Monthly Archive for June, 2007

Uneducated hobbyist builds backyard bots

Chinese man. Builds robots. In his backyard. Some walk. Some pour tea. The latest pulls a rickshaw.

His wife of course, prefers that her husband spend her time more productively and make money rather than fidgeting with robots in the middle of the night, and sometimes burning down the house (happened once — didn’t stop him).

Spotted by the BBC, surprisingly enough. If you don’t want to sit through the entire clip, watch the last 30 seconds.

Unfortunately he doesn’t seem to have a DIY/geek community backing him (as he might in the US), especially since he lives in a semi-rural area. This phenomenon is similar to Lyn’s post about the homemade planes, which in the US is backed a small but intense community of "ultralight" enthusiasts. When will the proliferation of the internet in China link up like-minded DIY hobbyists? And what will be the nature of the Chinese DIY community?

Via Suicide Bots.

Chinese missing persons website

I was looking for something else on Flickr, when I came across a bunch of photos posted by someone named "missing person net" 寻人网Since April 21, 2005, "missing person net" has been posting photos of missing mainland Chinese people on Flickr. 

The most recent was posted on May 28, 2007:
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Na Kexin, female, 14 years old, born 1/19/94, inadvertently got lost. Home address: Heilongjiang province, Youyi County, Xinglong Town.  Distinguishing characteristics: thin, 1.7 meters tall, medium length hair, fairly goodlooking.  Contact number: 13555103059.  Family guarantees deepest thanks to those who can provide information.

After Baidu’ing the term "missing persons net" this site came up: 110 missing persons net.  It posts photos of people who others are looking for.  It also has a section called "successful cases," meaning those which have been solved, which are divided into the following categories: Left on Own Accord; Reasons Unknown; Cheated or Kidnapped (all children); Lost Way (quite a few older people); Lost Touch With Friends and Family (only 3 of these); Orphan Looking for Relatives (only 3); Urban Vagrants (3 young boys). 

These cases provide the briefest glimpses of a different world:

Name: So-and-so Liu (Liaoning)| Posted: 2006-5-8
Missing person notice: Liu So-and-so, male, age 16, Liaoning Province Benxi City, left home 9/19/04, family members posted notice on this site 5/8/06.  8/2/06 family notified this site that Liu So-and-so had returned safely home. 

Advice: Parents should communicate more with children, discover problems in a timely manner, and resolve problems in a timely manner. It is to be hoped that Internet cafes will not allow minors to enter, that work units will not employ child laborers, and that police departments will take more responsibility.

featured design: [not-Chinese, Danish] paper art

Paper Scenes: Appreciating Engraved Paper Creations was posted May 31 07 at the design show forum at Yesky.com, a  popular Chinese IT portal.  The photos came from a Netease BBS, apparently, but a quick Baidu search didn’t turn up anything more, and there’s no artist attribution. I don’t even know if it’s Chinese, frankly, but most likely Asian at least. More photos at the site–check out the paper waterfall cut from the middle of a page…Update: not Chinese at all! These extraordinary pieces are by Danish artist Peter Callesen, who we now know thanks to Liz.  I don’t think the Yesky design editor knew where they were from, which is why they were left unattributed. 

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podcast: on China’s “eco-Potemkin village”

Ethical Corporation is a publisher and conference organizer on corporate ethics–broadly defined.  Their material is fresh and thorough.  You can sign up for a newsletter, and they have short podcasts as well.

Listen to this podcast with Toby Webb, EC’s Editor, and Paul French, their Asia-Pacific Editor (who is also publishing and marketing director at Access Asia), discussing Dongtan, the Chinese eco-village project being built on Chongming Island outside of Shanghai.  The second part of the interview is mostly about the politics of this project at home in the UK, which is a great illustration of how these international development projects always have multiple motivations behind them.  Of interest:

"…now every province in China wants to do one of these.  It’s almost as if, if I build this small green village with a couple of windmills and some solar panels, then we’ve done with the environment and I can go back to my strip mining and my dirty steel mill." 

"Now what they’ve done is scare all the [migratory] birds away by building these environmentally friendly buildings…so in a sense you’re destroying the natural environment in order to create an environmentally friendly environment…"

For more on Dongtan, link via CDT, see the IEEE Spectrum magazine’s excellent article, "How to Build a Green City."

