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All about life in the Pearl of the Orient.

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05/19/09

Permalink 10:07:22 am, by yu888 Email , 237 words   English (US)
Categories: Living in Shanghai, Health

Water for living Healthy

Drink lots of water. As the weather gets hotter here in Shanghai, be sure to get plenty of fluids or the humidity and heat will literally dry you out. Ideally, you should be drinking some 8 glasses of water a day on top of the water you can get from foods. That is something like one and a half liters of water we should be drinking. If you are not, when your body sweats as it gets hotter, you will become dehydrated.

Best bet, pure healthy drinking water, free of pollutants, healthy amounts of minerals without heavy metals, and a mildly alkaline pH to best fit your body’s needs. While thatis not always possible, getting the best bottled waters or installing an Atlantis Water Purifier to treat your tap water making it healthy to drink can help minimize your exposure to bad water.

Probably makes the most difference in growing kids as they need a lot of water to keep up their growth, both physically and mentally. Water helps regulate temperature, carry nutrients to the body’s cells, and eliminate waste from our bodies. Make sure they get plenty of water, especially when they are active as they tend to be more dynamic than adults.

For more info on water and healthy water: http://english.obusiness.cn/yhhnj/en/water/index.jsp

Article courtesy of Shanghai Directway Co. supplier of Healthy Lifestyle products for families in China

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05/14/09

Permalink 17:21:59, by janina Email , 158 words   English (EU)
Categories: News and Current

In the news:

Swine Flu all-clear

Judging from recent news, the death toll of the swine flu is no longer rising in Mexico. According to Shanghai Daily, Mexico's health minister Jose Angel Cordova blames the laziness and self-medication of most people for the high death toll. Now, that everybody knows about the new virus most people go to the doctor for a health check.


Passengers got stuck in Shanghai's metro

Yesterday metro line 2 couldn't leave Zhongshan Park subway station due to technical problems with the door-closing-system. This morning line 3 broke down on it's way to Shanghai South Railway Station. 6 minutes later the train started running again but the passengers arrived delayed nevertheless.

Sichuan Earthquake Anniversary
On May 12th was the first anniversary of Sichuan Earthquake. Entire China commemorated the victims.


Shanghai is getting smokeless

According to Shanghaiist a new Anti-smoking-campaign started at the Hongqiao Airport in Shanghai. Smoking is prohibited everywhere except of 5 special ventilated smoking rooms after the security check-in.

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Permalink 03:17:46 pm, by Krista Email , 43 words   English (US)
Categories: Uncategorized

Global China Chat with Sam Flemming

Please log on to the Global China Chat with Sam Flemming today at 5PM Beijing time, and then again at 11PM Beijing time. Sam will be discussing the internet and social networking sites in China, as well as online marketing and consumer feedback.

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05/11/09

Permalink 05:22:58 pm, by Krista Email , 486 words   English (US)
Categories: Uncategorized

Sam Flemming on Internet Word of Mouth

Don't forget to log onto the China Speakers Bureau's Global China Chat with Sam Flemming on the internet as a marketing tool in China. The chat will be held at 5PM Beijing time on Thursday, May 14th, and then again that same day at 10PM. Sam Flemming will be presenting on the internet in China and its increasing importance as a marketing tool. Participants are encouraged to log on with questions for Sam, as the chat will be held as an open forum. Registration for the chat is now open and can be accessed at the following link: http://www.china-speakers-bureau.com/blog/2009/04/global-china-chats-on-social-networks.html. Additionally, questions for Sam Flemming may be sent in advance to Fons Tuinstra at fons.tuinstra@china-speakers-bureau.com.

Sam Flemming is a co-founder and the current CEO of CIC in Shanghai (http://www.cicdata.com/). CIC is the leading Internet Word of Mouth (IWOM) research and consulting firm in China. CIC is at the forefront of Chinese digital culture, helping brands in China such as Pepsi and Nike to understand how Internet Word of Mouth can be used to impact marketing communications, product research and development, and public relations.

