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January 10, 2011

Beijing car plates oversubscribed by 10 times

Over 215,000 people applied for car licences in Beijing this month, but only 20,000 will be issued as the capital seeks to curb its massive traffic jams, state press said Sunday.

Under a new system aimed at controlling the number of cars on Beijing streets that began this year, applicants must apply in the first eight days of the month for the 20,000 available plates issued monthly.

According to Xinhua news agency, 215,425 people applied for the January allotment. A lottery on January 26 will decide who gets the licences and the right to buy a new car.

Under the new rules, only 240,000 new cars will be registered in Beijing this year, compared to the record 800,000 automobiles that took to the streets of the capital last year, the report said.

Authorities have admitted that the registration cap along with other measures such as higher parking fees in the city centre and stricter enforcement of traffic rules will not automatically ease the chronic gridlock.

Expectations that the government was going to restrict the number of new number plates sparked a surge in sales last month, with more than 20,000 cars sold in the first week of December, state media said.

That was more than double the 9,000 cars sold in the same period in 2009.

Beijing's air is among the most polluted in the world and the problem is getting worse amid high demand for private vehicles from increasingly affluent residents.

The number of registered cars in Beijing stood at 4.8 million in late December as an average of over 2,000 new cars hit the capital's streets every day last year, officials said.

But the current congestion is already so severe that parts of the the city often resemble parking lots.

On a single evening in September, a record 140 traffic jams were observed as the number of vehicles on Beijing's streets exceeded 4.5 million.

China's auto sales are likely to reach 18 million units in 2010, up 32 percent from the previous year, when the nation took the title of the world's top auto market from the United States.


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December 24, 2010

"Ant tribe" university graduates find degrees are nearly worthless

Liu Yang, a coal miner's daughter, arrived in Beijing this summer with a degree from Datong University, the equivalent of about £90 in her wallet and an air of invincibility.
Her first taste of reality came later the same day, as she lugged her bags through a tumbledown neighbourhood not far from the Olympic Village where tens of thousands of other young strivers cram four to a room.

Unable to find a bed and unimpressed by the rabbit warren of buildings, Ms Liu scowled as the smell of rubbish wafted up around her. "Beijing isn't like this in the movies," she said.

Often the first from their families to go to university, graduates like Ms Liu are part of an unprecedented wave of young people all around China who were supposed to move the country's labour-dependent economy toward a white-collar future. In 1998, when then president Jiang Zemin announced plans to bolster higher education, Chinese universities produced 830,000 graduates a year. Last May, that number was more than six million and rising.

It is a remarkable achievement, yet for a government fixated on stability such figures are also a cause for concern. The economy, despite its robust growth, does not generate enough good professional jobs to absorb the influx of highly educated young adults.

"College essentially provided them with nothing," said Zhang Ming, a political scientist and vocal critic of China's education system. "For many young graduates, it's all about survival. If there was ever an economic crisis, they could be a source of instability."

In a kind of cruel reversal, China's old migrant class - uneducated villagers who flocked to factory towns to make goods for export - are now in high demand, with spot labour shortages driving up wages.

But the supply of those trained in accounting, finance and computer programming now seems limitless, and their value has plunged. Between 2003 and 2009, the average starting salary for migrant labourers grew by nearly 80 per cent; during the same period, starting pay for graduates stayed the same.

China: Tough times are no deterrent

Chinese sociologists have created a term for educated young people like Ms Liu who move in search of work: the ant tribe. It is a reference to their immense numbers - at least 100,000 in Beijing alone - and to the fact that they often settle in crowded neighbourhoods, toiling for wages that would give even low-paid factory workers pause.

"Like ants, they gather in colonies, sometimes underground in basements, and work long and hard," said Zhou Xiaozheng, a sociology professor at Renmin University in Beijing.

Continue reading ""Ant tribe" university graduates find degrees are nearly worthless" »


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November 04, 2010

New rules of China airlines to pay passengers in cash for delay

Domestic airline companies are expected to implement new regulations on flight delay compensation, according to China Air Transport Association recently.

It was reported that new regulations included providing information, ticket refunds as well as endorsement and compensation for those irregular flights.

The compensation is divided into carrier and non-carrier reasons.

The non-carrier reasons refer to reasons including the weather, emergencies, air traffic control, passengers' safety inspection and public safety reasons, while carrier reasons refer to reasons including the flight plan, maintenance, flight deployment, transportation services and crew troubles.

According to the regulation, airline companies do not assume liability because of non-carrier reasons. Airports or airlines should assist passengers to contact food services and rest facilities, which will be paid by passengers themselves.

However, airline companies are required to provide free food and beverage services and accommodations for passengers for delay in intermediate stops.

Continue reading "New rules of China airlines to pay passengers in cash for delay" »


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August 13, 2010

First sex workers protest in China demands legalization of prostitution

In what's thought to be the first of its kind in the country, a small group of women have asked onlookers in Wuhan to end discrimination against sex workers by scrapping anti-prostitution laws and stopping the current sex industry crackdown.

According to The Guardian, Ye Haiyan, the women at the forefront of the protest, had decided to speak out after seeing women publicly humiliated following police raids - a police act that was only recently made illegal by the Ministry of Security.

Ye Haiyan, who blogs and tweets under the name Hooligan Sparrow, is an activist who once raised controversy for posting nude pictures of herself online. More recently, she launched the Chinese Women's Rights Workshop, which distributes condoms and AIDS-prevention pamphlets to brothels in Wuhan, though she said sex workers were reluctant to use them in fear that they could be brought in as evidence of prostitution.

