Japanese Ambassador to India Kenji Hiramatsu referred to Donglang, the site of an on-going standoff between China and India, as a disputed area and said no country should change the status quo by force in an interview with Indian media on Friday.
Jassy: If you believe as we do that in the fullness of time, relatively few companies will have their own data centers, and those will be very small, then that means all that computing is moving to the cloud. We’re very optimistic we’ll remain the significant leader, but there will be several players in multiple geographies that will be successful. We’ve said we think AWS has the potential to be the largest business in Amazon. Our consumer business is 0-billion-plus business and still growing at a good clip, so it’ll take several years for that to happen, but we’re optimistic that could happen.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe praised top Chinese envoy's work in improving Japan-China relations and thanked him for playing an active role "when the two countries face difficult situations" on Tuesday.
Jennifer Salke (NBC Photo / Mitchell Haaseth)
Jan Craps, CEO and president for AB InBev's Asia-Pacific region, said the company has identified premium products as an important growing trend across most consumer goods in China.
Japan is our home market and is also one of our biggest markets. The Chinese market is pretty big and it's growing really fast, it could soon become the biggest market. For the past few years we have been growing well across all markets, including Japan, which is a big base.
优化网站排名哪家好
Jeannie Park, president of the Harvard Asian American Alumni Alliance, and Coalition for a Diverse Harvard co-founder and board member, told the newspaper that she found Burroughs's use of alumni and student testimonies to be the most "gratifying" part of her ruling.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe left Tokyo on Friday for Estonia, kicking off his official visit to Baltic and Eastern European states of Latvia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Serbia and Romania.
Ji made the remark while answering reporters' questions on India's re-banning of mobile apps with Chinese backgrounds.
Japan's leading brokerage, Nomura Securities, said in a research note on Monday, "We are concerned that the ongoing political tensions in HK are now affecting the key pillars of the economy (such as retail sales, tourism, property prices) and thus the outlook of corporate earnings."