Recent articles by Sam Flemming can be found on Sam's IWOM blog:

Who Is Really Holding the Megaphone: http://www.seeisee.com/sam/2009/03/30/p864

The fact that IWOM platforms are open to such great commercial influence is a key difference between social media in China and in the West. In China, consumers can voice their opinions, but ultimately it is the community owners who control the megaphone’s volume and the on and off switch. In western markets, consumers are more in control.

More Thoughts on China Digital and Social Media: http://www.seeisee.com/sam/2009/04/15/p992

China has more bloggers (162 million) (see full stats here) and more places online to be social than any other market in the world. China’s penetration rate is a relatively low 22.6%, but social participation rate is very high. Forrester’s China technographics study, for example, shows that Chinese “creators” account for 40% of netizen population compared to just 13% in the US.

Consumer Day and the Internet Community: http://www.seeisee.com/sam/2009/03/15/p695

Once again, Consumer Day in China is here (March 15). Crisis 2.0 is nothing new to us in China, but it remains a powerful example of how the Internet Community is reshaping the relationship between brands and consumers...Consumer Day is the day that consumers are encouraged to share their customer service complaints (and perhaps kudos, but you don't see much of this). Consumer Day stories are featured prominently in mainstream media, and PR managers live in fear of this day. The big picture is that the Internet Community is reshaping the relationship between brands and consumers. For PR/reputation management, this means that “With so many platforms to communicate about and amplify brand experiences, one could say that everyday is Consumer Day in China.”

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Permalink 03:33:09, by Maria Korolov Trombly Email , 1183 words   English (EU)
Categories: Uncategorized

Shanghai’s DeepThink shifts to OpenSim development

Shanghai’s DeepThink shifts to OpenSim development
By: Maria Korolov

When it comes to virtual world real estate and design, DeepThink has been a big player, operating one of the largest continents in Second Life.

But in recent months, the Shanghai-based company has been refocusing on OpenSim, the open-source platform that’s rapidly becoming the standard for enterprise virtual worlds.

OpenSim is not an alternative to to Second Life — rather, it is a platform on which people can build their own Second Life-style communities, gaming worlds, or independent educational grids or company platforms.

DeepThink currently has five on-going OpenSim-related projects, said Adam Frisby, DeepThink co-director and the company’s head of research and technology.

A DeepThink seaside cottage.

Although the bulk of operations are in Shanghai, DeepThink Pty Ltd. is incorporated in Perth, Australia with additional staff distributed around the world, in Canada, U.S. and the UK. Frisby’s co-director, Alex Strong, is based in Canada.

The company provides hosting, virtual land rentals, software development, and virtual world design and building services.

“We generally take projects on a case-by-case basis,” Frisby told Hypergrid Business. “We’re looking for things that prove the platform and can do it reliably.”

One obstacle is that OpenSim is still in its early stages of development..

“Up until the last six months, OpenSim has been of questionable stability,,” said Frisby. “So we want to get a commitment from all the clients that they understand the limitations of the environment.”

Frisby is one of the core developers of the open source OpenSim virtual worlds platform, and has been working on that project for the last two years – since its very inception.

DeepThink gets OpenSim implementations running for clients, and also customizes the OpenSim code to fit customer needs, he said.

One project that DeepThink is working on involves virtual architecture. Another, an OpenSim-based currency system.

And virtual meetings are a hot topic, he added.

“We’re doing some event work, conferences that will be hosted on the OpenSim platform for quite a number of users,” he said.

“Training and conferences have definitely been coming into fashion in the virtual worlds.”

Training and education, for example, already has a proven track record in the virtual worlds, he said. These types of events have minimal requirements and can easy be handled with today’s technology.

There are still some limitations that have to be addressed, however, he said, such as the time it takes for end users to get settled in when they come to a virtual conference or training session.

“They want to spend half an hour customizing their avatar before getting moving,” he said.

The key to a successful training experience, he said, is that the virtual world needs to add something to the experience that can be gained through a telephone conference call, or an online produce like Webex.

For example, Wespac, one of the Australia’s largest banks, ran a training program in Second Life in 2007 and 2008, then pulled the pug in early 2009, along with some Web 2.0 projects. The reason? Lack of return on investment.

“The benefits weren’t much better than Webex,” Frisby said.