Continue reading "First sex workers protest in China demands legalization of prostitution" »


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July 26, 2010

China’s middle class to reach 48% in 10 years

Shanghai Morning Post reports that, according to Euromonitor International, by 2020, China’s middle class will expand to 700 million.

With China's impressive economic growth, the middle class in the country is expanding strongly.

China’s middle class currently accounts for roughly 23 percent of the whole population, based on comprehensive analysis of the 2005 1 percent National Population Sample Surveys, the China General Social Survey (CGSS) conducted by Renmin University of China and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology in 2005 as well as General Social Survey data (GSS) by National Academy of Social Sciences in 2006.

The middle class in China is defined as households with an annual income between RMB 60,000 and RMB 500,000.

Euromonitor International’s study shows China's middle class has grown from 65.5 million in January 2005 to 80 million in January 2007. It is forecasted to expand to 700 million by 2020, driven by continued strong economic growth. According to the Research Report on National Population Development Strategy, in 2020, China’s population is to reach 1.45 billion. So in ten years China’s middle class will account for 48 percent of the whole society.

Continue reading "China’s middle class to reach 48% in 10 years" »


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July 13, 2010

Inside Shanghai's first Apple Flagship Store: The Briefing Room

As if being the first Apple Store in Shanghai wasn't enough, there's something even more unique about the flagship store: The Briefing Room, a special VIP place to learn about and try out Apple products.

Kept separate from the noisy hustle and bustle of the rest of the store, the room includes built-in monitors, a worldwide iChat function, and speakers built into the ceiling, making for the ultimate conference call. There are also other Apple products on hand in the room like MacBooks and iPods, so businesses can come in and train employees on how to use new Apple products.

We can assume that with this new addition to certain Apple stores, the company is trying a new business tactic to further promote its products. So far, the Briefing Room is a feature seen only in two other stores around the world, Chicago and Minneapolis. Being that this Shanghai Apple store is located in one of the busiest financial district in the world, we bet this Briefing Room will be seeing a lot of action - and soon!


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July 07, 2010

Chinese parents deliver US citizenship

More Chinese women are traveling to America to give birth

Beijing - Wang Rong, who is six-months pregnant, is about to leave Beijing for California so she can give birth to her baby in the United States and give the child its first gift - US citizenship.

The special delivery will cost Wang and her husband, both white-collar workers in the capital, 100,000 yuan ($15,000), but they say it is money well spent.

The expenditure will cover all costs, including services before departure, medical care in the US and a three-month stay there, thanks to the help of a Shanghai-based agency that specializes in taking mainland moms to North America.

"Given the quality of educational resources and employment prospects in China, where there is a huge population and harsh competition, I want my baby to win at the starting line by obtaining US citizenship," she said.

The cost to deliver a baby in the US is far higher than in Beijing, but still affordable for the couple, which makes nearly 250,000 yuan a year, she said.

The list of benefits runs long for babies born in the US, says Jiang Feng, the Chinese mainland partner of the agency, which originated in Taiwan.

Jiang said babies born in the US will, at the very least, be entitled to a place at an American public university, which is favored by many parents over domestic institutions, both for quality of teaching and cheaper tuition.

"The number of mainland customers has been skyrocketing since we opened the branch in late 2008, right after the US opened tourist visa applications to Chinese individuals," he told China Daily.

Continue reading "Chinese parents deliver US citizenship" »


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June 23, 2010

The price of private healthcare in China

Patients who have had operations recently at Parkway Health, the Singaporean private healthcare provider, may have been surprised by an item at the bottom of their bill – a charge for removing their stitches.

A recent round-robin memo from Parkway even reminded doctors in Shanghai to make sure they did not forget to charge for the service, prompting one member of staff to call for some “common sense” from the penny-pinching management. He wrote, dryly: “I am sure most physicians do not charge for suture [stitch] removal”.

The desire to grind out as much profit as possible from patients means that China is now one of the most expensive places in the world to have private healthcare.

According to Bupa, the medical insurance giant that operates in over 190 countries, the cost of treatment in China has spiraled alarmingly. “Globally, medical costs are rising by around ten to eleven per cent each year,” said Dr Sneh Khemka, the medical director
of Bupa International in London. “At its worst, in China the inflation rate is 3,000 per cent.”

For Bupa customers, that translates into insurance premiums that are rising by 200 per cent to 300 per cent each year, as the group tries to cover its costs. However, Dr Khemka can see no obvious clinical reason why the prices should be rising so fast.

“It is our view that the drivers of these higher costs are commercial, rather than medical. There is practically a monopoly in Shanghai and Beijing and the clinics charge what they like,” he said.

Continue reading "The price of private healthcare in China" »


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May 13, 2010

Teach language. Tour free

Are you hoping to come visit Shanghai for the Expo 2010 but are not sure whether you could afford the exorbitant hotel prices here? Check out Tourboarding.com, a new website that connects you with Chinese people that are willing to host you for free -- all you'll have to do is to speak in English with your hosts for a minimum of two hours everyday! Apparently, 5,000 eager Chinese families have already signed up in the last 30 days for this unique language-exchange-meets-Couchsurfing service -- we're only surprised that interest has not been stronger. Upon arrival at your host family, if you feel like you're living with a freak of a family or in a shithole, you can terminate the relationship at any time and ask Tourboarding for a new match. Doesn't sound like a bad deal at all -- if you can navigate through the Chinglish website to start with.


