the second half of the year, why not investigate getting a Fibre Connection for your organisation? This way, you can make sure your business is always online with a reliable connection, and with incredibly high data transmission speeds, your employees can easily upload and download files and stay connected with each other, and your customers, at all times.

analyst 6492859 1920 | Vox | Turbocharge Your Business Operations with a Fibre Internet Line

 

In addition, VoIP calls can cut your phone costs significantly, both locally and internationally. It all works together to help make the way you do business even better – and efficiently-run organisations tend to have more productive employees. In turn, employees who are enabled with higher business functionality also tend to be happier and more positive at work – nobody likes having to do their job with less effective products and solutions.

And with a bit more ready cash at your disposal, you could even earn some more ‘Employer of the Year’ brownie points with an improved brand of coffee in the kitchen facilities, when it’s finally time for those well-deserved breaks.

Convinced yet? We’d love to hear from you if you’re ready to make the move to Business Fibre.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Business Fibre Internet?
Business Fibre Internet is a commercial-grade Fibre connection with SLAs, priority support and optional uncontended bandwidth (Dedicated Fibre). It’s built for uptime, security and scalability.

What is Dedicated Fibre and why would my business need it?
Dedicated Fibre offers uncontended, 1:1 bandwidth with stronger SLAs, and is ideal for data centres, high-transaction businesses, or organisations running latency-sensitive applications and large-scale cloud services.

How does Failover Internet work with Fibre?
Failover provides a secondary connection over a different route or technology to automatically keep your network online during primary-link outages. It’s recommended for businesses that cannot tolerate downtime.

Can Fibre reduce our phone costs?
Yes. Using VoIP over Fibre can significantly cut local and international call costs, and improves call quality compared with older PSTN or contended mobile links.

Will Fibre help our cloud backup and collaboration?
Absolutely. Fibre’s high throughput and low latency enable faster backups, seamless access to cloud-based tools and better real-time collaboration for distributed teams.

dedicated business fibre

Bringing the ‘Gees’ and Embracing New Challenges

Meet our Experts: Spotlight on Adriaan Buitendag

At Vox, we value, support and actively engage people with the levels of expertise that we require to keep us moving forward as a company. In this edition of ‘Meet our Experts’, we find out more about Regional Sales Manager Adriaan Buitendag, who manages to combine Monsters and mincing machines into his daily motivation to his team members. 

After a solid five years at Vox, Regional Sales Manager Adriaan Buitendag is taking on a new and exciting challenge with a move from Polokwane in Limpopo to Gauteng, embracing increased responsibilities and the excitement of a big, bustling city. It’s not necessarily going to be a ‘monstrously’ difficult challenge – anyone who knows Adriaan will know why that’s funny! – but it’s definitely a significant step forward.

Says Adriaan: “I’ve lived most of my life in Polokwane, but I have stayed in Joburg previously, for about a year when I was younger. I’m looking forward to the opportunity to explore many new places, at the same time as tackling new responsibilities and a wider range of tasks within my day-to-day working environment.”

There are ways in which the change of pace will be challenging in these still-early days, but this is a man who thrives on challenges.

[You could, in fact, call him the Chuck Norris of sales…]

Chuck Norris of Sales | Vox | Bringing the ‘Gees’ and Embracing New Challenges

We delve into the story of another everyday Vox hero, who in his career so far has (both officially and unofficially) embraced ‘Rookie of the Year’ more than once, and risen quickly and efficiently into a leadership role.

 

How Life at Vox Began

Adriaan – who also has an enthusiastic and successful entrepreneurship history – had been running his own business when he applied to Vox, being appointed in March 2020. Of course, this was just a few months before South Africa went into the Covid lockdown.

“Like everyone else,” he muses, “I remember that first ‘My fellow South Africans…’  speech, which suddenly turned our whole worlds upside down. But starting at Vox during the first month of lockdown turned out fine for me. At that time in Polokwane, there was just one residential area that was about to go live with Fibre, with about 500 homes. When we went into lockdown, I asked my reporting manager, who at the time was JP du Plessis, what he expected from me, and he said: ‘Well, just sell as much as you can.’

