Monthly Archive for September, 2007

Chinese sharing movies for the world

I’ve always wondered when this would start–this is the worldwide web after all.  TV Links, a website in the UK, works as a linkfinder for streaming movies, TV shows, anime, cartoons, and documentaries. While some of the links are to sites like Veoh, Stage 6 (especially for material before 1990) and occasionally Google Video, for its current movies TV Links takes advantage of widespread free English-language content hosted on Chinese sites like Tudou, Youku, 56.com, and Ouou.  No need to visit these sites directly and do a search; TV Links has about 2000 movies all there for you.  And TVL has a big group of volunteers who scour the web for additional links.  Eventually this model might also work for MP3s, but mainstream musical tastes are different enough in mainland, US, and Europe that there’s just not enough musical overlap yet.

According to Alexa, TV Links has a traffic rank of 214 and nearly 40% of users are from the U.S.

Fifth_element_2

Happy Mid-autumn Festival!

A friend sent this over this article to me today, entitled:

特别报道:全国各地惊现纸馅月饼
("Special Report: Country-wide Shocking Paper-filled Mooncake")

The article describes a famous person named "Jason," who went home with a box of mooncakes and discovered a secret note inside:

Mooncake

Translation: "Jason: Happy Mid-autumn Festival!"

Upon further examination, I noticed that my name (Jason) had been computer generated onto the image and the article! So if you want to send a similar online greeting to your friend, simply:

Copy the URL below, insert the name of a friend, and send it to him/her!

http://www.bokee.net/includes/zhongqiu.jsp?stra=(insert name here)

black market goods on the move between India and China

The Asian Studies WWW Monitor points toward this analysis of unofficial cross border trade between India and China.  It gives the geographic details of routes between Arunachal, Sikkim, Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Ladakh and Tibet and Xinjiang.  These routes have been in operation for centuries if not longer, and despite official customs efforts, apparently there’s a lot going on.  Excerpts:

Despite our bureaucracy’s whimsical reluctance to acknowledge it
Indian goods are going to China and Chinese goods are being brought in
large quantities all along the border, and China monitors this trade
quite closely.

…coarse wool,
pashm wool, tiger eye & other precious and semi precious stones, gold
pellets, daggers, boots, hats, blankets, quilts, jeans, jackets, fur
caps, felt hats, inverters, electronic equipment, cycles, foot wear,
confectionery, crockery, thermos flasks, raw meat (during winter in
Ladakh), saddles, yaks, and horses come into India and liquor esp.
rum, medicines (large quantity of Indian medicines go through
Kyrghystan and Kazakhstan to Sinkiang), woollen carpets, tea,
utensils, petrol and diesel, car parts, tool kits, solar panels,
shawls, bicycles & sometimes even cement bags go from India.

The goods that are now in demand are no longer traditional, and demand
for traditional goods like wool is now on a commercial scale. No
longer is it only for local use by cross border communities. The
routes and methods of carrying these goods is however still largely
traditional. Earlier needs were few and localized thus salt e.g. used
to be a very important item to be brought in.  Now as can be seen from
the list above preferences have outstripped basic needs.

In Ladakh the Chinese indirectly finance dumping of their goods by
giving long-term interest free credit. They demand payment only after
the goods have been sold by their Indian customers. For Indian goods
they pay in Rupees immediately on delivery. In Leh’s Moti Market,
across the road from the spacious campus of the Intelligence Bureau
about 50 shops sell largely Chinese goods. Amongst their faithful
buyers are uniformed personnel too.

It’s not only for Lhasa that the Chinese could be interested in
opening up trade routes with India. They want traditional trade routes
connecting each part of Tibet that has filial and old trade links with
India to be resumed. This way they can ensure cheaper supplies.
Providing these from mainland China takes time and is expensive. This
situation will not be affected much even when the Sikang – Lhasa rail
link is opened.

Isaac’s murmurs: digital tracks in virtual China

If you really cared about emerging Internet practices and their social impact in China, AND if you were trying to keep up with social media, AND if you didn’t have all the time in the world to read blogs, AND if you read Chinese…you might just check out or even subscribe to Chinese venture capitalist and social entrepreneur Isaac Mao’s Twitter stream

Isaac_twitter

Here’s Joi Ito’s Twitter stream in English, which helps give an idea of how the streams can create a kind of ambient intimacy among users.  But Isaac is stepping it up a level, to something that is closer to IM + blog + IRC/BBS.  Not only do you find Isaac’s ongoing thoughts throughout the day (such as the recent: What’s up with Air China’s service? The flight attendant on an international flight didn’t know whether the meat in the main meal was pork or chicken, and in the end everyone voted and decided it was chicken LOL), but Isaac is using some very cool little applications like Twitterfeed, which lets you read the RSS feeds he subscribes to (blogs such as mindmeters, Techmeme, and 我blog故我在), and Twitterfox, which lets you view his buddies’ Twitter updates (also known as "Tweets").  You can follow conversations across Twitter, kind of like comments back and forth on a blog or a BBS, but all on one page, and often referencing blog posts, news, and random experiences nearly as they happen. 

