Source favicon19:08 祝贺新年! » 豆瓣blog
    狗年马上就到,豆瓣团队成员从两大洲四个地方向您拜年! 祝您快乐。所有的话都在这句里了。 也祝愿新年里你能通过豆瓣发现更多有意思的人,有意思的东西。 放炮去了。新年好!
Source favicon15:45 恭祝新年快乐 » Blog on 27th Floor
在这举国欢庆的日子里,本Blog向所有关心、支持本Blog以及积极参与留言(垃圾和广告留言除外)的网友致以最衷心的感谢、最热烈的问候和最诚挚的新年祝福!

在过去的一年中,本Blog正是在广大网友的支持下,持续健康的向前发展。我衷心的感谢所有网友的关心、爱护与支持;同时也热切的企盼,在广大网友一如既往的支持下,本Blog和Internet会得到更好的发展。

祝你们身体健康,合家欢乐,万事如意!

cathayan.org
于乙酉除夕敬上

本文版权归水木社区所有。
Source favicon13:38 Do No Evil vs 在商言商 » Jan's Tech Blog
Google一直都讓人有Cool、創新、反微軟等感覺,但他們今天終於面對群眾的壓力。儘管他們在自己的Blog中「解釋」了為何建立中國版Google,但只要看看Bloglines中對這篇文章的Citation,大家就知道群眾是如何對待Google。...
Source favicon12:52 中国将成为世界第四大经济体 » blog中文翻译
原文出处 (法译中) 根据中国自己的统计,它在2005年的经济增长率接近10%。这一数字如果正确的话,将使得这个国家超过英国和法国,从而占据世界第四大经济实体的位置。 本周三,中国国家统计局在其2005年经济指标的首次官方测算中,宣称其国民生产总值增长了9.9%,达到了18232.1亿元(按年平均兑换率可折合为2225亿美元)。 在国民生产总值的计算方法上个月被修订之后,2004年的中国经济增长达到了10.1%。”2005年的数据显示总体的经济情况是好的”,中国国家统计局局长李德水非常高兴的说。他还补充说:”这些数据表显出中国经济状态更稳定,发展也更平衡,这些说明了中国经济的进步。” 中国政府在这一点一直是很谨慎的,当一些分析家曾预计其经济增长在2005年为9.5%时,它仅估计会是8%左右。瑞士信贷第一波士顿分析员陶冬就曾指出:”中国经济的发展将比市场认为的快一些”。 法国和英国,迄今仍是第五和第四大经济体,根据世界银行的数据,它们在2004年的国民生产总值分别为2000亿和2140亿美元。它们经济增长的最新官方预测分别是1.6%和1.7%。世界经济的前三强分别是美国,日本和德国。 中国快速发展的另一个表征是2005年其工业生产率猛增了11.4%,尽管官方称这个速度在放缓。 “农业的衰弱” 另外中国官方承认两年以来实施的宏观调控措施并未产生效果,许多令人担忧问题仍然存在,例如国家统计局局长强调了”投资结构的非理性”。 李德水也认为”农业衰弱和农民收入增长乏力是关键问题”。 去年中国粮食生产仅增长了3.1%,为4亿8千4百万吨,另外即使农民的平均收入增长了3.1个百分点,城市居民收入也相应地增长了9.6%。因此城乡差距仍在拉大,城市居民的收入已达农民收入的3倍。 中国政府可以自豪地说已经控制住了其通货膨胀,其消费物价仅提高了1.8%,而在2004年这个数字是3.9%。 另一个等待已久的好消息是中国外汇储备的增长,2005年已经达到8189亿美元,一年内增加了2089亿。中国的外汇储备已经是世界第二,只在日本之后。 中国政府同样证实了它在2005年的巨额贸易记录达到了1019亿美元,比2004年增长了699亿美元。其中,出口增加到7620亿美元(增长28.4%),进口增加到6601亿美元(增长17.6%)。 这个巨大的贸易额只会加剧中国和其贸易伙伴之间的摩擦,并再次引起美国和欧盟对人民币升职的强烈要求。(非常感谢Jacques HE的 翻译,这是我们站点翻译的第一篇法语文章,也是最近以来“中国”分类下的第一篇文章,同时欢迎Jacques的加入)
07:00 2006/01/28 07:00:00TQ洽谈通搜索力指数排行榜 » TQ洽谈通搜索力指数
 搜索引擎  搜索力指数  排名升降  份额
1. Baidu  50364098     58.81%
2. 3721  9996758     11.67%
3. Google  9229098     10.78%
4. Yahoo  8470014     9.89%
5. 163  2578194     3.01%
6. Sogou  2273638     2.66%
7. QQ  1261562     1.47%
8. China  481038     0.56%
9. iAsk  455202     0.53%
10. Zhongsou  309302     0.36%
11. Tom  184842     0.22%
12. Yisou  26078     0.03%
13. Sohu  4530     0.01%
14. Sina  134     0.00%
Source favicon04:17 Questions for Andrei Broder re emerging search technology? » Yahoo! Search blog
You may have heard some buzz about Andrei Broder joining Yahoo! as a research fellow and vice president of emerging search technology. Longtime search industry folks will know that Broder is a noted expert on design, analysis, and implementation of...
Source favicon03:58 Google in China » Official Google Blog