“I took my phone and started phoning through my contacts – pitching Fibre to the Home to them – and I think within the first month of sales, I did 100 quotes, with 39 accepted orders and 28 approved, to a total of R23,000 worth of sales, which placed me into third position in the country.”

[Again, see the notes about ‘the Chuck Norris of Sales’ and ‘Rookie of the Year’]

Vox CEO Jacques du Toit was overheard saying that, in 25 years in the telecommunications industry, he ‘had never seen anything like it’.

“And you know,” continues Adriaan, “hearing those supportive words just affirmed that what I was doing was the correct way of doing things. And I’ve never stopped doing it that way since.”

Here, we could define ‘that way’ as driving sales with energy, warmth, honesty and attention to detail, all wrapped together in a tasty dollop of fun and excitement – it wouldn’t be too long before Adriaan’s special blend of out-of-the-box thinking, with both his internal incentivising and external sales campaigns, would come to the fore.

Legends in the green | Vox | Bringing the ‘Gees’ and Embracing New Challenges

 

Driving the Daily Moments

Adriaan clarifies that Limpopo and Mpumalanga, his previous ‘stomping grounds’, together contain some 7.2 percent of the country’s Fibre network for Vox salespeople in these two provinces to sell on. “In contrast, Gauteng has about 44 percent of the country’s network,” he clarifies, “so I believe that the addition of Gauteng into my portfolio is definitely a great opportunity for me to show what I can do!”

Perhaps as a reaction to starting at Vox during Covid, Adriaan is a fan of working at the office rather than from home. He explains: “As soon as I get into the car and start driving to work in the morning, my mind starts switching on in terms of what tasks I must complete for the day, what we should do as a team, and the discussions I need to have – essentially, what tasks and challenges do I need to drive that day? By the time I get to the office I’m in work mode.”

As for the transition between Polokwane and Gauteng, Adriaan clarifies: “A current focus for me is to increase efficiencies, and I’m satisfied that we’re making good progress. In other ways, though, there are many similarities in my role within the two different places, including communicating with my team to see how they’re tracking towards their numbers and sharing the strategies that we’re implementing, as well as liaising with senior management, to ensure that my team is empowered with the correct tools and so forth, to continue driving the business forward.

“Essentially, when I compare my working life in Polokwane to Gauteng, it remains community-focused – there are still communities everywhere, but in Joburg and Pretoria, it’s just a larger variety. At heart, it remains all about people, both with colleagues as well as our clients.”

 

Bringing the Monsters with the ‘Gees’!

When Adriaan headed up the Polokwane branch, it was – and still is – famous for having Monsters everywhere – the energy drinks, that is – because, says Adriaan, ‘Our blood is green!’

Spot the Monsters | Vox | Bringing the ‘Gees’ and Embracing New Challenges

Well, watch out Joburg, because the Monsters have come with him: “They’re standing in boxes and boxes here on the floor!” he says enthusiastically. “I did stick them up against the wall initially, but I’ve now got a new plan: I would like to find someone who can cut, mould and shape these tins into a symbolic sculpture that depicts what we stand for here at Vox – something that represents life or growth, perhaps, to attract and inspire our salespeople.”

[It seems like Adriaan might also be the Chuck Norris of recycling…?]

He is also famous for his trophies, which he made himself: “I created two impala heads for my ‘Top Salesperson’ and ‘Best Customer Retention’ awards. And I have another trophy here designed like a mince meat grinder, which symbolically talks to the sales process….”

[Wait, what?]

“…as follows: your top funnel, where the meat goes in, represents your sales prospects; the lever that you turn to kickstart the process is your closing of the sale; and in the front end, where the mince comes out in its final form, you have your commission! All the processes work in turn with each other to represent the complete sales process.”