It starts to feel extraordinarily exponential…people like Isaac are moving fast with this stuff and are creating new virtual experiences and spaces as they go. 

HK-based research foundation makes flashy research, BBC & SCMP pick it up

I saw this on the BBC Asia page yesterday:

"Mega-city move? Calls for Hong Kong and Shenzhen to merge into one city"

The people behind these "calls" is the Bauhinia Foundation Research Centre. Their director, Anthony Wu, is quoted as saying "If you look at the long term competitiveness of Hong
Kong, Hong Kong has only got seven million people, and… Shenzhen has
13 million people. You need to merge the two to create a bigger
metropolis to take advantage of China and the world."

And he continues to argue that "Hong Kong should merge with China… as Hong Kong has the legal system and China the 5,000 years of culture."

The article continues by giving more details of his radical plan, which, as you may have guessed, I have my doubts about. Are these grandiose, sweeping generalizations the best that a "research centre" in Hong Kong can come up with?

Then of course, there’s the local English newspaper, the South China Morning Post, which ran an editorial  supporting Wu’s arguments and (quoting from the same BBC article) "argued that the ‘one country, two systems’ mantra, designed to guarantee Hong Kong’s autonomy under Chinese rule, was a ’straitjacket’, which ‘but for history’ was holding Hong Kong back."

I’m not even going to comment on that one.

Source: See original article on the BBC.

China’s innovative news dashboards, good information design on the rise

The China Media Project, based out of the Hong Kong University, ran a recent blog article called QQ runs interactive feature page on the problem of “fake reporters” in China, which pointed out the wave of innovative news dashboards coming out of Mainland Chinese online news sites.

The screen below, taken from the QQ news page suggested by China Media Project, has a graphic-intensive title (roughly translated as "Uncovering the most fake reporter in history"), below which is a snippet of the latest news.

Then on the left are the previews/summaries of full articles accompanied by the respective photographs, and on the right are some primary sources that give a look inside the "fake reporter’s" world.

Qqnews1

Then if you scroll down, there is an reader poll on the right and then a box on the left for reader’s comments (but in a format more reminiscent of BBSs than blog comments).

I find it interesting how they’ve managed to leverage the screen to put up multiple articles, viewpoints and pieces of evidence (rather than the typical one article per page format that most news sites take).

The feature article below, from daqi 大旗,  uses a similar two column layout, with previewed articles on the left and reader comments on the right. What they also do is quote an excerpt from Baidu Post (the Baidu all-purpose BBS) as a way of putting up another viewpoint.

Daqinews1

Note, however, that these are the dashboard views for feature news items that have had multiple articles written on them. So they do not replace the current single-page articles (which are linked to) but they do augment the currently article-centered news.

Two observations during registration for QQ…

Qqreg1

One. There’s a mandatory category where you state your country: you can choose between the "People’s Republic of China," or "Other countries and places."

Qqreg2

Two. The speckled dots is, I believe, a sign that the image is supposed to prevent spam entries (sort of like the enter-the-code in the warped image tests, technical term: captcha). Are Chinese characters are so hard to parse that only a few dots are needed to throw off the spam bots / automated hackers?

Get a QQ account today! (Also, for fellow Mac users, I’ve gotten LumaQQ and Adium to work, albeit without emoticons or pictures.)

CaoFei & Yang FuDong @ ASU

Businessasusual

For those of you in the Arizona State University area, CaoFei and Yang FuDong is opening a show there this Friday. It’s called Business As Usual: New Video from China. See website for details:

http://asuartmuseum.asu.edu/businessasusual

Thanks to John Spiak for the link.

Bicultural designers bridge the divide?

While IDEO and Frog have studios in Shanghai, Lunar in Hong Kong, and various other companies have done work in China, none of them market themselves with as much flair as the:

Rednetwork1

Rednetwork2

The Red Network consists of Kaizor Innovation, Y Studios and culturalANTENNA, and is a "global alliance" of "ethnic Chinese with bicultural backgrounds."

Do they live up to their marketing message? I don’t know — their websites don’t show much in the way of China-based projects. Having said that, being "bicultural" myself, I’d check them out if I was looking for designers.

Thanks to Andy Switky of IDEO Shanghai for pointing them out to me.

What if France is making a backup copy of itself in China?

An email arrived this morning from IFTF’s Jason Tester with the subject header: "What if France is making a backup copy of itself in China?"

The email contained a link to a post on Super Colossal titled: "China: USB External HD to the French."

The scenario, laid out by Super Colossal, is this:

  • In the town of Tianducheng in Zhejiang province, the Chinese people are hard at work replicating French architecture, complete with its own Eiffel Tower clone.
  • So the Chinese are copying instead of innovating again, nothing new right?
  • But what if France, not China, was responsible for this construction.
  • What if France was backing itself up, physically, just in case?

Parisbackup

Thanks to Reuters/Aly Song for the great photograph.