October 12, 2005

  • Back in the Day


    Smashed

    There are always days that I wonder if taking the leap to come to China was a good idea. Those days happen, when I start missing my friends the most. Pics for Kirby’s little shindig in Guangzhou are finally up, msg me if you want the link, I’ll send it to those who are curious.

    I gotta figure out how to revive this damn blog.


    Alicia Keys is so crazy.

October 5, 2005

  • Gucci in China


    China’s Gucci Team

    The Gucci brand has such an aura amongst the local Chinese. Everybody loves Gucci. Everybody wants Gucci. But not everybody can afford Gucci. This has contributed to the vast network of counterfeit Gucci’s throughout the motherland. You can find fake Gucci products in the most random places, and EVERYBODY knows Gucci, although they may not necessarily know how to properly pronounce it or spell it. (Many I know here call it Koochee)

    I personally think the proliferation of these brands through the counterfeit markets does more good to the luxury brands in the short term than in the long term. It is unavoidable at this point mostly because of the number of people that it employs. From the hundreds of factory workers to the thousands of street hawkers. The markup is easily at least 100% and should a foreigner come by and buy a couple of items, we’re looking much more in returns. It just makes sense right now for the locals to continue doing it. And why would the government put a stop to it overnight? You know they COULD if they really wanted to. China is great that way, don’t really need much debate in parliament and then ask the people. I’ve seen Shanghai transformed overnight because a delegation of foreigners were coming into town. When I went to bed, the streets were filled with litter, dying plants and street hawkers. The next day, entire flower beds were replanted, roads repainted and litter completely gone. It would take a decade for some of these things to be done in other countries.

    I have seen fake everythings here: Coach, LV, Ferregamo, Armani, Hugo Boss, Cartier, IWC, Panerai… you name it they got it. Mind you the quality may not be the same, but the locals and some foreigners don’t mind at all. For a fraction of the prices, the feelings that one gets when owning a Gucci are worth it. And I am certain that if people could afford it, and really wanted it, they would stop at nothing to go for the real thing.

    So although the battle seems quite uphill, the people behind it I’m sure are working hard to make sure the the aura of Gucci continues to live on. Go kooocheeeee!

October 3, 2005

  • Kirby and Jane

    I remember a long time ago when Kirby was my locker partner in high school. Now he’s married.

    Here are some pics from the banquet that he had in Guangzhou over the weekend. Man it was great seeing the boys!

September 22, 2005

September 12, 2005

  • The US Government is SO Self Serving it is Disgraceful

    Shady…

    Firms with White House ties get Katrina contracts

    FEMA taps Halliburton subsidiary, Shaw Group, Bechtel for cleanup



    WASHINGTON
    (Reuters) — Companies with ties to the Bush White House and the former
    head of FEMA are clinching some of the administration’s first disaster
    relief and reconstruction contracts in the aftermath of Hurricane
    Katrina.




    At least two major corporate clients of lobbyist Joe Allbaugh,
    President Bush’s former campaign manager and a former head of the
    Federal Emergency Management Agency, have already been tapped to start
    recovery work along the battered Gulf Coast.




    One is Shaw Group Inc. and the other is Halliburton Co.
    subsidiary Kellogg Brown and Root. Vice President Dick Cheney is a
    former head of Halliburton.




    Bechtel National Inc., a unit of San
    Francisco-based Bechtel Corp., has also been selected by FEMA to
    provide short-term housing for people displaced by the hurricane. Bush
    named Bechtel’s CEO to his Export Council and put the former CEO of
    Bechtel Energy in charge of the Overseas Private Investment
    Corporation.




    Experts say it has been common practice in both Republican and
    Democratic administrations for policy makers to take lobbying jobs once
    they leave office, and many of the same companies seeking contracts in
    the wake of Hurricane Katrina have already received billions of dollars
    for work in Iraq.




    Halliburton alone has earned more than $9 billion. Pentagon
    audits released by Democrats in June showed $1.03 billion in
    “questioned” costs and $422 million in “unsupported” costs for
    Halliburton’s work in Iraq.


    Watchdog groups take notice



    But the web of Bush
    administration connections is attracting renewed attention from
    watchdog groups in the post-Katrina reconstruction rush. Congress has
    already appropriated more than $60 billion in emergency funding as a
    down payment on recovery efforts projected to cost well over $100
    billion.




    “The government has got to stop stacking senior positions with
    people who are repeatedly cashing in on the public trust in order to
    further private commercial interests,” said Danielle Brian, executive
    director of the Project on Government Oversight.

September 4, 2005

August 31, 2005

  • The Difficulty of Being Productive

    With technology these days, things seem so convenient.  You speak
    the name of the person you want to call into your phone, and the phone
    dials the number automatically.  You pull up a couple websites,
    and all the research and text you require is at your fingertips. 
    Not home during your favourite show?  No worries, there’s Tivo or
    you can download it off the net.

    But as I sit in front of my computer, I can’t help but think how inundated we are with reams and reams of SHIT.