Adriaan B and trophies | Vox | Bringing the ‘Gees’ and Embracing New Challenges

It’s a great conceptual idea, and it isn’t all that Adriaan has up his sleeve in terms of his creativity and ingenuity – he’s looking forward to unfolding more initiatives over the next few months in Gauteng. For now, the photos tell more of the story.

“I enjoyed creating a competitive yet positive and family-orientated mindset within my branch in Polokwane, which was also replicated in the Mpumalanga branch, and yes, I hope to install the same, in the coming months, in Gauteng as well,” says Adriaan.

 

A True Survivor

Despite all the fun elements that Adriaan brings into his work, it hasn’t been a sunny journey all the way through – he’s had to overcome some real challenges in his life, including two retrenchments in one year (“That was one of my lowest ever points,” he notes) as well as being involved in a very serious car accident, which at the time affected both his health as well as his job security. How, then, does he remain so unswervingly optimistic, and continue persevering with such unwavering determination?

“I think,” he says, “that much of my inspiration comes from my late father, who was a police officer for 26 years, as well as my late grandfather, who was a pastor for 28 years. I have tremendous respect for them and for the life lessons that they taught me, including dedication, perseverance and being disciplined.”

Adding to their excellent example, Adriaan also learned some great life lessons during his school years through his karate training, when he became a three-times national colours recipient.

karate 3961079 1280 | Vox | Bringing the ‘Gees’ and Embracing New Challenges

“I believe that in life, some of its punches will hit you and others will miss,” he says, “but are you going to stand still and just allow the punches to land on you? No! You have to remain strong in bobbing and weaving, to successfully duck as many of them as you can – and then, of course, when the punches do land, you just have to get back up on your feet.”

 

Inspiration from the Top

Pointing out that the telecommunications industry is dependent on adapting to new challenges and ideas, Adriaan appreciates the energy that is always apparent within Vox. “My inspiration comes from the top down,” he says, “through our CEO, Jacques du Toit and national sales manager, Johan Pitzer, and their drive and passion always energises me.

“I see how, within our company, there’s a shared awareness of challenges that need to be overcome and results that need to be achieved, and the encouragement to do this is always positive, forward-thinking and motivational, which I love. I also highly appreciate having the freedom to be an out-of-the-box thinker.”

As for moving forward, Adriaan says it’s critical to share knowledge and expertise. “From my experience, we always need to adapt and innovate,” he says, “and I’ve found that people as individuals are often afraid of teaching others, or imparting their knowledge to someone else – perhaps they’re afraid that they’ll then be challenged later. My idea, though, is that it’s better to share our knowledge, and in this way continue to encourage and challeng each other as we keep moving forward.

candle 2738529 1280 | Vox | Bringing the ‘Gees’ and Embracing New Challenges

“People need to bring others into the fold of a culture that we’re trying to achieve, and in this way, this is already bringing us all a step closer to shared success. After all, a candle that lights another candle doesn’t lose any of its flame,” concludes Adriaan.

WhatsApp Image 2025 05 07 at 08.15.51 1 | Vox | Bringing the ‘Gees’ and Embracing New Challenges

Wireless Connectivity Struts its Stuff

In the age of reels, DMs, and “guys, it’s giving…”

…Wireless Connectivity is basically the socialite of the tech world—glamorous, fast-talking, always on the move, and somehow everywhere.

BreakfastAtTiffanys1961 108 F CROPPED | Vox | Wireless Connectivity Struts its Stuff

 

Unlike Satellite (our dependable but dusty Oupa), Wireless is that hyper teen who can’t sit still, wears AirPods at the dinner table, and somehow has three bars of signal even in a concrete bunker. It’s chaotic, it’s brilliant, it’s a bit emotionally unstable—but it gets the job done.

the jopwell collection 5O2WsA93zAQ RESIZED | Vox | Wireless Connectivity Struts its Stuff

 

Let’s rewind a bit though. Wireless wasn’t always this confident. There was a time when it was the shy kid in the corner, struggling to send a song via Bluetooth for 17 hours while your phones practically had to kiss. Remember that? The Nokias doing infrared transfers like some awkward phone-to-phone CPR? Simpler times (although we’re showing our age here. Sorry not sorry).

akmA46Ne 700w 0 | Vox | Wireless Connectivity Struts its Stuff

 

Wireless is the friend who went to gym once, got a six-pack, and suddenly discovered their worth. Now it’s strutting down digital runways, offering high-speed, low-latency connections and acting like it didn’t spend its formative years buffering LimeWire downloads.

