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COPAD, solution for orderly distribution of high-demand products

The Division of the Desoft Computer Applications Company in this province of eastern Cuba launched a computer solution through which companies and government authorities could organize the orderly distribution of high-demand products offered in the retail network of Commerce.

Las Tunas, Cuba.- Through four fundamental components, the Control of High Demand Products (COPAD, in Spanish) integrates in a single platform the information related to the distribution of previously defined resources, regardless of the provider or nature of what is put to available to customers. Always housed in the entity's servers, COPAD would also make it possible to control distribution cycles so that decision-makers know which nuclei have received specific merchandise and, at the same time, identify the most vulnerable families.

For consumers, it includes an application for mobile phones through which citizens would know in real-time when commercial units receive a certain product, which centers would be responsible for purchasing them and, consequently, only go to the establishment if they were among those included.

By using the infrastructure, its ecosystem - emphasizes Desoft Las Tunas - “facilitates integration and security with the Citizen Portal and with other solutions launched and under development, such as optimizing the wholesale supply chain; project in execution by the Government of Santiago de Cuba with our representation in that province.”

COPAD, for example, would be very useful in this territory that distributes by family nuclei part of the most demanded and existing merchandise in the Caribe Stores chain. Doing so has been a great challenge for everyone involved in the task here; especially, with regard to establishing agile mechanisms so that the progress of the assortment distribution is known, which, it is worth clarifying, does not constitute modules or products regulated by the ration card.

Desfot Las Tunas assures that COPAD could remain even beyond the current scenario and become a useful tool for large distributors who routinely use the consumer registry, such as the Domestic Trade companies or Collection. By the way, it would speed up the urgent digitalization of these existing data in the control offices for the distribution of supplies (Oficoda).

Last week, Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel insisted on the need to continue promoting the indigenous creation of computer solutions that make the processes of Commerce and Government in the country more expeditious. "I am convinced that everything we set out to do, we can do," he said. He also cataloged the digitization of public records as urgent; something that, he stressed, would increase the quality of the procedures services to the population.