Google users in China today struggle with a service that, to be blunt, isn't very good. Google.com appears to be down around 10% of the time. Even when users can reach it, the website is slow, and sometimes produces results that when clicked on, stall out the user's browser. Our Google News service is never available; Google Images is accessible only half the time. At Google we work hard to create a great experience for our users, and the level of service we've been able to provide in China is not something we're proud of.

This problem could only be resolved by creating a local presence, and this week we did so, by launching Google.cn, our website for the People's Republic of China. In order to do so, we have agreed to remove certain sensitive information from our search results. We know that many people are upset about this decision, and frankly, we understand their point of view. This wasn't an easy choice, but in the end, we believe the course of action we've chosen will prove to be the right one.

Launching a Google domain that restricts information in any way isn't a step we took lightly. For several years, we've debated whether entering the Chinese market at this point in history could be consistent with our mission and values. Our executives have spent a lot of time in recent months talking with many people, ranging from those who applaud the Chinese government for its embrace of a market economy and its lifting of 400 million people out of poverty to those who disagree with many of the Chinese government's policies, but who wish the best for China and its people. We ultimately reached our decision by asking ourselves which course would most effectively further Google's mission to organize the world's information and make it universally useful and accessible. Or, put simply: how can we provide the greatest access to information to the greatest number of people?

Filtering our search results clearly compromises our mission. Failing to offer Google search at all to a fifth of the world's population, however, does so far more severely. Whether our critics agree with our decision or not, due to the severe quality problems faced by users trying to access Google.com from within China, this is precisely the choice we believe we faced. By launching Google.cn and making a major ongoing investment in people and infrastructure within China, we intend to change that.

No, we're not going to offer some Google products, such as Gmail or Blogger, on Google.cn until we're comfortable that we can do so in a manner that respects our users' interests in the privacy of their personal communications. And yes, Chinese regulations will require us to remove some sensitive information from our search results. When we do so, we'll disclose this to users, just as we already do in those rare instances where we alter results in order to comply with local laws in France, Germany and the U.S.

Obviously, the situation in China is far different than it is in those other countries; while China has made great strides in the past decades, it remains in many ways closed. We aren't happy about what we had to do this week, and we hope that over time everyone in the world will come to enjoy full access to information. But how is that full access most likely to be achieved? We are convinced that the Internet, and its continued development through the efforts of companies like Google, will effectively contribute to openness and prosperity in the world. Our continued engagement with China is the best (perhaps only) way for Google to help bring the tremendous benefits of universal information access to all our users there.

We're in this for the long haul. In the years to come, we'll be making significant and growing investments in China. Our launch of google.cn, though filtered, is a necessary first step toward achieving a productive presence in a rapidly changing country that will be one of the world's most important and dynamic for decades to come. To some people, a hard compromise may not feel as satisfying as a withdrawal on principle, but we believe it's the best way to work toward the results we all desire.
Source favicon02:55 Yay » English - The Real Deal
The No.12 seeded pair of Zi Yan and Jie Zheng have upset top seeds Lisa Raymond and Samantha Stosur to deliver China its first ever Grand Slam title with a 2-6 7-6 (9/7) 6-3 victory in the women’s doubles final at Australian Open 2006 on Friday. Best. Chinese. New. Year. Gift. Ever. 看看澳网的官方报道: “We feel very [...]
Source favicon02:23 AWStats: 25 additional robots available in robot detection file robot.pm » AWStats Enhancements and "how to" Resource Center Update Notification - Antezeta
We've updated our version of robots.pm to detect more than 25 additional robots.
Source favicon00:14 Has Google Lost Its Soul? » Jeremy Zawodny's blog
We all knew it was a matter of "when" not "if", but it's surprising to see that it had to happen this way. Over on Google Blogscoped, I see that Google Removes Its Help Entry on Censorship: The page which used to say: Google does not censor results for any search term. The order and content of our results are completely automated; we do not manipulate our search results by hand. We believe strongly in allowing the democracy of the...

^==Back Home: www.chedong.com

<== 2006-01-27

==> 2006-01-29