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March 08, 2010

The yuppies of China: Xiaozi (小资)

Elliot Ng of CNReviews has a really interesting article up on a new breed of people in China and the new term they've been nicknamed: Xiaozi (小资). So what does it mean? Apparently, Xiaozi is translated as the "petty" part of "petty bourgeoisie," but it's meaning is related more to the now maturing richer middle class in China that's attracted to "Western" commercial and artistic culture.

Which means that China's now been rich (or, more correctly, had people getting rich) long enough for there to be class divides within the rich people. No longer do they and their rich friends only sneer at the poor folk, they can also sneer at other rich folks that don't understand things like "environmentalism" and "creative culture" and "coffee." Aka The Yuppie.

Anyway, he also found a quiz to determine if you (or your friend) are a Chinese yuppie: Here's 20 questions, see how you (or your friend) fit:

Are they jaded about Chinese national events, and resist being defined by “official” and mainstream culture?
Do they like to sit in cafes? Do they like to drink coffee?
Do they appreciate red wine (and really appreciate it, not mix it with Coke)?
Do they crave outbound travel? Do they want to visit Tibet?
Are they focused on self-expression through fashion? Do they look down on people who spend money on brands without true appreciation of fashion?
Do they sometimes have a sense of being somehow different from the rest of society? That they are seeking something that cannot be found?
Do they use their English name, even with other Chinese people?
Do they like to socialize with foreigners? Do they like to date foreigners?
Are they picky in their love life? Do they feel that most traditional members of the opposite sex don’t understand their love of life, and their need for creative self-definition? Attitude of “if I’m not in love, I’d rather die”
Do they like foreign hobbies like Yoga? or Salza dancing?
Do they known multiple languages? Do they have good scores on TOEFL, GRE, and other foreign placement tests?
Do they like popular intellectual Western literature like Italo Calvino or Jorge Luis Borges?
Do they like Western popular music, electronica or jazz?
Do they tend to watch Western TV shows and like to complain about the low quality of Chinese media?
Are they Web-savvy? Do they like Western Web 2.0 sites and the more clean Western aesthetic of Web design?
Do they like all things Apple Computer?
Do they like blocked Western Websites like Twitter and Facebook?
Do they use Google, not Baidu?
Do they use MSN messenger or Skype, but not QQ?
Do they visit Douban, Onlylady or Rayli.com.cn?

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December 11, 2009

In China, my name is...

Given free reign to do whatever they want, Chinese people sometimes choose the weirdest names. One of our friends has a guy in his office named Elvis, another has a student who calls himself Valerie (and yes, he knew it was a girl's name when he chose it). Now two authors, Valerie Blanco and Ellen Feberwee have written a 176-book on the cultural ramifications behind the strange names you see.

Called In China, My name is..., the book seeks to answer the question of why Chinese people adopt English names in the first place and how they choose them. As they explain to Fauna (speaking of weird names) on ChinaSMACK:

We asked a simple question: “Do you have an English name?” But behind this question lay many answers and insights ranging from China’s past to its future. This fascinated us, so we decided to hit the streets to see whether our analysis was right. We did our research in Shanghai.

 

We spoke with Chinese from different provinces and “social layers”; poor street workers, visitors off the Millionaire fair, religious monks, students and so on. Shanghai is a melting pot, attracting people from all over China. This gave us the chance to provide a broad perspective on this subject.

 

One of the people they found named himself Jessie Potter because he likes Harry Potter, but admitted "it's hard to say if I have some kind of connection with him. I just like him. I use an English name because I have a lot of foreigner friends so it is very convenient for me." Head over to ChinaSMACK to read more and win a book. And don't forget to share your stories of fun names you've come across in comments here.


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June 11, 2009

Shanghai shoots up the 'most expensive' list

STRONG Asian currencies pushed Shanghai up 83 notches to rank as the 28th most expensive city in the world for foreign staff, according to a survey by ECA International.

Beijing advanced 78 notches to rank at 26 and Hong Kong became the 29th most expensive city from last year's 98th position, ECA International said today. ECA is an international human resources consultancy.

"The strengthening of Asian currencies is the dominant factor contributing to the region being more expensive for visitors than it was 12 months ago," said Lee Quane, regional director of ECA Asia.

"In that period, the yuan has continued to strengthen against the US dollar. Many Western currencies, including sterling, the euro and the Swiss franc, have weakened. As a result, people coming from these economies into Asia will notice a considerable difference in costs compared with 12 months ago," he said.

Continue reading "Shanghai shoots up the 'most expensive' list" »


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February 09, 2009

Shanghai attracts one fourth of students returning to China

The biggest destination for Chinese students who have studied abroad and returned to China is Shanghai -- attracting one fourth of returning students, according to local authorities on Wednesday.

    Figures from the Shanghai Municipal Bureau of Human Resources and Social Security showed that about 75,000 returning students now work for -- or have started their own -- business in Shanghai.

    Currently, Shanghai boasts some 4,000 enterprises founded by returned students, with the total investment exceeding 500 million U.S. dollars.

Continue reading "Shanghai attracts one fourth of students returning to China" »


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August 04, 2008

Back to School

As always, September brings the beginning of a new academic year. Millions of fresh faced teenagers across the world leave home for the first time to start university. The nerves and excitement at the dawn of this new life stage are remembered for a lifetime. It is only natural that the university journey in the Far East has its own distinctions from other parts of the world – but some of these differences are pretty surprising for a Westerner.