    I just downloaded Google Talk.  I already have MSN, I actually
    started with ICQ (My ICQ NUMBER is 6 digits), and I tried to stay loyal
    for a very long time.  But it’s hard.  More and more people
    started to use MSN.  MSN added more and more features, and all
    those reminders asking you to download the latest MSN, play games with
    your friends, draw funny pictures, search online for new emoticons
    etc…

    So now, with all my efficient Microsoft Office tools, as I sit at my
    desk, I’m getting random messages from friends on MSN, chatting with a
    buddy from Google  Talk, checking Flickr for the latest pics from
    the weekend’s party, talking on the phone, working on a word document
    while researching on the Internet.  My mobile phone is ringing and
    I have to put the other person on hold.  I get a delivery from the
    courier, a fax is coming in for me and I have a meeting with the client
    in 10 mins.

    How the heck am I supposed to seriously get any work done?

August 25, 2005

  • Going to University in China

    Going To University In China



    It is one thing to get good entrance examination marks and get

    accepted, but can you afford to go?



    Here are the basic numbers via a post at Yannan:



    [translation]  According to the China Youth Daily, the Jilin

    Provincial Government Research Center conducted a study of students at

    a senior secondary school in a rural county.  28.7% of the students

    said that they were afraid of attending university, because their

    family cannot afford the university fees.



    According to the study by the Jilin Provincial Government Research

    Center, in 2004, the average university tuition fee was 6,000 RMB, the

    average room charge was 1,000 RMB and the average food expenses was

    4,800 RMB.  Combining the three items, university students need 11,800

    RMB whereas the average net income for Jilin rural residents was

    3,000.42 RMB.  That is to say, each university student requires the

    net income of four rural peasants.



    The report emphasized that tremendous pressure from the university

    tuition is the biggest reason for rural students being afraid to

    attend university.  But this author believes that the uncertain

    earnings is the true reason for rural students not wanting to attend

    university.  According to economic theory, expected benefits directly

    determines investment confidence.  If attending university is a form

    of investment, then what are the expected benefits?  Of course, it is

    more than a piece of paper that is a diploma; it has to be the

    benefits that the student will receives after getting a job.



    The data indicates that the employment situation for university

    graduates are not optimistic.  In 2002, the number of university

    graduates was 1,450,000; in 2003, 2,120,000; in 2004, 2,800,000; in

    2005, 3,400,000.  With the continuous increase in the number of

    graduates, the job situation is getting tougher and tougher.  Not only

August 20, 2005

  • Publicly traded… CYOS

    http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc? s=CYOS.OB&t=5d

    This seems interesting.  I wonder how they will do in the China landscape.

    CYOP’s Chinese Poker Opening for Play on Sina.com; Online Poker to Be
    Available for Exclusive Play on Game Channel

    BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Aug. 18, 2005–CYOP Systems
    International Inc. (OTCBB:CYOS), a leading provider of online gaming
    software and operator of games portals, is pleased to announce that
    its Chinese version of TenSeatPoker.com software will be open for play
    on the Sina.com network this September.

    The site is in the final stages of integration on Sina.com, and is
    going through extensive quality control.

    CYOP’s Chinese TenSeatPoker.com will be found exclusively for the Game
    Channel on SINA.com Online. SINA will further arrange fixed entry
    points by providing tournaments on the SINA Taiwan and Beijing
    Channels, linking on-line traffic to the co-branded Games site in the

    US.

    The Company intends to sell advertising and sponsorships within the
    games and related site. As well, CYOP will be hosting and managing
    multiplayer tournaments with cash prizes.

    And the TensSeatPoker.com site is being translated into Chinese;
    leveraging our tournament sponsorship and advertising model with the
    plan to convert the play for fun database into cash play gaming.

    Even with its minimal penetration rate, China already ranks second in
    the world in total Internet users. According to eMarketer, during the
    2004-2008 period, the US Internet population will grow at a 2.6%
    annual rate. In contrast, China’s Internet population will grow during
    the 2004-2008 period by over 14.3% on an annual basis.

    Mitch White, CEO of CYOP commented, “Interest in China is growing, and
    North Americans are beginning to understand the potential of the huge
    marketplace. Recent events such as Baidu.com’s IPO and Yahoo’s $1
    billion Alibaba.com deal are proving that strong moves are being made
    into the burgeoning Chinese Internet. CYOP is also strategically
    positioning itself as an early entrant into the online poker industry
    in Asia.”

    About CYOP

    CYOP is a provider of multimedia transactional technology solutions
    and services for the entertainment industry and a developer of online
    skill games, poker, and bingo. The Company’s range of products and
    services include financial transaction platforms for on-line video
    games, licensed online gaming software, gaming websites, poker portals
    and integrated e-commerce transaction technology for on-line
    merchants.

    CYOP’s central games portal, www.SkillArcade.com, features virtual
    games where people play popular skill games against other players and
    compete in tournaments to win real money prizes. CYOP’s Software may
    be viewed at
    www.RedFelt.com, its play for cash poker site at 
    www.TenSeatPoker.com and it Chinese site at www.CrediPlay.cn

August 5, 2005

  • Shady Chinese Women

    Wow, check out this bio of Ms. Wendy Deng, Rupert Murdoch’s new wife:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wendi_Deng

    She is hardcore.  She is the epitome of what a Chinese woman can do to a rich old man.