Alibaba opens first data centre in Mexico, ramping up AI infrastructure expansion
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“We are not only bringing world-class cloud technology to support local businesses, but also building an inclusive and thriving ecosystem in Mexico together with our local partners, developers and customers to foster innovation, collaboration and sustainable growth across Latin America,” Selina Yuan, president of international business at Alibaba Cloud, said in a statement.
Cloud computing services enable companies to buy, sell, lease or distribute a range of software and other digital resources as an on-demand service over the internet, just like electricity from a power grid. These resources are managed inside data centres.
With multiple power sources and high-bandwidth internet connections, data centres are secure, temperature-controlled facilities that house large-capacity servers and data-storage systems. More enterprises are using data centres to host or manage computing infrastructure for their AI projects.

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