The obvious question when you start at university usually is: what will you choose to study? In my own home country, for the most part people have the freedom to choose to major in the subject they have interest or talent in, or simply enjoy.

When I was chatting to my friend who studies in Beijing, however, she had an interesting answer to my question about why she chose her major: “I didn’t choose English, English chose me!”

I learned that her major of choice was Telecommunications, but at school it was decided for her that her major should be English (a subject she confessed she did not even like). While this is not a universal experience for every Chinese student, it is still something of a shock to people new to China.

Continue reading "Back to School" »


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July 18, 2008

Wife, I'm still bigger than you!


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June 26, 2008

"The Dragon" to descend on the Shanghai city skyline

It's finally coming! The "big one" eagerly predicted by Shanghaiist in 2006 — China's tallest building will begin construction this year in Shanghai. At 580m, the Shanghai Center will top a triangle of impressive towers with the 420-meter-high Jin Mao Tower and the 492-meter-high Shanghai World Financial Center in the Lujiazui district of Pudong. The building will be designed by Gensler, a U.S. firm, in conjunction with the Shanghai-based Architectural Design & Research Institute of Tongji University. It will be designed to look like a coiled dragon, the architects said. At its completion, the building will be 118 stories high and 79m taller than China's former tallest building, the Taipei 101, currently the world's tallest building.

At this point, its designers are only claiming that the Shanghai Center will be China's tallest building, but does it have a shot at being the tallest in the world? Our research shows that Burj Dubai, the skyscraper rising in the United Arab Emirates with a completion date in 2009, is currently 636m tall, but its final height is being kept a secret. Another skyscraper planned for Dubai, Al Burj, has a proposed final height of 1,200m (*gasp*)! With these feats in mind, Shanghaiist has two questions: will the Shanghai Center be able to top those erections, and is it possible to write about architecture without sexual innuendo?


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May 07, 2008

The new look of the Bund in ShangHai

American urban design and architecture firm Chan Krieger Sieniewicz was chosen by the town to revamp its former international concession port area. The Huangpu River and the heart of the city will be “reconciled.”

Head of project Liang Zhao explains that today, the Bund buildings are separated from the water by Zhongshan Road – impossible to catch a glimpse of the river from Nanjing Road, for example, for the promenade is too high. And from the promenade, people are quite far from the buildings. The idea is to have fewer obstacles to get to the river. There will be pedestrian overpasses from the street to the strolling area.

Trees will be planted, glass-walled pavillions for shop stalls – Zhongshan Road will look like a boulevard for a hundred yards where Nanjing Road connects. The roofs of the pavillions will be covered with grass, as will the slopes connecting the promenade to the road. North of the Bund, Huangpu Park will be harmonised: fewer partitioned areas, but still in the mixed styles of British, French and Chinese influences. A square, an observation tower and a 200-yard floating bank will be added for leisure activities.

Continue reading "The new look of the Bund in ShangHai" »


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April 18, 2008

Chinese man builds world's largest cell phone

A Chinese man is hoping to get in the record books after creating what he claims is the world's largest working mobile phone.

Mr Tan, of Songyuan city, says his 3ft high phone, which weighs 48lbs, is an exact copy of his own phone - but 620 times bigger.

A local journalist tested the phone by making calls and sending text messages and pronounced it completely functional, reports City News.

Continue reading "Chinese man builds world's largest cell phone" »


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February 20, 2008

Shanghai draws up plan for nation's tallest building

For real-estate developers in the city, the sky is not the limit.

Shanghai, already crowded with skyscrapers built on the back of robust economic growth and financial might, will be home to the country's tallest building in Lujiazui financial zone of Pudong New Area.

Construction on the proposed 580-m building, among the world's tallest, will start this year, Xinhua News Agency reported.

The Shanghai Center, reportedly scheduled for completion by 2010, has been approved by the city's development and reform commission.

The project will be jointly developed by Shanghai Chengtou Corporation, Lujiazui Finance and Trade Zone Development Co Ltd and Shanghai Construction Group. The cost has not been revealed.

According to a design by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM), a Chicago-based architectural and engineering firm, the 118-story center will dwarf the nearby 491.3-m Shanghai World Financial Center (SWFC), which is expected to be completed this spring, and the 420.5-m Jinmao Tower.

Continue reading "Shanghai draws up plan for nation's tallest building" »


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January 25, 2008

Officer Snowjob

A lady loves a man in uniform, but the police officers of Hefei have definitely taken this mystique to the next level with their strenuous winter training. What could be more attractive than young, shirtless officers rubbing snow on their chests and doing push-ups? Ya, we couldn't think of anything either! Ladies (and gentlemen), we present you with two images to warm your hearts on those cold Shanghai nights. And let's hear no more complaints about your drafty apartment and your cold fingers.

Stripped to the waist, armed police officers take exercise against the skin piercing wind in Hefei, capital of South China's Anhui Province. More pictures after the jump


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December 08, 2007

Keyboard on a building

You seriously have to give it to architects in Shanghai for coming up with something that catches your eye. It may not work all the time, but it will be at least different from anything else you have seen before.


