Jun 22

Beijing subway Line Four beings test run

Published by admin under Beijing Today

Beijing subway Line Four began a three-month test-run on Saturday. The tests will ensure the entire system is safe and ready for operation. The new line was built with help from Hong Kong’s MTR Corporation, the first in the country to be constructed with overseas investment.

The Line Four has 24 stations in total and links the north-west Haidian district with the city’s southern Fengtai district. According to national regulations, the line must run with an empty load for three months before it opens to the public. The MTR Corporation has prepared thirty trains with six carriages each for the test run. It takes 48 minutes to travel the whole line.

Huo Zhichang, Project Manager of MTR Corp. said “The final touches to the trains’ interior have basically been finished with only a few minor tasks left to do. The trains’ mechanics are still being adjusted.”

Adopting many of the management techniques of the Hong Kong subway system, it is hoped that Line Four will provide better and more efficient services to passengers. Every station on the line has been equipped with a passenger service center. More than 600 members of the line’s service staff will take etiquette training and be prepared with knowledge of the city’s traffic.

Beijing began to build its first subway lines in 1964. So far, eight lines have been put into operation, all of them run by the state-owned Beijing Subway Corporation. The boost from overseas investment is aimed at improving efficiency and management through market competition

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Jun 22

Google pledges to comb out porn results in China

Published by admin under Internet

Searching engine giant Google Inc. said Saturday that it would take all necessary steps to clean up pornographic searching results in its Chinese-language portal, Google.cn.

“We are undertaking a thorough review of our service and taking all necessary steps to fix any problems with our results,” a statement from Google’s headquarters in Silicon Valley in the United States said.

The statement given by John Pinette, communications director of Asian-Pacific Region, confirmed that the company’s representative in China had met with government officials to discuss problems with the Google.cn service and its serving of pornographic images and content based on foreign language searches.

The statement came after the Chinese authorities criticized some of the search results served up by Google violated the country’s Internet regulations and laws.

Xinhua acquired the statement after an e-mail request to Google on Friday. Telephone calls to the company’s Beijing office has not been answered since Thursday.

The China Internet Illegal Information Reporting Center (CIIRC) Thursday “strongly condemned” Google’s Chinese portal for providing links to pornography and lewd information.

The national office for Internet pornography crackdown has started blocking some Chinese-language search results and suspended its associated word-search services since Friday from Google over concerns that these links contained pornographic content.

The California-based Internet searching company had been warned twice for providing those pornographic links by the CIIRC in the first four months this year.

The statement said the thorough review was a “substantial engineering effort” and the company “have addressed the large majority of the problem results”.

Jessie Zhang, a staff with Google’s PR agent in China, also provided a similar statement Saturday afternoon, saying that it would continue to communicate directly with Chinese government on its services in China and the progress of the current problem’s solving.

The company will make additional announcements, as necessary, the statement said, adding that Google had been continually working to deal with pornographic online content and material in China which could be harmful to children.

The national office for Internet pornography crackdown said further actions would be taken depending on Google China’s implementation of the orders.

China launched a major crackdown on Internet porn in January targeting popular online portals and major search engines such as Google and Baidu, the two major competitors in China’s Internet searching market.

In the past month, 1,001 Web sites had been blocked by the authorities for distributing porn and other lewd material and more than 4,000 web sites that were shut down also had been investigated, according to the CIIRC.

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Jun 22

Report: Beijing Olympics earnings hit $146M

Published by admin under Olympic 2008

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Many people care about one question about the earnings of the Beijing Olympic.

The 2008 Beijing Olympic Games raked in a profit of more than 1 billion yuan ($146 million), the National Audit Office (NAO) said on Friday.

A report posted on the office’s website said the total operating cost of the Games was 19.343 billion yuan and the operating revenue, 20.5 billion yuan.

This August 8, 2008 file photo shows the fireworks during the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympic Games held in the National Stadium, also known as the Bird’s Nest, in north Beijing, China. [Xinhua]

Apart from the operating cost, China also spent 19.49 billion yuan on building 102 Olympic projects in Beijing and the five other cities that co-hosted the Games. Thirty-six of them were competition venues and the rest were used for training.

The operating revenue came mainly from broadcasting rights and marketing programs. The expenses included 5.092 billion yuan on broadcasting, accommodation, transport and medical services; 1.272 billion yuan on the opening and closing ceremonies, torch relay and other promotional activities; and 1.424 billion yuan on human resources.

The Olympic and Paralympic opening and closing ceremonies together cost 831 million yuan. And the revenue of the Paralympic Games was equal to its cost: 863 million yuan.

The earnings from the Games will be used to set up special funds for development of sport, improve sport facilities and organize events for common people, an official said. “The scheme to set up the funds is under discussion.”

The Beijing Olympic Games organizing committee (or BOCOG) was the first organizing body to be in charge of hosting the Olympics and Paralympics both.

