Mei Guan Xi(没关系)

what is this guanxi you speak of?

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Trip to Nanjing

November 23rd, 2008 · 3 Comments

I don’t get much of a chance to travel with the startup and all, but I managed to get away for an overnight trip and all for less than $90 to boot!


On the train wasting time till we get to nanjing


Not exactly the most scenic train ride I’ve ever been on


See what I mean?


Only 2 hrs ride via bullet train from Shanghai


Pinnacle of architectural design


The scooter in the park is classic


Gates to the old city walls in Nanjing


Nanjing taxis - maybe my next car should be the same green


Most of the traffic lights have a giant timer - I wish all US traffic lights would have this


Ah…the local street food we’ve been looking for (don’t mind the bright pink plastic surgery sign above)


Wait - Colonel Sanders? Are we at the right place?


KFC’s rule China


Found it….except there is a line. Doh!


Soupy dumplings…mmmm


Vermicelli noodles with duck blood…sweet


More food….


The picturesque surroundings leading up to Sun Yat Sen’s mausoleum


”天下为公“ basically means everything under the sun is of concern to the public


Male lions are characterized with a ball under his paw


Females - with a little cub


Up the 337 steps…


The next tony hawk


“I promise this is the first time I’ve made a peace sign in pictures” - S. Yeah, right


View from the top


See the 2 holes? The big one was made by japanese bombardments, the little one….er…by the chinese themselves


…by the Red Guard - not exactly a bright spot in Chinese history


Wandering around town at night


Equivalent of the White House


Random tangent - but check out this photo, it’s from 1948’s chinese games. Look carefully to the left, it says Coca Cola! Coke was in China in 1948?!? That’s amazing to me.


A really famous painting of a chinese soldier taking down the chinese flag - it was during the period of Chinese infighting.


The State Room


With Sun Yat Sen’s photo on the wall


The VP’s office is pretty modest


Corridor on the grounds


The garden behind the grounds

UPDATE -

I asked the cab driver how many people lives in Nanjing and he said 7-8mil, 10 if you count the out-of-towners. And here I was thinking that nanjing was a small city compared to shanghai.

The most striking difference was the openness - as in physical space. Things feel slower and more relaxed because there aren’t skyscrapers descending upon you from every direction, plus it does feel like there are less people (but it’s all relative).

It is a pretty cool place to visit, but as far as living - I feel like if I am going to go city life, I’d choose shanghai. If I was going to choose some place with a better balance, probably hangzhou.

UPDATE 2 -
My friend chastised me for leaving out the symbolism of the lion and lioness. This was his comment…
雄狮代表的是强大雌狮代表昌盛 - which roughly translates to the lion represents “strength and power” while the lioness “flourishing prosperity”

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Search advertising in China

November 23rd, 2008 · No Comments

Baidu has been getting a barrage of bad press lately - first was taking payment to remove links to negative press about the milk powder scandal.

Now in a most recent ‘expose’ by CCTV (gasp!?!), they uncover that Baidu has been taking advertising from fake online pharmacies. Aside from the obvious, why has this been such a big commotion? It’s because Baidu mixes in it’s paid search results with its organic ones. The only sign that it’s an advertisement to the consumer is a word “推广” (chinese meaning ad) at the end versus “百度快照“ (chinese meaning baidu snapshot).

Check it out - not exactly easy to pick out, huh?

With that said, most netizens are tacitly ok with it, but all this came to a head when people were getting phony online pharmacies for top results while searching for keywords like “cancer” or “tumor”! There is now debate whether this practice is ‘legal’ but no matter how you slice it, it certainly isn’t ethical.

More about it at Forbes and Renmin Wang (in chinese)

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Happy Singles Day 1111

November 11th, 2008 · No Comments

It’s called 光棍节 (guang1gun4jie2) since it’s November 11th, or 1111, it’s designated a day for singles.

What do people do? Not really sure, but it’s the 7th most popular search term on Google.cn as of right now (2pm China time). The top 6 are all related to this girl who apparently had cybersex on video. Interesting…I wonder if there can be some correlation on analysis on people who searched BOTH. haha

Even more interesting write-up about it at Baidu baike (basically a poor man’s wikipedia). It lists some suggestions on how to celebrate - some of the more entertaining include “streaking” as suggestion #4 and karaoking #7

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Only advertise for brand or performance? how about “crisis management”?

September 23rd, 2008 · No Comments

I continue to learn everyday the difference between the internet world in China vs the US. Here is a big glaring one…from Pacific Epoch

A spokesman from Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) claimed on Tuesday that Alibaba Group published posts on September 14 with misleading titles about Baidu’s “PR protection agreement” with food product manufacturer Sanlu on the websites of consumer-focused e-commerce site Taobao.com and business-to-business e-commerce company Alibaba.com Ltd. (1688.HK), reports Sohu. The reports said Sanlu milk powder planned to sign a RMB 3 million advertising agreement with Baidu if Baidu would remove Sanlu’s negative search results. Baidu said it retains the right to sue Alibaba Group for defamation, the report said. Baidu also announced on its online forum channel Baidu Post Bar on September 13 that it refused to sign Sanlu’s proposed PR protection agreement.