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October 01, 2007

Piano house

If you thought you've had enough of crazy architectural styles in Shanghai, wait till you see this piano house in Huainan, Anhui. Inside the transparent violin is the staircase to the house upstairs. Apparently, the building has been built by the local government to draw interest to the newly developed area, but from what we can see, it almost looks like it was built in the *sshole of nowhere.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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September 18, 2007

Housing boom continues

While the US real-estate market maybe suffering from a bout of subprime malaise as of late, China’s housing boom continues unabated (until it hits a wall of its own). According to numbers released yesterday, in August, prices for new construction among China’s top 70 metro areas on average are up 8.2 percent year over year, and 1.4 percent sequentially. Shenzhen leads the pack with a 20 percent annual appreciation rate. Shanghai in comparison, sports a far more modest yearly increase of just 3.6 percent. Chinese residential real estate market has been on a tear since 2000. Prices in several top tier cities have already gone up 300 to 500 percent coming into this year.


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September 07, 2007

Louis Vuitton man-bags and Chinese hackers

Okay okay, we've all had a bit of a Macau overdose lately, but we just couldn't resist sharing with you this tid-bit of information that we found on the blog of Telegraph journalist Richard Spencer. He shares a rumour that "the Louis Vuitton store in Macau is, per square foot, the company's most profitable anywhere in the world. And that the big seller is man-bags. The men buy them to put their cash in before going gambling." He also makes the comment that suddenly, the world wants China to go shopping!

 

Gosh. With the third allegation of hacking by the Chinese military into government computers in Germany, the United States and the United Kingdom surfacing within two weeks, the guys at the Foreign Ministry have been kept busy! Fons Tuinstra points to past cases of bored teenagers who have successfully hacked into other governments and surmised that the German government could not have said that they had an issue with millions of bored Chinese teenagers! Richard Spencer made the erudite argument that if the "US and other western governments are busy infiltrating the computer systems of foreign governments... it is disingenuous to complain too vigorously when those same foreign governments become good at doing it back". Hmm...


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June 26, 2007

If you miss the train I'm on...

For most girls, the dream to have a wedding gown with a ridiculously long train that requires a dozen or more train-bearers remains but a dream, but for this lucky bride in Guiyang in South China's Guizhou province, that dream became a reality. Her 99,800 yuan ($12961) wedding gown comes with a 28m-long train that took 10 tailors 45 days to sew, and 20 train-bearers to carry. Now if you don't actually realise how ridiculous that is yet, Queen Elizabeth's gown was a paltry 13 feet long, and even Princess Diana's fairy tale gown was no match at 25 feet.


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June 19, 2007

Chinese Students at London Graduate Fashion Week

With another London Graduate Fashion Week at an end as of Wednesday, June 6th, its time to look back at how some of China’s overseas hopefuls faired against their fellow students from around the world. Whether or not they will make an impact on the world of fashion in the future, only time will tell.

Continue reading "Chinese Students at London Graduate Fashion Week" »


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The National Grand Theater

The face of the Chinese National Grand Theater was unveiled in Beijing on Monday when protection shields of the last thirty of nearly 20,000 titanium boards were peeled off. With the construction of the controversial building designed by the French architect Paul Andreu now nearly completed, the interior will be finished by the end of this year. The theater's bold design is as much a spectacle as the productions that will be staged inside in the 2,416-seat opera house, the 2,017-seat concert hall, and the 1,040-seat theater. At night, the semi-transparent skin will give passersby a glimpse of the performance inside one of three auditoriums, a feature that highlights the building's public nature.


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June 05, 2007

Millionaire Fair: A place for all that useless money

On Friday night, we set out to rub shoulders with Shanghai's glitterati, nouveau riche, assorted celebrities, politicians, and captains of industry at the Millionaire Fair, where we watched them splurge their hard-earned, unearned, or ill-gotten gains on some of the priciest merchandise in the known universe. There were stretch hummers, Scotch whiskey, French wines, US$350,000 diamond necklaces, and quoting from the New York Times, "Blüthner pianos, private islands off the coast of Dubai, beluga-size speedboats, snub-nosed sports cars. It is a woozy carnival of excess, with Cuervo cocktail shakers hurtling through the air and vaguely Soviet floor shows to delight or repulse, depending on how you like your entertainment served."

Among all the hubbub, a US$70,000 Limited Edition Ego Diamond laptop from Tulip Ego caught our limited attention. The chrome-plated x86 machine is encrusted with 358 diamonds set in 18 carat white gold, and the exterior is covered with genuine shark skin leather, which the salesman assured us still smells like a shark. We didn't poke our nose through the glass case for a whiff of this absurd creation, but we did express our concern for the safety of the Ego in the presence of house cats. He said that they typically sell one such bejeweled computer per show.

Continue reading "Millionaire Fair: A place for all that useless money" »


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June 01, 2007

Who's going to grace the red carpet at the SIFF?

The tenth Shanghai International Film Festival starts on June 16, and as the time draws near, people have been wondering what actors and celebs will grace the red carpet on opening night. One report we've read says that Oliver Stone, Maggie Cheung, John Woo, and Stephen Chow will be among the stars that show up. A slightly more snarky report states that Sharon Stone will show up, which is great for we connoisseurs of older women, but which the report says presents something of an image problem for SIFF because, artistically speaking, Sharon Stone is somewhat past her prime.
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May 19, 2007

Tianjin's 'Pile of Boxes' skyscraper

We have never been to Tianjin, but we have seen a pile of boxes, and these ingenious buildings do indeed look like giant piles of boxes. Sounds kinda cool, via Inhabitat:

The port city of Tianjin (Mainland China’s third largest city behind Shanghai and Beijing) is adding another skyscraper to its skyline. Construction on Atkins’ TEDA Landmark Towers (Tianjin Economic and Technological Development Area), nicknamed “the pile of boxes” by local residents, is set to be underway. The design features three towers made up of stacked and slightly rotated eight-story blocks. Each tower will use a geothermal heating/cooling system and feature sky-gardens in rotating corners of the glass blocks. The gardens will “light up the corners of each tower, creating an illusion of glowing lanterns rising up into the sky.” Each of the buildings will also be crowned with mesh-like blocks that house vertical wind-powered turbines to help supply electricity.