So, in honour of Wireless’ glow-up, here’s a Throwback List of things that were still cool when your Wi-Fi password was “admin123”:

  1. YouTube intros with exploding text
  2. Spinning BlackBerry loading wheels
  3. Being “WAP enabled” (and not in the Cardi B sense)
  4. The sweet, sweet pain of EDGE connection
  5. MXIT statuses like: “$$$Mo$$$ is… bored 😐”
  6. Twitter eggs
  7. When Instagram was just sepia-tone lunch photos

 

Wireless has come a long way. From stealing your neighbour’s unsecured signal (shout out to “NETGEAR”) to Mesh Wi-Fi systems that cover your house like clingwrap over a plate of leftovers—seamless, unnecessary, but somehow very comforting.

And look, we get it. Wireless isn’t perfect. Sometimes it flakes out during that very important Teams call, or decides to ghost you the second you sit down to stream something. It’s got commitment issues. It gets moody in rain. And like any dramatic lead in a telenovela, it loves dropping out right when the plot thickens.

But despite all its high-maintenance behaviour, it’s hard not to love it. Wireless connectivity has turned our homes into offices, our parks into cinemas, and our toilets into social hubs (don’t lie—we all do it).

on phone in park | Vox | Wireless Connectivity Struts its Stuff

 

The truth? Wireless isn’t a luxury anymore. It’s a lifeline. From that weird new coffee shop trying to seem quirky with “No Wi-Fi, Talk to Each Other” signs (okay, Karen), to schools in remote areas running full classes on a dongle and a prayer—Wireless keeps things going.

It’s the overachiever. The do-it-all. The one carrying half the tech world on its slightly overworked, overheating shoulders.

So, while it might not have the old-school loyalty of Satellite, or the brute strength of Fibre, Wireless is the one you call when you need to get things done fast, flashy, and without strings. Literally.

Wireless: flakey but fabulous.

We stan.

freedom 307791 1920 CROPPED | Vox | Wireless Connectivity Struts its Stuff

Satellite is Old… But is it Over?

In a world dominated by super-fast connectivity (you know the sales pitch) – Satellite seems about as relevant as a coupon for Blockbuster at a Netflix convention (editor’s note: we are officially too old to think of more relevant pop-culture jokes. Skibidi Rizz).

In fact, we’ve compiled a Throwback list of things which were still trending when Satellite was last relevant (which, incidentally, includes the concept of Throwbacks):

  1. Mxit and BBM Pins
  2. Jay Jays
  3. Scratch and enter airtime vouchers
  4. The first debut of Anaconda on ETV
  5. Jean-Claude Van Damme
  6. Man United being good
  7. Elon Musk being proudly South African

Fact is (and we can’t pretend otherwise), Satellite is old. And not cool old, or even old enough to pass as cute – we’re talking ‘oupa saying “back in my day” while waving fist’ old.

back in my day resized | Vox | Satellite is Old… But is it Over?

 

If Satellite were a person, its ID number would be 1 – and it would still have the green ID book. There’s no two ways about it – it’s been here for a long time and a good time. It’s outlasted copper cables and 3G. Stayed the course when everyone was discovering what Wi-Fi means. It was there, solid and dependable when people blamed 5G for Covid. And, the way its going, chances are it’ll be there long after its current group of peers have moved on – like that kid in matric that was already there when you started, but nobody ever saw him graduate or recalls him being in any other year.

