Google opens first India data centre; aims to take on Amazon & Microsoft

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Google, the information technology giant, opened its first data centre in India on Wednesday, offering customers the ability to host applications and store data locally. This is part of its effort to compete with global rivals Amazon and Microsoft in this country's fast-growing cloud services space.

Located in Mumbai, Google says the data and applications hosted at its new data centre will help reduce latency (the term in a computer network for the time it takes for a packet of data to get from one designated point to another) by 20-90 per cent for end-users in Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru and Hyderabad. The company will also allow users to pay in rupees.

The company will offer customers of its cloud platform in India all its major services of Compute, Big Data, Storage, and Networking. The local centre will also allow it to tap sectors, such as financial services, which have been sceptical of hosting data abroad due to security concerns.

While Google is a late entrant into India's cloud services market, it is hoping to win customers from rivals with its capabilities in artificial intelligence and machine learning. The search giant has troves of Indian user data which it can use to finetune its AI and ML products for local taste.

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