Continue reading "Tianjin's 'Pile of Boxes' skyscraper" »


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Paul & Shark launches new line in China

Popular Italian sports and casual wear brand Paul & Shark launched their Spring/Summer 07 line across their 30 China stores with a beach themed bash in Hong Kong earlier this week.

Continue reading "Paul & Shark launches new line in China" »


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May 07, 2007

Seen in Shanghai: The world's longest kite?

With all the excitement of the GP and the success of Chinese women at the Jinshan Olympic beach volleyball qualifiers, you might be forgiven for missing out on a world-record breaking event happening right under our noses, also in the Jinshan district: the world's longest kite. OK, it's not officially the world's longest kite, but its maker will apply for that title from the folks over at Guinness.

For those of you that missed the national kite invitational (article in Chinese), fear not, there's always next year, and maybe even the year after that!


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May 04, 2007

Slogans with Chinese characteristics

In China, you will see slogans every day and everywhere. Not only is this a tradition with a long history, it is a trend that has remained popular, particularly in the red and crazy 1950s - 1970s.

These days, there is little ideology in these slogans, but more and more ridiculous ones have appeared. For your entertainment, Danwei presents some of the more outrageous ones, although they do lose something in translation.

普及一胎,控制二胎,消灭三胎。
Popularize the first child, control the second child, exterminate the third child.
This is a slogan about family planning policy in China, which advocates one child per family.

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May 01, 2007

2007 Shanghai Auto Show roundup

Shanghaiist thinks there aren’t enough cars in Shanghai. The air, quite frankly, is incredibly clean. There’s nary a spot of traffic. And really, couldn’t taxi drivers be more conscientious by honking their horns just a LITTLE more often? Shanghai needs more cars. Definitely. And what better place to encourage additional consumption than the Shanghai Auto Show!

The Shanghai show has become a major stop on the automotive circuit. GM, BMW Audi, and many others are all unveiling new concept cars and production models for the first time here (check the links for details), and CEOs have flocked to our fair city to demonstrate the Importance of the Chinese Market in slowing GM's demise continuing the industry’s growth. You can read more about the Shanghai show, and its implications for the global automotive industry, here and here.

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A labor contract for mistresses?

A private detective, hired by the wife of a Shenzhen businessman, successfully tracked down the latter's mistress—a third year university student. What he didn't expect was the neatly folded "mistress contract" (包养协议书) that she pulled out of her bag. Written like a labor contract, it lays down the terms and conditions of their affair. (The title on the contract was 包养协议, bao yang xie yi. Xie yi means "agreement" and bao yang is the term commonly used when referring to the transfer of money and property to the mistress in exchange for her mistress duties. The contract or agreement simply formalizes what are usually private, verbal promises.)

The conditions in the contract include living expenses (10,000 RMB a month), as well as the time they are to spend together. The minimum required of the woman was to be with the man from Friday evening through Sunday night, and other times could be considered so long as they didn't interfere with her studying, because no one can really expect to absorb a lot of calculus after f*cking.

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April 07, 2007

We have so much more respect for Shanghai's 'No. 1 Beauty' now

Pictured at left is Shen Lijun, who, according to "many netizens" is the "No.1 Beauty in Shanghai." (Shanghaiist thinks she is so 2006.)

Anyway, Xinhua says BBSs have long been aflutter with the "shocking" rumor that Shen is determined to marry nothing less than a billionaire (so all you Millionaire Fair attendees, step off.)

But, wait. Stop stepping-off. Shen says this is simply not true. She clarifies:

"Although it is my dream to marry a billionaire, I still believe it is better for a girl to be self-reliant."

Amen, sister.

View Shen Lijun's blog here.


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April 04, 2007

Shanghai ranked 100th for quality of living

The 2007 Quality of Living Survey fresh off the press from Mercer Human Resource Consulting has Shanghai coming in at 100th spot in a ranking of 215 cities around the world.

Zurich and Geneva took the top two places in the study that ranked cities based on 39 quality of living criteria, including political, social, economic and environmental factors; personal safety and health; and education, transport and other public services. The study named the top 5 cities in Asia as Auckland (tied for 5th), Sydney (tied for 9th), Wellington (12th), Melbourne (17th) and Perth (21st) - all cities within Australasia. Top city in Asia sans Australasia was Singapore (34th), sandwiched neatly between Paris (33rd) and Tokyo (35th). Closer to home, Hong Kong came in at 70th position, followed by Shanghai which moved up three notches to 100th place, and Beijing which advanced from 121st to 116th place.

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March 29, 2007

10 more reasons for Shanghainese bachelors to be sad

According to the Shanghai Youth Daily (via CRI), 10 women have been scammed selected to make a trip out to Silicon Valley to meet the potential loves of their lives.

Apparently, an online dating website is organizing a tour in partnership with an agency in northern California for wealthy professional women who simply don't have the time to find a good man here in Shanghai. Scheduled for next month, the tour will match these women with men from the Chinese mainland who, we suspect, also fit the description above (the "not having time" part, not the "wanting to find a good man" part).

