Source favicon19:16 Black rain and democracy in the state-owned media » Danwei RSS 1.0
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Vile effluvia

Black sludge rained down on Chengdu, Sichuan on Friday. The sludge storm was caused by effluvia from the nearby Jialing Power Plant, which burnt a batch of substandard coal.

The incident has been covered in the state-owned press, in both English and Chinese. Xinhua's English website republished a China Daily story about the black rain, and illustrated it with photos credited to search engine Baidu, which probably means they were found using a Baidu search, and could come from just about anywhere. The photo reproduced here is from the Xinhua web page.

Meanwhile, an opinion piece in the China Daily asks: Does democracy exist in China?

The article talks about the government's recent release of a white paper about democracy, arguing that the document is worth reading:

The reading process may be a little tedious considering the prevalence of unfamiliar political jargon. But ample rewards are guaranteed - you will find out what democracy means in terms of official Chinese political ideology, and how democracy - the Chinese brand - is practised.

Hmm, The Chinese Brand of Democracy. The reading process may be a little tedious.

I think I prefer Socialism with Chinese Characteristics, but then as Jiang Zemin was fond of saying, one must move with the times (与时俱进).

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Source favicon17:14 Skinhua and transparent military procurement » Danwei RSS 1.0
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Bread, circuses and babes!

China's state-owned news agency Xinhua is consistently good at one thing: copying photos of hot women from other websites and magazines.

The image reproduced here is from a Xinhua photo gallery called Bai Ling on lingerie ads which comprises photos scanned from Stuff, which may be described as a babes and gadgets lads magazine.

Other interesting stuff on Xinhua today:

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) ... has opened a website to publicize its military material procurement work and ensure its transparency...

...The PLA procurement network ... is said to be the only website of its type, aims to provide a platform between military material suppliers and buyers with the aim of "integrity, fairness and openness".

The website is buggy, and the section that is supposed to contain details of current tenders and contracts is empty. Perhaps it's just a PR gimmick connected with U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's visit to China earlier this week.

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Source favicon17:03 Yahoo! Mail Beta介面現身 » Jan's Tech Blog
新Yahoo! Mail的Beta Screenshot已經在網上流傳了。Ajax當然是一個主要的Keyword。事實上,現在新一代的Application已經朝這方向走。有興趣看看這些Screenshot的,可以點按以下的圖片。 此外Download Squad也做了一個Review。如果大家有興趣申請轉用這Beta版的Yahoo! Mail,可到他們的What's New頁上填上Email,但只限@yahoo.com的用戶,至於@yahoo.com.hk、.cn甚至.tw暫時無緣參加了。 延伸閱讀: MSN Hotmail新介面曝光 Hotmail Beta Screenshot...
Source favicon13:42 到网志年会现场尝试公民媒体行动 » 【刻录事】
Schee和乔已经跃跃欲试,在网志年会上使用文字blogging、语音podcasting、图片记录等方式,全方位记录他们在上海的活动和年会的状况。 Blog 和 Podcast 算是基本的方式,所以不必多說。我也會乖乖背上「公民新聞包」,再度實跑測試不同型態的紀錄。一來跟上海的朋友交換經驗,二來也將之前做的些好事,再次分享。 Schee.info - 摩托車日記 » Daily Digest - 20051021 多有趣的事情。 如果不出问题的话,会场应当会提供Wifi无线接入,所以,有兴趣公民新闻的blogger,可以尽情地尝试自己的报道,这是一个难得的机会。 届时,人们也可以从blog空间中所反馈的情况,来对比下国内外热衷blogging的人们在现场blogging的落差到底有多大:) ————— 从Flockr中发布。感觉flock很失败,是个多余的产品。 Technorati Tags: 中文网志年会, 公民媒体
Source favicon10:56 Baidu: "Are you sure you want to download illegal music?" » Danwei RSS 1.0
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Baidu has added an extra click-through layer to its MP3 search function in an apparent attempt to distance itself from allegations of piracy.

Previously, clicking on an MP3 search result would download the file directly, but now it leads you to a page containing the warning translated below:

Baidu MP3 warns you: At the request of the user, the Baidu search engine system will automatically provide links to third party web pages without human assistance. "Baidu" does not store, control, edit, or modify the information on the linked third party web pages. Baidu highly respects the protection of intellectual property rights, and has established a principle of taking measures that work toward the legal benefits of protected rights holders. Should the rights holder send to Baidu a "rights notice," Baidu will take steps according to the law to remove relevant content or hide relevant links. Please see Baidu's copyright statement.

It's unclear whether this strategy will work - Baidu is essentially taking their courtroom argument and clarifying it for their users, but nothing has fundamentally changed in the areas the record companies are displeased with.

