Showing posts with label Only In China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Only In China. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Vuvuzelas, South African World Cup Buzzing Trumpets Are Manufactured By Home-based Factory in China

Vuvuzelas, the annoying trumpets blown all venues of FIFA 2010 World Cup South Africa, are manufactured by home-based business in China. A vuvuzela sold to nearly ten US dollars in South Africa, only has a cost about 2 Yuan  (FYI, 1US$~6.79Yuan at current currency exchange rate).

Vuvuzela house-factory made in china 1

Vuvuzela house-factory made in china 2

Vuvuzela house-factory made in china 3

Photos shown here are mid-aged women working in a family workshop named Jiying Plastic Factory run by Wu Yijun (bottom picture) from Zhejiang Province. Before the opening of World Cup, Wu exported 1 million vuvuzelas to South Africa, with each having a profit margin only 0.1 Yuan, so he did not make too much money. Now he improved its price to 3 Yuan each, in a bid to own more.

Vuvuzela house-factory boss Wu Yijun
Vuvuzela boss: Wu Yijun in front of his laptop

Link

Monday, May 24, 2010

Transverse Facial Cleft Causes Boy To Look Like Wearing a Mask

At the first glimpse, many think this boy is wearing a mask. But not. This unlucky one-year-old from China, is suffering from the transverse facial cleft condition, a congenital facial deformity.
Transverse facial cleft  Boy Photo 4
Born to an immigrant workers family, he is only able to receive facial correction surgeries recent when  a big sum of money were accumulated. All the best to this “mask face” baby!

Transverse facial cleft  Boy Photo 2 Transverse facial cleft  Boy Photo 1 Transverse facial cleft  Boy Photo 3 Thw transverse facial cleft boy is under knives for correcting his deformed face

Link

Monday, April 19, 2010

2010 Shanghai Expo China Pavilion vs. 1967 Montreal Expo Canada Pavilion


2010 Shanghai Expo China Pavilion


1967 Montreal Expo Canada Pavilion

Many Chinese netizens are outcrying thecountry's masterpiece on 2010 Shanghai World Expo have plagiarized the design of Canada Pavilion for 1967 Montreal World Expo.

FYI, yesterday Shanghai World Expo organizers pulled the plug for the promo song Right Here Waiting For You in 2010 (2010等你来) where celebs like Jackie Chan, Yang Lan, Lang Lang, Andy Lau, Li Bingbing & Yao Ming,  after it was exposed as being a copycat of Japanese singer Mayo Okamoto’s The Unchanged You Is The Best in 90's.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Hell Laptop For The Deceased in China

Every April 5th is Tomb Sweeping Festival, or Qingming, in the Chinese culture. On the day, the Chinese people go to the cemeteries to clean the graves and burn hell money to the deceased in a tradition that has lasted over more than 2000 years.

In a belief that they should provide the ancestors with everything they will need in the next life, Chinese people have began buying and burning paper replicas of luxury goods like flat screen TVs, mobile phones, BMW and Mercedes cars, or even viagra, condoms, and make-up bar girls [ehh...for the afterlife sex] years before.

But anything else?

With the internet having become an indispensable part of the real life, apparently, Chinese people want their ancestors to surf the net in the underworld also. Not surprisingly, they come out with the paper laptop!

Hell Laptop For The Deceased in ChinaHell Laptop For The Deceased in ChinaHell Laptop For The Deceased in China


Above are three pictures showing one of such kind of computers. It was spotted by a Chinese internet user spotted what is called Mingfu Computer [Mingfu, literally as Hell] at a joss paper shop when going to the wet market. He/she posted them in a thread titled Qinming Is Arrving, In The Hell Also Can Surf the Intenet on the forum of 163.com. According to the shortcut icons on its desktop, this hell laptop was "installed" with Microsoft's Windows 98, :-).

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Google to Quit China, Fans Offered Flowers, Held Light Vigil at Its Beijing Headquarters (Pictures)




David Drummond, Google's chief legal officer, threatened in a blog post the search engine giant would quit the China market. Influential Chinese IT blogger Keso explicitly used Google Quits China as the title for a response to Mr Drummond's statement. Quite some of Google fans in Beijing offered followers and even held a small light vigil at Google headquarters in Beijing's Tsinghua High-tech Park upon hearing the distressed news.



The apparent reason, though as Drummond used six paragraphs of his nine-paragraphed article to explain, is what he said because Chinese hackers attacked its core infrastructure and tried to access the Gmail accounts of some Chinese human rights activists.

These were just too simple excuses. The four years of Google's existence as Google China in Beijing, was bumpy, inconvenient. It had to offer a censored Google.cn (or G.cn). Still the company was often screwed up by the Chinese government, especially in 2009 when it was accused of spreading pornographic contents not once but twice on some high profiled events.



David Drummond revealed Google is "no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn," followed by a much diplomatic toned sentence "and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all" before he finally acknowledged "We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China."

For those who are familiar with Google's situation, what David Drummond hinted can 100% certain that Google will pull out the plug from China.



In a report by Xinhua which is China's official news agency, the anonymous employee at Google Beijing Office said "No agreement will be reached with both sides refusing to give in."

Even though, some Chinese officials cast their doubts on Google's decision. "It is still hard to say whether Google will quit China or not. Nobody knows," a high-ranking official with China's State Council Information Office told to Xinhua in a telephone interview on the condition of anonymity.

Strangely enough, Guo Ke, a professor on mass communication from Shanghai International Studies University, told Xinhua it was "almost impossible" for Google to quit China. He believed "Google is just playing cat and mouse, and trying to use netizens' anger or disappointment as leverage." Nevertheless, it's true that Guo's viewpoint that Chinese Internet users are the real victims if Google quits China."

Images via Bonnae / Twitpic.com