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March 26, 2007

Head to New York City for Shanghai's best (and biggest) burrito

Some days, you just want to eat a big-ass burrito. Perhaps this is primarily an American craving (as many, we're sure some readers would point out, big-ass cravings are) but, trust us, sometimes the best cure for a Sunday morning hangover is an oversized soft flour tortilla filled with just about everything. We never thought this was an option here — Shanghai's selection of Mexican restaurants is ... well ... Shanghai really has no Mexican restaurants worth mentioning — until SH mag food guru Jarrett Wrisley told us where to go for our south-of-the-border[1] cravings: that's right, New York City Deli. And how does NYC Deli serve its "super burritos"? Of course, "California style."

Here is how the NYC Deli describes its 45 RMB California Style Super Burritos on its menu:

Super size tortilla, cheese, Mexican rice, salsa fresco, slow cooked carnitas & sour cream ranch dressing. (Add 7rmb for fresh guacamole)

NYC's burritos are only available on Saturdays and Sundays, and sadly by Sunday they were all out of guacamole. It didn't matter, though: Even without the green stuff, NYC Deli's Super Burritos are very, very tasty. And despite the fact that these burritos are big-ass in every sense of the word (they are huge), we are only slightly embarrassed to be able to say "we can't believe we ate the whole thing." One suggestion for NYC: Maybe throw some beans into the mix, or at least add it as an option. That way the wife, who doesn't eat meat, could have joined in on the gluttony.

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March 16, 2007

Bus envy soon to hit Shanghai?

Determined to have the "world's largest" everything by 2010, China recently unveiled the "world's largest" bus, the Youth Daily reported earlier this week. The Chinese manufacturer, named Zhejiang Young Man Vehicle Group, introduced the 25-meter-long "Superliner" at Shanghai's Busworld Asia 2007 convention. The bus has five doors, 40 seats, carries up to 300 passengers and, according to a driver, "is flexible when cornering."

Sadly, it looks like this bus is only going to be used in Beijing and Hangzhou.


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March 14, 2007

Bike lanes to be linked around Shanghai

Traffic authorities in Shanghai will link cycling lanes around the city this year to create a network of lanes with no obstructions, as one of several measures to improve conditions for drivers and cyclists in the city.

Other projects include rearranging vehicle lanes at intersections, and creating bus stations that won't block traffic, according to officials from the city's infrastructure association.

"Over the next few years, we will make existing roads more reasonable instead of building more roads," said Peng Rongfeng, an official with the Shanghai Engineering and Road Trade Association.

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February 28, 2007

Nanjing: The happiest city in China

Who are the happiest citizens in China? Not us — although we're close to the top. At least that's the conclusion of a recent survey (story in Chinese) conducted in 31 China cities by Oriental Outlook and University of Chicago professor Xi Kaiyuan from December 2006 to January 2007. Xi, also known by the English name Christopher K. Hsee, is a professor of Hedonomics (related to "hedonics"), the "science of happiness", which operates at the crossroads of psychology (quantitative measures of subjective well-being) and economics (aspects of consumer behavior).

The survey was conducted through random phone interviews in four municipal cities, 22 provincial cities and five autonomous regions to obtain 7,000 samples (what kind of person agrees to a random phone interview?). One of its main conclusions was that Nanjing, Hangzhou and Shanghai are the three happiest cities in China (thus Shanghai retains its title as the happiest major city in China). The survey questions focused on human relationships, transportation, opportunities, convenience, entertainment, environment, public security, civilization and city development in recent years.

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February 25, 2007

What are the best Chinese movies and movie lines?

daysofbeingwildchinesemovie.jpgIt's that time of year again—the Oscars are this Monday (Sunday night in the US) and in the spirit, 163.com decided to ask Chinese netizens what their favorite movie line or dialogue from a Chinese movie was as well as what the best overall Chinese film was. You can still vote, so the results are still being tabulated and updated, but preliminary results are in: the best movie dialogue is from the Wong Kar-wai film Days of Being Wild (阿飞正传) , and goes something like this:

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February 23, 2007

Urbanites stranded as migrants leave for festival

As a large number of migrant workers are enjoying the Spring Festival family reunion in the countryside, China's city dwellers have to face inconvenience caused by the absence of some daily services provided by migrant laborers.

A Beijing resident surnamed Wang said she now has nowhere to buy steaming breakfast after the owner and waiters of a restaurant in her neighborhood went back to Chengdu, capital of southwest China's Sichuan Province for the Lunar New Year.

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February 17, 2007

Jobless, but home for the holidays

Shanghai Morning Post reported earlier this week that an office worker in Shanghai resigned from her job so that she could return home for the Spring Festival. In an op-ed for the Mirror, Tang Ziwen, a program host with China Radio, writes about the choice workers face when they find themselves far from home as traditional holidays approach.

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February 12, 2007

China's rich spend big to celebrate Valentine's Day

Once considered a symbol of the decadent West, Valentine's Day is becoming big business in newly affluent China.

Nowhere more so than in Shanghai, China's showcase city for the economic reforms of the last three decades, a financial hub which is once more rediscovering its glory pre-World War II days when it was known as the Paris of the East.

This Valentine's Day, Shanghai banker Richard Fan will be buying his wife a 40,000 yuan ($5,146) Cartier wrist watch.

"I think it's a better gift than some 10,000 or 20,000 yuan ($1,300-$2,600) meal," said Fan, 37.

