Guizhou is now home to various smart computing data centers of internet giants. [Photo/ddcpc website]
Under the guidance of the national "channeling computing resources from the east to the west" strategy, Southwest China's Guizhou province is advancing the construction of computing infrastructure and establishing an efficient computing power scheduling system.
The province connects East China's massive data demands with West China's abundant computing resources, creating a comprehensive and interconnected national computing power network.
As China's first national big data comprehensive pilot zone and one of the eight integrated computing network national hub nodes, Guizhou has become one of the regions with the highest number of large-scale data centers globally. Its digital economy growth rate has ranked among the top in the country for nine consecutive years.
Version 1.0 of the integrated computing power scheduling platform developed by Guizhou Dongshu Xisuan Data Processing Service Co went online in March of this year.
This platform creates a low-latency, high-speed interconnected transport channel, and through computing power scheduling, provides computing power and data transaction services for upstream and downstream users.
The company has also developed AI application projects tailored for specific industries, utilizing Guizhou's abundant computing resources to process data efficiently.
As of October, Guizhou has established direct computing power network connections to 40 cities outside the province, with an out-of-province bandwidth of 51,100 Gbps. This has made it a crucial region for optimizing the allocation of national computing resources and promoting coordinated development between East and West China.