Miniso Corp, a low-cost retailer based in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, has resumed operations at more than 90 percent of its outlets across the country following the novel coronavirus outbreak, according to a company source.
Microsoft has been competing fiercely to convince developers in the healthcare industry to build on its platforms. The company built an Azure API for FHIR, which is a set of standards that codify how healthcare data should be structured. Last month, Microsoft hosted a developer’s conference focused on FHIR, and it has also contributed open-source software that makes it easier to implement these standards.
Mobile video apps including Kuaishou, Douyin, Xigua and Huoshan are displayed on the screen of a 4G smartphone. [Photo provided to China Daily]
Migrant workers from Southwest China's Yunnan province arrive at Jinjiang, East China's Fujian province, earlier this week after taking a charter plane. [Photo/Xinhua]
Microsoft Corp's largest research lab for artificial intelligence and internet of things is scheduled to begin operations in Shanghai on May 15. [Photo by He Wei/chinadaily.com.cn]
Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar, the Reverend Jesse Jackson, actor Kevin Hart and rappers Master P and Ludacris also came to honor Floyd.
版纳妇女港立医院
Mil Mi-8AMTSh transport and attack helicopters in the final stage of the Peace Mission 2018 joint counterterrorism exercises conducted by the SCO member states on the Cherbakul Training Ground in Chelyabinsk region, Russia, August 29, 2018.[Photo/IC]
Microsoft finally issued a statement after the Department of Defense announced late Friday that it awarded a billion cloud contract to the Redmond, Wash.-based company.
Microsoft changed its Azure penetration testing policy in 2017 to allow customers to test their applications without first getting permission. For both companies, getting permission was not all that difficult, but nobody likes filling out forms and AWS told would-be penetration testers that they could expect to wait up to a week before getting the go-ahead to proceed.
Microsoft may start feeling like the Rodney Dangerfield of tech. It?just gets no respect.