Alibaba Group welcomed the Baidu lawsuit and said that revealing truth to the public is its responsibility, reports Sina. Alibaba deleted the reports on Tuesday night from the Taobao.com and Alibaba.com Ltd. homepages, reports ChinaByte.

This isn’t the first time that I’ve heard of this, but first time I’ve seen it in print. Advertising is concentrated with the big portals in China just like it is in the the US, but it might not be just for brand or performance motivations!

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Putting the best foot forward….for august anyway

July 21st, 2008 · 1 Comment

Talk putting the best foot forward…there has been a major effort to crack down on unsavory content on the web prior and during the olympics, for example:

1) Audits and closing down of all sites that do not have an ICP license. Basically to run any type of website in China you need some sort of ICP license (to different degrees depending on what kind of content is on your site). This has always been the rule, they just haven’t been very vigilant about closing down sites that don’t have it.

2) Scanning for unsavory keywords

3) Disallowing entry into datacenters for basically the whole month of August. Yeah, that means if your servers hardware goes down, too bad. Gotta wait until the end of august to get in there.

Looks like they aren’t kidding around.

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Making a dent in saving the environment? 对环保的贡献?

June 2nd, 2008 · 2 Comments

What do these 3 things have in common?

It’s that they all cost 1 RMB!

Believe it or not, most restaurants charge you 1 RMB for napkins and for the really annoying skinflints, 1 RMB for chopsticks (even for reusable chopsticks and towelettes) ! Small Fat Lamb (hotpot restaurant) use to be like that, but I think they’ve since changed.

Besides being nickeled and dimed to death, what I wanted to point out was that starting today (June 1st), a new policy has been implemented that does not allow stores to give away free plastic shopping bags (defined by a thickness of 0.025mm). Yep, that means all supermarkets, shopping centers, roadside stalls, etc. This law was passed earlier this year in January as a means to improve the environment. Furthermore, as a part of the initiative, the gov’t is trying to curb the production, sale, and use of the bags while increasing the number places you can recycle them.

Brushing aside the enforcement aspect, I think it’s a great idea. Chopsticks and napkins, not so much. To steal a great phrase, I already “refuse plastics bags with impunity” and think that until there is some kind of financial impact, there won’t be much of a change in consumer behavior. Let’s just hope it works!

As an aside, I think US is even more plastic or package happy than China.

这三个东西有什么共同点? 都是一块钱呀!

我刚来的时候很难接受在莫些餐厅用筷子还要一块钱。。。我记得小肥羊原来就是这样的,不过现在应该取消了。今天去了优衣裤才发现禁止提供免费塑料袋的政策已经实施了。 虽然之前一些朋友会嫌我抠门因为付那个毛巾的一块钱我都不愿意(这些东西还要付钱我很反对因此我从来不用)。。。但是我非常认同对塑料袋的政策。 我觉得人是个习惯的动物,如果没有什么额外的刺激,人是不会改变得。

反证除非实在没办法的话,我通常都拒绝拿塑料袋。。。希望这个新政策真正对环保有贡献。

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Earthquake & 9-11

May 21st, 2008 · 1 Comment

The earthquake in Sichuan happened a little over a week ago, but I was actually oblivious to it until 10 minutes later some of my friends IM’ed me asking if I felt it. Nada…but for some of my friends in high-rises, they said the entire building shook laterally at least 3 feet for almost 5 minutes! That’s pretty incredible considering the earthquake happened about 1000 miles away from Shanghai which is still farther than say Chicago to DC (~650 mi).

To be honest the aftermath of it reminds me a lot of 9-11 back home, in the way that people are responding to the natural disaster, hearing about amazing human feats of survival, workers digging tirelessly to rescue the victims under the rubble…

From what I hear it’s been covered a lot back in the US, but I think here are a few links worth passing along. (It might be a bit slow for those of you not in China)

(From 南方都市报)
looks like a tornado went thru there…except imagine if there were hundreds of tornadoes simultaneously)

(From 南方都市报)
a couple taking their wedding pictures as the earthquake happened - this is 8 minutes after the first earthquake

People getting together in shanghai to remember the earthquake victims

Lastly, the government put out a notice saying “为表达全国各族人民对四川汶川大地震遇难同胞的深切哀悼,国务院决定,2008年5月19日至21日为全国哀悼日。在此期间,全国和各驻外机构下半旗志哀,停止公共娱乐活动,外交部和我国驻外使领馆设立吊唁簿。5月19日14时28分起,全国人民默哀3分钟,届时汽车、火车、舰船鸣笛,防空警报鸣响”

Essentially it says, from 5/19-21st, to remember the victims of the earthquake, the gov’t has decided that the flag will be at half mast, and must cease all public entertainment events. Further, on 5/19 at 2:28 there will be 3 minutes of moment of silence.