Where the benefits can be found, he said, is when the training requires a dynamic environment. For example, virtual worlds allow users to prototype how something looks in three dimensions, or to go through a virtual representation of a physical location.

One application, for example, involves users walking through an environment and trying to spot the safety problems.

There’s not much advantage in training users in how to use desktop applications, for example.

Virtual world events also give participants an opportunity to network with presenters and other guests in a way similar to what they would do in an actual conference. By comparison, networking in a telephone conference or a Web session is extremely difficult, especially between strangers.

“The ability to speak with multiple people simultaneously, that’s great,” said Frisby. “The ability to break into smaller groups.”

As a result, the virtual conference business is picking up this year.

“There are no travel fees, no productivity loss,” Frisby said. “They don’t need to worry about taking a day off of work and factoring in travel time. We’re gong to see smaller, more niche industry conferences looking at virtual worlds quite a bit.”

Bigger conferences will stay in the real world, however, until scalability problems are solved. Today, he said, it’s hard to get 50 users into a single location.

For larger gatherings, regions can be broken up into smaller areas, so that multiple servers can handle the load. And the virtual environment can be optimized to load faster, he added.

“A lot of people have experimented with it, it’s possible, but we haven’t had a client need it yet,” he said. “We’ve done tests with automated logins, but they’re not representative of real users.”

Another area under development is that of voice. Today, conference speakers can be streamed in, but if everyone in a conference wants to have a chance to speak out loud – rather than typing messages into a chat window – then OpenSim requires a third-party voice module.

Companies looking to enable voice conversations on their grids can use a custom voice solution, he said. Meanwhile, OpenSim has been experimenting with open source voice products, with limited success.

“I think this will be one of those things that will be solved this year,” he said.

The payment situation is another one in which companies will need to deploy their own payment method if they want to collect money within their virtual world.

Most of the commercial virtual worlds, like Second Life, have currency platforms build in. Second Life, for example, has a virtual currency that is freely tradable with the US dollar.

However, unlike Second Life, OpenSim is not a stand-alone world. Instead, it is a platform for building virtual worlds. And, much like website owners want to have a choice of payment platforms – credit cards, PayPal, Google Checkout, or any of a number of others – so, too, virtual world operators may prefer to use a payment system popular in a particular country, or within a particular industry.

“So the core [OpenSim software] shipment will probably never contain e-commerce functions,” said Frisby.

Instead, third party vendors such as PayPal might step in to provide payments, or entirely new companies may arise.

“I would much prefer to have an established company,” Frisby said, adding that it’s more likely that a new startup will take on this market.

Meanwhile, grid operators that don’t want to go to the trouble of enabling a third-party payment solution can simply send their users to a Webpage to make the payment, Frisby said.

For example, conference attendees may be required to register for a conference on a web form and make the payment before they receive their login instructions for the conference.

Even shopping cart systems can be built inside OpenSim today, with existing tools, Frisby said.

For shopping however, more is needed besides the payment system – users have to be able to access the world more easily than today.

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05/10/09

Permalink 02:36:37 pm, by msittig Email , 14 words   English (US)
Categories: Bus

Bus with appeal

Spotted in Hongkou yesterday:

IMG_7575

This model hasn't made it out to Pudong yet, AFAIK.

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05/06/09

Permalink 17:22:44, by janina Email , 156 words   English (EU)
Categories: News and Current

In the news:

More secure ATMs in Shanghai
In Shanghai some different banks use new taller machines which reject bankcard cloning devices. I guess it is a seminal technical improvement.

Swine Flu also in China
After the first case of swine flu last week, China is very sensitive with people coming from Mexico.


Britain goes Australia

A British guy won the race of getting a dream job on an Australian Island. His job will be snorkeling, having a go for a walk at those amazing beaches, living in a villa and writing a Blog. His remuneration will be about 150.000 australian dollars for a stay of 6 months. Enviable!!
beach


Visa- Never ending disaster

The Chinese government found a new way to make it more complicated for U.S. citizens to get a Visa for China after the swine flu cases. One of the new rules is filling out a form with a listing of all states and countries they visited recently.

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