There are still some things we don’t know about Amazon’s recent run of profits. It is unclear if the retail business is becoming more profitable, or if another growing arm of the company, such as advertising, is pumping up the bottom line. The company doesn’t break out operating income for individual businesses, except for AWS.
There are more than 3,000 public libraries in China. But most of them have few visitors. According to Guangzhou Library, local citizens visited the library just 1.15 times on average last year.
The writing system was traditionally passed down through generations orally, but by the 1990s, many of the women who could read and write Nushu had passed away.
The world's largest drone maker DJI is also leveraging Microsoft's cloud services and AI to develop applications for agriculture, public security and other sectors.
Their cargo has expanded from electronic products such as mobile phones and computers at the initial stage to clothing, daily necessities, grain and industrial products.
Themed "Shaping an interconnected world," the Hamburg summit will focus on topics of economic, financial, trade, climate, and development policy. Other issues like digital technology, migration, and counter-terrorism will also be discussed.
南京初级中级职称评定
The women's feet bobbed on the pedals of the sewing machines at the Jinpan Embroidery Workshop in Qinghai province's Huzhu Tu autonomous county in Haidong city in early April.
The zoo said that it will also close its box office and entrance when the daily capacity of 30,000 visitors – half the utmost limit - is reached. All visitors must wear masks before entering the zoo, administrators added.
There also may be a problem with the software that drives the anti-stall device, according to initial assessments of the crash. The software updates follow preliminary results from the Lion Air crash that suggested bad data from a single sensor may have caused the anti-stall system to malfunction and send the plane into the fatal dive.
There are many examples of these highly ambitious second-generation business leaders keen to prove their capabilities. One is William Hsu, 28, son of a Taiwan property development magnate, who went to the United Kingdom for his education when he was 14.