So, what’s the point of all of this? Are we going somewhere, or did we just wake up with a directive to write a blog about Satellite and decide to bash it for 1,000 words or less (gotta love malicious compliance).

Admittedly, this author wasn’t too enthused about the concept – how do we sell Betty White in a world full of Kim K’s? (again – the most recent pop-culturally diva we could think of).

Betty White Kim Kardashian | Vox | Satellite is Old… But is it Over?

 

If you’re talking connotations, Satellite evokes feelings of excitement rivalled only by the new VAT price – that is, until you dig beneath the surface (ironic, since it’s basically a fossil anyway).

Let’s state the obvious: Satellite isn’t for the person who just moved into the extremely unique and definitely different looking new Balwin property. It’s not for the tender-preneur, the guy next to the country club, your neighbourhood Karen or anyone in the city. However, neither is a tractor – but there’s a time, and a place, and a reason for everything. And we can guarantee you a tractor is a site more useful on its own turf than a dropped suspension GTI.

That’s not to say there’s not a place for the tech. Aside from people in outlying areas where Fibre lines are as rare as a working cell signal, the recent prancing of Elon has seen a big resurgence in Satellite being a buzzword globally – and no, not just because he’s flinging them into orbit like Oprah giving out cars—“you get a satellite, you get a satellite!”

Oprah cropped | Vox | Satellite is Old… But is it Over?

 

The truth is, Satellite has quietly reinvented itself. It’s no longer just the chunky metal dish bolted to your oupa’s roof, picking up reruns of Knight Rider. It’s become leaner, smarter, and in some instances, surprisingly cool (in a very niche, sci-fi-adjacent kind of way).

Modern satellite tech is the silent hero of rural connectivity, remote operations, emergency services, and that weird stretch of road where even your playlists refuse to load. It’s what keeps oil rigs online, helps farmers track crop health from space, and connects ships in the middle of nowhere so they can still order pizza (ok, maybe not quite—but close).

In fact, with the rise of LEO (low-earth orbit) constellations and private companies entering the game, Satellite’s gone from dusty relic to… well, still old—but old with a gym membership and a side hustle.

Is it glamorous? No.
Is it trending on TikTok? Definitely not.
But is it essential? More than ever.

So before you write it off completely, remember: just because something isn’t flashy doesn’t mean it’s not powerful. Satellite’s like that one uncle who shows up to the braai with tools, biltong, and obscure knowledge about boreholes—you don’t get it, but you’re glad he’s there when things go wrong.

Satellite’s not trying to win Prom King any more. It’s not chasing trends or hashtags. It’s just out here, doing its thing, keeping the forgotten corners of the world connected—and that, in this fast-paced digital mess, might just be the coolest thing of all.

Long live the dish.

Satellite resized | Vox | Satellite is Old… But is it Over?

Vox Hosting with the Mosting

Providing a solution to meet your business requirements

Customer loyalty today demands digital options. If your business doesn’t have an attractive and well-functioning website, your potential customers will shop elsewhere.

South Africa’s online retail sector showed a significant increase in the past few years, growing by almost 30 percent (29 percent) between 2022 and 2023. Having reached the R71 billion mark in 2023, online sales are now anticipated to break the R100 billion barrier by 2026 – which is just around the corner.

And so, with South Africa’s online sales soaring, there’s never been a better time to make sure your business has a functioning website. Even with a bricks-and-mortar operation, it’s essential to back it up with an online option as well.

If you’re keen to upgrade your company’s online presence quickly and effectively – or even kickstart one if you haven’t got a website already – Vox offers several different hosting experiences with solutions to meet your business’s unique requirements, no matter your budget.

 

Domain and Web Hosting: The Right Address and Functioning Operations

street 767772 1920 edited | Vox | Vox Hosting with the Mosting

In the physical world, you need an address so your customers can find you, and you need premises from which to operate. These two terms represent different things in terms of getting your website infrastructure up and running.

