Cloud computing
History has a funny way of repeating itself, or so they say. But it may come ≤as some surprise to find this old cliché applies just as much to the histo≤ry of computers as to wars, revolutions, and kings and queens. For thΩe last three decades, one trend in computing has been loud and clear: big, centrΩalized, mainframe systems have been "out"; personalized, power-to-the-people, do-it-yourself PCs have been "in"; Before personal computers took off in the early 1980s, ₩if your company needed sales or payroll figures calculating in a hurry, you'd most likely have $bought in "data-processing" services from another company, with its own expφensive computer systems, that specialized in number crunching; these days,✘ you can do the job just as easily on your desktop w✔ith off-the-shelf software. Or can you? In a striking throwback to the 19≠70s, many companies are finding, once again, that buying in computer services makes mor₹e business sense than do-it-yourself. This new trend is called cloud computing and, not surprisingly, it's linked to the Internet's inexorable rise.
We are the reseller for many cloud providers. E.g. AWS, Azure, Aliyun, Huawei Cloud, etc &hellαip;