"A gift you can use daily looks much more concrete," he added blithely.

The watch's price tag is 12 times more than the average Chinese farmer earns in a year.

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February 10, 2007

A few ways to make this Valentine's special in ShangHai

  • Send your close friend who doesn't have a sweetheart a box of chocolates and sign it anonymous. Really, Valentine's isn't just for boy- and girlfriends.
  • Send a heartfelt Valentine's Day card to someone you haven't seen in a long while or someone who has inspired you in a special way.
  • Spend time with kids at an orphanage with him/her. Who says candlelight dinners are the only way to celebrate Valentine's? Make it a special one this year by sharing your joy with people who are less fortunate with you.
  • Share a hug with a stranger on the street a la Free Hugs style.
  • Send her a Valentine's cake from Bakerzin which has images of couples in unmentionable poses (see image on the right). They've actually been asked to censor their advertising! (5F Raffles City, T: 6430 5243)
  • For an on-top-of-the-world feeling, book a room at the Grand Hyatt on Jinmao Tower, and make sure you have one of those bathrooms with a breathtaking view of Lujiazui. A tad expensive, but every cent worth it!
  • 1

    Continue reading "A few ways to make this Valentine's special in ShangHai" »


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    February 06, 2007

    Beijing boots and brands

    purse-and-boot.jpg light boot s.jpg

    The mercury has dropped in Beijing and winter is on the way. To mark the changing of the weather, Danwei did a spot survey of seven young women and eight young men in the shopping districts of Xidan and Wangfujing, asking them about their clothing and brand preferences.

    The first finding is that for women tall boots are still really popular this winter; four of the seven women surveyed were wearing them. They come in leather, pleather, plastic, suede and just about any material you care to name. Complex embroidered designs on the boots, like last year, are very common.

    When it comes to brands, the results are below. Respondents were asked to leave out any item for which they did not have a genuine preference.

    Continue reading "Beijing boots and brands" »


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    February 04, 2007

    Chinese attitude on buying Vista

    The price of Windows Vista in China varies from RMB2000 to RMB2600,I don't know how much Vista costs in your country,but I do confirm few Chinese will buy it because this price is too high to us.

    You may not understand why Chinese people love pirate softwares,now let me take Vista for example.

    I've mentioned above,the price of Vista is higher than RMB2000(about USD257) may not shake users in developed countries,but do you know it is equal to the average monthly salary in China's economic center Shanghai!So please take this fact into consideration before criticize our behavior of buying pirate softwares.

    A recent survey of public opinion from China's portal NetEase shows that 81% of netizens think Microsoft is forcing them to use pirate Vista,17% think Vista is flashy but not substantial,only 1% will buy the original version.

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    January 31, 2007

    Live in Style

    The Fashionable Life of Beijing Youth
    The Chinese youth, especially the white collars in big cities like Beijing and Shanghai, now form a fashion of seeking stylish life. To them, grace is something that needs guidance, since it connects with not individuals but social atmosphere. With times' development, the distinction between grace and fashion has been blurred out. Long hair can be graceful, skinniness can be graceful, and acting cool can also be graceful. Grace has actually been nothing but a wish.

    The fashionable youth would have their breakfast in McDonald's. Sitting near a window, they can feel the warm sunshine in winter. Young ladies think it worthy to buy those famous brands on sale, and a silk scarf or long socks will add to their femininity. Theaters are an often-visited place since modern operas and ballet are graceful. In the afternoon if they have spare time, Starbark is a good place to enjoy coffee and loneliness. When dining with strangers, they would tell the waiter to bring a glass of water, or of course, it is also a proper choice when they cannot read a French menu. The magazine Fashion is in style, just as their life. But do not read it in subways, or join any activities the magazine holds, for they are out of style. Most of all, do not let others know they buy things under its guidance, which is the least graceful. They would always go shopping in the Xiushui market, even window-shopping sometimes. With the most fashionable wearing and ornaments there, they can be sensitive to the prevailing trends.

    Continue reading "Live in Style" »


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    January 26, 2007

    New count halves China divorces

     
    Last Updated: Friday, 26 January 2007, 13:57 GMT
    E-mail this to a friend Printable version
    A mass wedding in Harbin, China, on 8 January 2007
    More Chinese are happy to stay married than previously thought
    China has discovered the truth behind its worryingly high divorce rate - a statistical inconsistency.

    For years, the country's official divorce rate has been calculated on the basis of the number of people divorced, the China Daily newspaper reports.

    Now Chinese statisticians have decided to follow the international practice of counting the number of actual divorces, and seen its divorce rate cut in half.

    The 2005 rate fell from 2.76 divorces per 1,000 people to 1.38.

    Once rare

    The inconsistency came to light thanks to Xu Anqi, a researcher for the Marriage and Family Institute at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

    She had been lobbying various governmental departments of the necessity to correct the problem since the 1990s.

    "Based on the wrong statistics, many sensational research reports came out," she was quoted as saying.

    With the old calculation, China's divorce rate was higher than that of Japan and South Korea, and close to the US, where the rate is 3.7 divorces per 1,000 people.

    Divorce in China used to be rare.

    Until 2003, separating couples needed permission from their work unit to divorce, and this was rarely granted.

    But economic reforms have brought rapid social change, making divorce more common.

    According to the China Daily, 1.6 million people divorced in 2006.

    Under the new calculations, that equates to 1.3 divorces for every 1,000 people.


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