One tiny critical point, a genuine question for those of us who are foreigners and think and write about China: why is it that so many of us continue to use the Cultural Revolution as a reference point for what’s happening today?  Isn’t it kind of like using the San Francisco Summer of Love, 1967, as a common reference point for understanding something about current American culture?  The CR was between thirty and forty years ago–that’s a long time.  Of course it had a massive impact on many levels, but so did the free love/sexual revolution/women’s liberation 1960s movement in the U.S., but we don’t continue to reference it.  Or maybe we should?

on Sina BBS: a Chinese tourist eats in North Korea

Found this interesting account today, titled: This is how North Korean quality restaurants entertain foreign guests!  It’s a series of photos and commentary on what really matters–what’s the food like in North Korea?  Rough translation:

North Korea is the same as we were before the 1980s; the standards for receiving foreign and domestic guests are completely different.  All of their restaurants are state-run, so if we don’t eat at a quality restaurant then it’s a special banquet room, and they’re all good local restaurants. The food can’t compare to China, but it’s very special treatment in the North Korean context.  It can’t be called really tasty, but getting your fill isn’t a problem.

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The first evening they arranged for us to eat at a 4-star restaurant in Pyongyang, the Western Peak.  Eight or nine people to a table.  When we got there they brought small dishes of chicken, tofu, pumpkin and beef, three dishes of each.  That made it look like there was a lot, but there were really only four kinds of food. But each table had two bottles of beer, which was more than we had expected. After that each meal had beer, which is not often the case when taking tours in other countries.

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A Kaesong "royal banquet" — the tableware is very pretty.

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The second day we went to Kaesong, where we had lunch at a famous Koryo cuisine restaurant. We were served an ancient imperial banquet, and the tableware here was beautiful. In front of each guest was a perfectly arranged set of eight brilliantly polished brass bowls…Waitresses dressed in traditional clothing poured us each a glass of millet wine and removed the lids from the dishes to reveal eight different kinds of pickled vegetables.

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The shops were fairly well stocked, but are mostly for foreigners. They have a ration system, as we used to have in China.  If you don’t have enough grain you can get more on the black market. But we heard it is many times more expensive. It looks like as long as you have money you can take care of food and shelter. But here in North Korea, where the average monthly salary is 90 RMB, how many people can really fill their bellies?

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Selected comments from BBS readers:

Why is there such a huge difference between North and South Korea?  I can’t figure it out!

Because North Korea is like China — communist.

Can you tell us when you took these?

I hope the two countries can reunite. They’re one family after all.  Mr. Kim Jung-il, please consider it.

Unbelievable…

It looks poor.

It’s a typical socialist country.

I wonder how people would have felt if they had seen these pictures when they were all shouting, "Socialism is great!"

You must have been watching too many South Korean teledramas!  South Korea would swallow up North Korea, and our compatriots in northeastern China would be living under the sights of American rifles.

You think he’d unite?  Old Kim wouldn’t give it up.  North Korean people are starving to death and he still lives like an emperor!! Just like those years for us with Comrade Mao, who was going around saying he didn’t want a personality cult, didn’t want anything special, and yet he was the grandfather of it all!! Even emperors didn’t live the way he did.  Really, I bet that in the Qing dynasty ordinary people dared to say what they wanted about the emperor.  But during Mao’s time I guess you didn’t even dare say anything to your mother!!…

Chinese online video activism: “We don’t need GDP, we need life”

Thanks to China Digital Times for the link to this rather extraordinary video, posted by someone called daughterofchina, whose producers are using the Internet and Youtube as a means of online environmental activism. It would be nice to know more about who produced it. I searched Yoqoo (which I notice is now calling itself Youku, thank god), Baidu, and Tudou and could not find it on any of these Chinese video sharing sites.  It must have been posted there, however, so perhaps it has been deleted?

The video calls attention to water pollution in Wuxi and the protests against the PX chemical factory in Xiamen, the latter which has been blogged in depth on ESWN and Global Voices Online

You can find a collection of Chinese videos of newscasts on the Wuxi polluted tap water issue here.
 

Chinese DIY: story of a homemade plane

Our first subtitled Chinese video! It’s the story of Wang Qiang, a Sichuan barber who grew up making model planes and eventually built his own and became a self-taught pilot. This is one of the things I love about China–an ordinary guy can build his own plane and fly it, without a whole lot of interference from anyone.  Especially in rural areas.  The government appears to be trying to crack down on some of them, according to this story of a farmer-pilot from Zhejiang province.  And not everyone is as lucky as Wang Qiang: an amateur Beijing pilot (called the "birdman" recently had a crash

For those of us interested in translation work: to do this I used mojiti.com and would definitely recommend it.  It’s unbelievably intuitive and easy to use.  You just tell mojiti what video you want to upload and it does it for you, then you add "spots" to it.  You can get anything that’s on Youtube, Yoqoo, Tudou, and a number of other sites. I think that the video is "open," meaning that someone else could go in and edit the translation or add their own spots.