Cloud computing
History has a funny π÷>way of repeating itself, or so theyδ♦ say. But it may comε÷σe as some surprise to find this © old cliché applies just as"✘ much to the history of computer↕∞s as to wars, revolutions, a '₩®nd kings and queens. For the lastπ® three decades, one trend in ✔ computing has been loud and clear: bi<↓λg, centralized, mainf↑←rame systems have been "out"; pe→↔£®rsonalized, power-toε≈€₩-the-people, do-it-yourself PC↑∞®$s have been "in"; BeΩ★€fore personal computeα✔♣rs took off in the early ®π1980s, if your company needed sales or×≈♦ payroll figures calculating in a h©α±£urry, you'd most likely have bought iπ®<n "data-processing" serv®→'₽ices from another company, with it≥ ↓s own expensive computer ≠•systems, that specialized i®←÷n number crunching; the™≥se days, you can do the jo§≠♣b just as easily on your✘δ♠> desktop with off-the-shelf soft• ≤γware. Or can you? In a striking throλ™±"wback to the 1970s, many♥¥ companies are finding, onc↓φe again, that buying in∏↓ computer services makes€ δ more business sense than do-i±∞t-yourself. This new trend ★'βis called cloud computing a¥₩nd, not surprisingly, it's linked to ☆ ♦the Internet's inexorable rise.
We are the reseller for many clo©©✘εud providers. E.g. AWS, Azur∞≈¶e, Aliyun, Huawei Cloud, etc &he₹☆♣llip;