| D-Caravan Home Page | Computer Services | Hyperlinks | Flyer Design | Services | Social Network |

We are an Website Design Company based in Atlanta Ga. Our goal is to design the best Websites for people of African Descent.
Our company see a need for Web Design and Development within the Black Community. In Corporate America all companies have Websites and the Internet is not going anywhere.
We can design your Website according to your design anywhere from e-commerce to search engine optimization. All Continents have Websites. All Cities have Websites. Our businesses need Websites
With the importance of needing a Website D-Caravan can design it for you.
![]()
The following data came from www.economist.com
Almost a quarter of the world's
population-1.5bn people-will use the internet regularly in 2009. Half of them
will make online purchases. A further 400m people will join the online world by
2012. By then, over 1 billion people will buy things over the web, contributing
to a global business-to-consumer (B2C) market worth $1.2trn.
Business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce by then will be just as mainstream and
worth ten times as much.
While the number of devices with internet connections will double to 3bn over
the next few years, the real shift will be in the way users access the web-by smartphone and other
portable devices, rather than by personal computers,
according to IDC, a consultancy. In 2009, 600m people will have mobile internet
access, twice as many as in 2006.
Online retailing will continue to grow, but not as quickly as offline purchases
based on web research. eMarketer reckons web-influenced store sales in the US
will grow by 19% to $667bn in 2009, while retail e-commerce will expand by 12%
to $170.6bn. Combined, the two will account for 28% of all retail sales by 2012.
With the lessons of the dotcom crash still fresh, the IT industry is better
placed to navigate tougher times. Given technology's role in productivity, cost
control and competitiveness, IT spending will outpace GDP growth in rich
countries as well as developing ones.
According to the Economist Intelligence Unit, spending on hardware, software and
services will edge up by around 3% in 2009. Although most of that growth will be
in emerging markets, IT spending in western Europe will still continue to run
ahead of GDP growth. The need for network security, sophisticated data-storage
tools and mobile computing will spur growth as companies globally shift
processes and transactions online, a process known as cloud computing.
Growth in the sales of personal computers will continue to slow in 2009,
although demand will remain relatively strong in emerging markets. The falling
cost of laptops and the growing availability of cheaper internet-enabled devices
will help to fuel demand worldwide. As a result, laptops will outsell desktop
computers for the first time in 2009.
With factories running at close to 90% of capacity, the global semiconductor
industry will see stable prices in 2009, helped by demand for chip-heavy
laptops, high-end TVs and satellite navigation systems.
Mobile-internet devices. Despite strong support from companies like Intel, tablet-sized computers will remain a non-starter as consumers upgrade to smartphones instead.
From the world's poorest countries to the very richest, the demand for mobile phones will not be derailed by tougher economic times.
Could it be that some of the reasons that black businesses fail is because of the lack of having a Website?