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Source favicon10:08 期待维基百科重现大陆 » 【刻录事】
来自联合报的消息”中文維基 再遭大陸封鎖”(谢谢cathy的分享): 參與大陸維基開放撰寫條目的網友,原以為又是中央信息部網路審查的「傑作」,但向網路服務商(ISP)求證,才知道是國家安全單位下令。 中文维基人已经提交了申请解封的材料,“不出意外的话,1星期之内应该会解除封锁。”(感谢shizhao和他的同伴们)。 我们暂且静静的等待。如果没有结果,还是期望大家和中文维基人一道,多些建设性的建议和行动,共同开启重现wikipedia的大门。
Source favicon07:53 Future On-Line Advertising Growth, based on DMA Conference experience » Jeremy Zawodny's blog
US Postal Service Sponsors Direct Marketing Originally uploaded by jzawodn. Last weekend I traveled to Atlanta to participate on a panel about "Harnessing the Buzz Power of Blogs" at the annual conference for the Direct Marketing Association. These are people who live and breathe marketing, often controlling millions of dollars worth of advertising dollars every year. While I was at the conference less than a day, I came away simultaneously shocked and hopeful. The Shock In talking to some...
Source favicon06:56 Guess what just turned 34? » Official Google Blog




It's difficult to pin down the exact origin of email, but in October 1971, an engineer named Ray Tomlinson chose the '@' symbol for email addresses and wrote software to send the first network email.



At the time, it must not have seemed very important – nobody bothered to save that first message or even record the exact date. I've always thought that it would be fun to witness a little bit of history like that – to be there when something important happened. That's part of what drove me to join a little no-name startup named Google, and it's why I was excited when I was given a chance to create a new email product, now called Gmail.



Of course that wasn't the only reason why I wanted to build Gmail. I rely on email, a lot, but it just wasn't working for me. My email was a mess. Important messages were hopelessly buried, and conversations were a jumble; sometimes four different people would all reply to the same message with the same answer because they didn't notice the earlier replies. I couldn't always get to my email because it was stuck on one computer, and web interfaces were unbearably clunky. And I had spam. A lot of it. With Gmail I got the opportunity to change email – to build something that would work for me, not against me.



We had a lot of ideas, but first we spent a lot of time talking to all kinds of people about their email. They let us watch over their shoulders and helped us really understand how they use email and what they need from it. We didn't want to simply bolt new features onto old interfaces. We needed to rethink email, but at the same time we needed to respect that email already had over 30 years of history, thousands of existing programs, and nearly a billion users. So we started by learning which features were most important, and which problems were most aggravating. We also realized that solving everyone's problems was too big of a challenge for the first release. It would be better to build a product that a lot of people love, than one that everyone tolerates, and so that was our goal.



On April 1, 2004, we rolled out the first release of Gmail. It immediately became known for giving away 1000 MB of storage, while the others only offered 4 MB, as they had for many years. We didn't do that just for the attention (although we certainly got our share). It's just part of our philosophy. We always want to do as much as we can for our users, and so if we can make something free, we will.



But storage was only the most obvious difference, and our other improvements were just as important. Gmail included a quick and accurate search. It introduced powerful new concepts to organize email, such as the conversation view (so now I can finally see all those replies at once). It provided a fast and dynamic interface from web browsers everywhere, popularizing the techniques that have since become known as AJAX.



This interface included many important features not commonly found on the web at that time, such as email address auto-completion, a slick spell-checker, keyboard shortcuts, and pages that update instantly. It included a smart spam filter to get rid of junk mail. Finally, we made an important new promise: you can keep your Gmail address and all of your email, even if you someday decide that Gmail is not for you. Cell phone owners already have the right to keep their old phone number when switching to a new provider, and you should have that same freedom with email. To ensure this freedom, Gmail provides, for free, both email forwarding and POP download of all your mail. Many services are now beginning to include other Gmail innovations; we hope that some day they will also be willing to include this one.



Of course, the launch was just the beginning, and we're still busy improving Gmail. We keep increasing free storage (2656 MB and counting), we offer the interface in 38 languages, and we now have features such as auto-save drafts, so that you don't accidentally lose that half-written message. We know that Gmail isn’t quite right for everyone yet. We’re working on that too – there’s still more we can do for the folder-lovers and devout-deleters out there. But wait, there’s more! :) We also have a new batch of exciting innovations on the way that we hope will shake things up again and make Gmail even better for even more people.



I'm proud of what we've done so far, and am excited about our future plans for Gmail. So celebrate how far email has come by joining its fun future.
Source favicon05:14 Video Search To Go! » Yahoo! Search blog
As I eagerly await the arrival of my brand-spanking-new 60gb white Video iPod (for research purposes only, I assure my manager), I've been thinking about how I can fill my new device up with content, and I imagine many of...
Source favicon01:16 Yahoo! Search Marketing Eliminates Minimum Spend » Yahoo! Search blog
If you ever thought about initiating a sponsored search campaign with Yahoo! Search Marketing, but were somewhat hesitant to start one because of required minimum spends, worry no more. We've eliminated the $20 monthly minimum spending requirement for Sponsored Search....

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