“According to fixed exchange rates, the cost of the Beijing Games was slightly lower than that of the 2004 Athens Olympics, and as we know the budget for the next Games is more than that for Beijing. So the Beijing Olympics was not the most expensive,” chinanews.com.cn quoted an NAO official as having said.

The Athens Games cost $2.4 billion and reportedly made a profit of $155 million.

The NAO began auditing BOCOG’s accounts in the later half of 2005.

Its report said: “BOCOG controlled the expenditure, and its revenue was much more than the originally estimated 410 million yuan.”

“BOCOG has maintained strict supervision,” it said. And though “no major irregularities were detected during auditing”, some problems did crop up. For example, there was “no detailed plan for some of the projects and some of the budgets were too high”.

BOCOG, however, paid due attention to those problems and rectified its programs in time, the report said.

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Jun 18

Beijing raises two alarms for thunderstorm

Published by admin under Beijing Today

Beijing’s meteorological station released two alarms Tuesday on a heavy rain at noon.

The sky turned dark when a drizzle became downpours accompanied by thunder and lightning at about 11 a.m.

The Municipal Meteorological Station raised the thunder and lightning alarm to the level of rainstorm at noon, when average rainfall in the downtown area reached 11 millimeters, said Guo Hu, head of the station.

The average precipitation in the city was 7 mm as of noon.

Street lights turned on and vehicles were crawling amid heavy rainfalls with their headlights on.

The thunderstorm abated at about 2 p.m. but showers are expected at night in the downtown area and more rains are possible in the next couple of days, according to weather forecast.

The city’s public transport authority arranged 200 standby buses in case of increasing passenger flows.

The neighboring city of Tianjin also suffered similar weather conditions on Tuesday noon with the maximum rainfall of 20 mm, said Yi Xiaoyuan, the city’s chief weather forecaster.

The rainfall is expected to last till midnight.

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Jun 16

Rain day of Beijing

Published by admin under Photos

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Jun 14

China starts new excavation of terracotta warriors

Published by admin under China news

XI’AN, June 13 (Xinhua) — Chinese archaeologists started a new excavation of the famous terracotta army site Saturday, hoping to find more clay figures and unravel some of the mysteries left behind by the “First Emperor.”

    It was the third excavation in the pit — the first and largest of three pits at the site near Xi’an, capital of northwestern Shaanxi Province — since 1974 when the terracotta army was discovered by peasants digging a well.

FIRST DAY: “BETTER THAN THOUGHT”

    The new dig began at 1 p.m. Saturday, which marks the country’s fourth Cultural Heritage Day, and it lasted about five hours on the first day.

    ”The most important discovery today is two four-horse chariots that are standing in tandem very closely,” said Cao Wei, deputy curator of the Qinshihuang Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum.

    ”It is the first time for us to find such an existence in the excavation history,” Cao said.

In addition, another important discovery was that a few newly-unearthed terracotta warriors were richly colored. Archaeologists soon used plastic sheets to cover them for protection.

    Richly colored clay figures were unearthed from the mausoleum of Qinshihuang in the Qin Dynasty (221 B.C.- 207 B.C.), the first emperor of a united China, in previous excavations, but once they were exposed to the air they began to lose their luster and turn an oxidized grey.

    ”From what we have excavated today, the preservation of the cultural relics is better than thought,” said Xu Weihong, head of the excavation team.

“Take for instance, the discovery of the richly colored terracotta warriors gave us great confidence. I believe the future excavation will go smoothly,” Xu said.

    The 230 by 62-meter pit was believed to contain about 6,000 life-sized terracotta figures, more than 1,000 of which were found in previous excavations, said Wu Yongqi, museum curator.

    The State Administration of Cultural Heritage has approved the museum’s dig of 200 square meters of the site this year, Wu said.

Also Saturday, deputy curator Cao told reporters that the state ministration has approved a five-year excavation plan submitted by the museum.

    ”We plan to dig about 2,000 square meters in the coming five years,” Cao said.

    NEW DISCOVERIES EXPECTED

    Archaeologists hoped they might find a clay figure that appeared to be “in command” of the huge underground army, said Liu Zhancheng, head of the archeological team under the terracotta museum.

    ”We’re hoping to find a clay figure that represented a high-ranking army officer, for example,” he told Xinhua earlier.

    Liu and his colleagues are also hoping to ascertain the success of decades of preservation efforts to keep the undiscovered terracotta figures intact and retain their original colors.

    Most experts believe the pit houses a rectangular army of archers, infantrymen and charioteers that the emperor hoped would help him rule in the afterlife.

    But Liu Jiusheng, a Chinese historian in Xi’an, claims it was an army of servants and bodyguards rather than warriors. His argument is still not widely accepted by other terracotta experts.

    The army is still known to most Chinese people as the “terracotta warriors and horses.”

    The army was one of the greatest archeological finds of modern times. It was discovered in Lintong county, 35 km east of Xi’an, in 1974 by peasants who were digging a well.

