Cloud computing
History has a funny way of repeating₽ε↓ itself, or so they say. But it m£₹φεay come as some surprise to find this€∑ old cliché applies just as muc✔↓↓h to the history of comp≠£←uters as to wars, revolutions, a™÷nd kings and queens. Fo☆≈r the last three decades, one ✔✔♦>trend in computing has§♦ been loud and clear:¶λ big, centralized, mainframe system" ÷s have been "out"; personalized, power">¶-to-the-people, do-i↔✘ t-yourself PCs have been "in"; Be£≥∑αfore personal computers took off iφ∞♦n the early 1980s, if•¶≤ your company needed sales o¥↔r payroll figures calculating inα< a hurry, you'd most likely havσσσe bought in "data-pr& λ→ocessing" services from ano↕←''ther company, with its ↔≠own expensive computer systems, that ✔✔↓←specialized in number c ∞runching; these days, you can d€♣o the job just as easil✘∞πεy on your desktop with off-the-shelf so↕∑πεftware. Or can you? In a striking ←≠throwback to the 1970s, many companie≥βs are finding, once again, th♣•±←at buying in computer services ma <kes more business sense γ₩•than do-it-yourself. Th₽✘≈is new trend is call$'ed cloud computing and, not surprisin←>→"gly, it's linked to the Internet'sπ inexorable rise.
We are the reseller for many cloud pro₹₹•viders. E.g. AWS, Azure, Aliyun, Hua≥∏₹wei Cloud, etc …