In response websites grayed out their logos or sites or even shut it down entirely for 3 days.

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Using IM to go viral in China and boycotting french goods

April 17th, 2008 · 5 Comments

As I signed onto MSN instant messenger yesterday, I was greeted with a bunch of “heart china” signatures.

too lazy to take my own screenshot, here is one from shanghaiist

Similarly reported by Shanghaiist and Wangjainshuo according to QQ MSN China tabulates over 2 million users adding this signature! (in chinese)

To summarize, this was a response by chinese netizens to all the negative press China has been getting in the world arena. Furthermore, there has even been a call to boycott French goods (like carrefour) given what happened in Paris during the torch relay.

Politics aside, what I wanted to highlight was the phenomenon of using IM signatures as a viral tool in China. People in the US use email as the primary tool for everyday communication whereas in China it’s IM (as mentioned here and here). In one signature change, you’ve accomplished the equivalent of sending out an email to your 100+ contacts on your contact list. Moreover, when you email something funny or interesting to your friends, you probably only select a subset of friends whereas your IM signature is a broadcast to your entire contact list no matter if they are acquaintances or best buds.

I wonder why IM signatures hasn’t caught on in the US?

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Yet another step closer to localization - tooling around in a bike

April 15th, 2008 · 2 Comments

At the behest of my friend to by a bicycle, I succumbbed and bought this bike last week. My only regret is that I didn’t do it sooner!

Mine is the shiny red one.

And it folds up too! Which is nice in case I get tired and can just put it in a taxi or head to the nearest subway.

I was a little worried with no gearing and the 16″ wheels, but luckily shanghai is as flat as a pancake so I haven’t missed those nicer options. The purchase ran about $80 which was just about the cheapest one they had, some of the nicer ones run up to $500-600 (20″ wheels, superlight frame, gears, disc brakes, etc).

So simply put, having a bike is a game-changer. I can’t say that I’ve missed having a car, but I do feel a renewed sense of freedom. Plus, it’s a decent way to get good exercise - when I’m not inhaling car exhaust that is.

Plus, I feel like this is also a good way to see and get to know the city better…check out some of the pics I took during my recent rides

French concession area is a good place for a nice relaxing ride

plus I found this cool old school motorcycle with a sidecar

Believe it or not, the following pictures are all from the same block

I found out the hard way that you get fined for ignoring this sign….luckily it was only 5 rmb’s.

These bike lanes make it much more pleasant to ride on the street - though in shanghai, you can’t seem to get away from people no matter what you do

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So that’s inflation!

April 6th, 2008 · 2 Comments

How bad is inflation in China? According to businessweek 8.7% in Feb…is that good? bad? what does it really mean?

First off, some frame of reference - since Ben Bernanke has taken over, the Fed has come out explicitly to target an inflation rate of 2%…so by that measure 8.7% is extraordinarily high. In slightly more concrete terms, it means that if your salary in 2007 didn’t increase by 8.7% nominally…you ended up with a pay cut!

But before you go pouring all your investments into gold in fear of inflation, one must keep in mind that that China amidst all this inflation worries still grew at 11.4% in real GDP terms in 2007! Which means the country came out waaay ahead even after accounting for inflation.

A lot of this macro mumbo jumbo doesn’t really mean anything to me on a daily basis…well, that was until this past week. For some reason, it hit me all at once…

1) The milk tea I buy around the corner everyday cost 3 rmb, that is until last week. Now it’s 4 rmb
2) One of my perennial favorites noodles bowls went from 18 rmb to 22 rmb’s
3) Today I had to cough up 548 rmb’s for the same exact bike my friend purchased a month ago at 498 rmb,

Bummer, couple that with the US dollar getting weaker, it’s a double whammy for me.

UPDATE: After writing this post yesterday, I found out another one of my regular hangouts reprinted their entire menu just to raise their prices…

物价涨是个热门话题,不过物价涨幅8.7%实际上对我来说有什么影响?算多吗?还是少?

要判断之前还是要有一些对比。 首先,美国Fed Chair, Ben Bernanke, 宣布了涨物价要控制在2%以内,用这个为标准,8.7%的确超级高。 从另外个角度来看,这就是说明如果你2007年的工资没涨8.7%,就算工资被砍了。

不过,不能光光顾这个物价的涨幅,还要考虑到中国2007年度实际经济增长率是11.4%,就是说,扣掉物价涨幅后,经济发展还是很火热。

通常这些经济大道理对我来说没什么实际的生活影响,不过我这个礼拜终于感受到了。。。

1)天天买的奶茶本来是3元,突然涨到4元了
2)我最爱的鱼香肉丝面从18元暴涨到22元了
3)同一款的自行车,我帮我朋友上个月买了498元,今天我自己要买的时候已经涨到548元了

加上了美元汇率续跌,我亏死了!

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