  • Start with an address: Domain hosting is a service that allows you to choose and register a unique online name for your website and brand, in other words your web address.
  • Make sure your premises are fit for purpose: Behind the address lies the property from which your business operates. Web hosting is essentially what stores all your site’s information and files. It’s usually a server, or space on a server.
  • Let your customers come inside: When someone uses your domain to access your website, signals are sent to the server, which then opens up your live site for the customer – the online version of ‘going into your shop’.

 

With Vox Web Hosting, you rent space on our server and host your website contents through us. We offer multiple platforms to choose from, including WordPress, Linux and Windows. Vox Web Hosting includes a free .co.za domain.

 

Backed by Vox Expertise

difference 7370145 1920 | Vox | Vox Hosting with the Mosting

As well as being able to choose from multiple platforms and have a free domain, Vox Web Hosting also offers the following benefits:

  • Extensive network coverage: Vox Web Hosting has an established national and international backbone with over 13 local PoPs (Point of Purchase outlets) and footprints in all the Teraco Data Centre environments.
  • Security Team: All servers sit behind Vox’s state-of-the-art firewall infrastructure, with virus management and security updates.
  • 24/7 Expert Support: Our servers are locally hosted and managed around the clock by our engineering team for peace of mind.
  • Includes a Free SSL Certificate: If you’re going to run a prosperous website that is secure for your users and browsers, SSL certificates are an essential. Vox SSL Certificates keep your customers’ confidence by ensuring the safety of their data while they visit your website.

 

WordPress, Linux and Windows are some of the world’s most popular website hosting platforms today, and Vox Web Hosting is proud to bring you different options across each brand.

 

Shared Web Hosting: Linux and Windows

Shared hosting makes getting started online simpler and easier, saving you money, as well as taking the headache out of hosting.

With Vox shared Web Hosting, our customers experience a form of web hosting in which more than one website shares the resources of a single virtual or physical server, which means a stable but also low-cost solution.

Choose from Linux options as follows:

  • Linux Basic: 1GB of storage, 25 email addresses;
  • Linux Standard: 4GB of storage, 75 email addresses;
  • Linux Advanced: 20 GB of storage, 200 email addresses; and
  • Linux Ultimate: 30 GB of storage, 250 email addresses.

Alternatively, Vox Web Hosting also offers Windows options, as follows:

  • Windows Standard: 2GB of storage, 100 email addresses;
  • Windows Advanced: 4GB of storage, 200 email addresses; and
  • Windows Ultimate: 20GB of storage, 250 email addresses.

 

Premium WordPress Hosting

If you want to kick your website functionality up a notch, consider WordPress. Over the last two decades, WordPress has grown from being a simple blogging website to one of the world’s most used hosting platforms today.

Our premium WordPress offering delivers performance and scalability to your fingertips. It’s an excellent solution for customers who require better performance, uptime and scalability – although please note: it doesn’t come with email addresses built into the offering.

  • WordPress Starter is ideal for startups that require a professional WordPress website, offering 50GB storage and able to cater to up to 30,000 visitors monthly.
  • WordPress Innovator is perfect for growing businesses that need to scale and require speed and reliability, with 100 GB storage and ideal for up to 120,000 monthly visitors.
  • WordPress Fanatic is excellent for running an e-commerce website, with 150GB storage. It’s capable of catering to an unlimited number of visitors monthly.

 

Which Option to Choose?

Whether your business is already established or a startup about to take off, you need a strong online presence. From your website address to the online ‘premises’ behind it, Vox has the right option to help you with your online sales.

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Shared hosting shares a single physical server with hundreds (if not thousands) of other websites, giving you a low-cost service. WordPress hosting is tweaked for high traffic websites, providing excellent performance and faster loading websites.

Contact us for more information and we can assist you with working out the option that’s best for your business. We can help you establish a business identity, give your organisation a professional look and feel, and build credibility on the web.

Join the sales revolution and be part of the drive to reach the one billion Rand online sales mark next year!