    The first formal excavation of the site lasted for six years from 1978 to 1984 and produced 1,087 clay figures. A second excavation, in 1985, lasted a year and was cut short for technical reasons.

    The discovery, listed as a world heritage site by UNESCO in December 1987, has turned Xi’an into one of China’s major tourist attractions.20090614

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Jun 14

Intercultural communication discussed in Beijing

Published by admin under Beijing Today

A biennial conference on the intercultural communication between China and the world opened on Friday.

Titled “Intercultural Communication between China and the World: Interpersonal, Organizational and Mediated Perspectives,” the 8th China Association for Intercultural Communication (CAFIC) Intercultural Conference aims to enhance the mutual understanding between China and the world as well as the teaching and studying of the subject.

The three-day conference will cover more than 100 topics, including intercultural competence, intercultural identity, organizational communication and China’s image as well as the overseas Sinology study.

Compared with the previous conference, this one is more internationalized with about 600 scholars from around the globe, said Sun Yonzhong, president of the organizing committee of the conference, also vice president of CAFIC.

Along with renowned scholars in the field, the conference was also attended by high rank officials.

“With the presence of them, we have gained the official and administrative support we needed to promote the teaching and study of intercultural communication in China,” said Sun.

Moreover, this year’s conference “has expanded the boundary of intercultural communication as a research field,” Sun added.

“We redefined the boundary of intercultural communication studies. Now we have four sub-areas, i.e., the interpersonal perspective, which is the traditional perspective, mass communication, organizational communication, comparative cultural studies.”

Speaking of the role of media, especially the Internet in intercultural communication, the president said that mass media is playing a more and more important role. Not everyone can have the chance to travel abroad to get to know another culture personally, but, “almost everybody can watch Hollywood media, or listen to BBC.”

This year’s conference is co-hosted by the Intercultural Studies Center of the School of English and International Studies at Beijing Foreign Studies University (BFSU) and Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press.

Launched by China Association for Intercultural Communication in 1995, the conference has helped the intercultural communication in China enter a new epoch. It is also a new landmark in the study of international intercultural communication.

(Xinhua News Agency June 12, 2009)

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Jun 02

Danwei: Twitter blocked in China

Published by admin under Internet

And… there we have it.

Michael Anti was right after all:

Danwei: In terms of new media, do you still feel that in China censors could control everything that’s happening in this area - you once said that if they shut off twitter, for example, it would be very easy, and information will just not get out.
Michael Anti: Twitter is a new thing in China. The censors need time to figure out what it is. So enjoy the last happy days of twittering before the fate of Youtube descends on it one day. [Emphasis added]

By the way, I want to point out that the Chinese Twitterland is funnier than the English one, for a Chinese tweet can have three times the volume of an English tweet, thanks to the high information intensity of the Chinese language. 140 Chinese characters can make up all the full elements of a news piece with the “5 Ws” (Who, What, Where, When and HoW). But the joy of the Chinese Twitterland is more fragile, and I hope that it will live longer in this country.

The block seems to be a URL keyword filter. Googling for “twitter.com” resets the connection, as does including the string “twitter.com” in any other URL. Access to the service is fine through proxy or VPN.

Update: It seems that photo sharing website Flickr.com has been blocked.

Update 2: Bing.com (the new Microsoft search engine) is gone too, probably for autoplaying Youtube videos when you put your mouse over them.

Update 3: Live.com and Hotmail.com have gone under. But MSN messenger seems fine.

Blogspot and Youtube remain blocked.

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Jun 02

Beijing sounds first high-temperature alarm of this year

Published by admin under Beijing Today

Beijing reported the first high-temperature alarm of this year on Monday, said Beijing Meteorological Bureau.

The alarm, reported at 11:20 a.m., was an Orange Alarm, the second level of meteorological alarms, saying the highest temperature will reach 37 degrees Celsius Monday afternoon, according to the bureau.

“The sunshine has been strong, the air has been dry and the winds have been strong these days in Beijing. The weather of this kind is defined as dry hot wind,” said Guo Hu, head of the bureau.

The dry hot wind usually appears in north China in May and June, which harms crops, especially wheat, but does no harm to people, Guo said.

The temperature in Beijing had been two-to-three degrees Celsius higher than usual since May, Guo said.

The city might be cooler on late Monday as cold air may bring thunderstorms, Guo said.

The temperature might be lower on Tuesday but will likely remain 32 degrees Celsius, he said.

The northeast Tianjin Municipality also reported its highest temperature of this year on Monday afternoon, which reached 38.9 degrees Celsius and broke the record of the same period since 1951, said Zhao Gang, chief weather forecaster of Tianjin Meteorological Bureau.

It should be 31 degrees Celsius on Tuesday and might rain on Thursday and Friday, Zhao said.

They said it was unknown if abnormal temperatures are a result of global warming.

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May 31

Green Beijing in the summer season

Published by admin under Photos

As the it is the summer season again, Beijing once again become a beautiful green city.

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