Archive for the ‘Web’ Category

Zaobao.com blocked in China 联合早报被封!

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Singapore Chinese Newspaper’s widely read (beyond our shores, yes) official website zaobao.com has been blocked in China. 新加坡联合早报被封了!

For many in China, Zaobao has been a source of foreign Asian news perspective, written in Chinese. This follows the very recent shutdown of Yeeyan.com, which translates widely read English articles for Chinese readership.

must be the Tiger ads on zaobao.
more details later..

Add me on 校内网 Xiaonei.com

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009


Add me on Xiaonei.com: Junde on Xiaonei

Facebook has just gone under the GFW, presumably due to the ongoing riots in Urumqi, Xinjiang. Twitter and Danwei.org had also gone down over the past 2 days.

Also wondering if it’s time for me to take a break back in sg..

SMM.TV: 17 year old Aussie-Chinese Model in Singapore

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

I was encouraged to do a little publicity for SUPERMODELME.TV - an online reality supermodelling competition in Asia. 10 models from Singapore, Malaysia, Korea, Thailand, the Philippines and India will compete to be Asia’s next hottest face on runways and magazines.

I considered writing a serious essay about how Supermodels excite economies of happiness but after deep thought of 12 seconds I decided to just get to the point.

Here’s my current (competition) favourite on the show - Evelyn Lee-Ann Leckie:

Nationality: Australian
Ethnicity: Australian/Chinese
Date of Birth: 3 September 1991
Age: 17
Height: 1.8m
Language Spoken: English
Interests/Hobbies: Dancing, music, shoes, learning French, music festivals and Thai food

For more photos, videos, and blogs, check out Evelyn’s profile on SUPERMODELME.TV

facebookiconBe Evelyn’s fan on Facebook

twittericonFollow Evelyn on Twitter

Disclaimer: This blog is not turning into some other sites you see on the charts at http://ping.sg.
I will still have deep thoughts from time to time.

Big-time Teeny Bloggers

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

Recently from this ranking chart I came across Xavier Lur (TechXav.com), a 15 year old from Singapore and Stanley Tang (Stanleytang.com), a 16 year old from Hong Kong.
These are their Twitter profiles. Note the amount of followers.

teenbloggers

 
What exactly is their appeal? Good original content? Good commentary on latest issues?
From my limited observation of their entries on the home pages, Stanley seems to have substantial guest content on his blog, that could be a draw. Xavier also has an apparent focus on latest technologies. The rest is up to intepretation. I would advise any critics to second-think engaging them in reactionary public debate. Social Media often works in a way that big boys have more to lose.

Also, it is noteworthy that both teens make it a point to highlight their youth on their Twitter profiles. Refer to above image, again.

Why is this so? Is this a remarkable draw?
Yes, actually it is quite remarkable; It is worthy of a visitor passing a remark about it:

“Hey look at this amazing kiddo teen blogger! If I didn’t see his About page, I would’ve thought he’s as old as John Chow! Ha-ha ha..”

 
It is quite an achievement for these teens to be involved and apparently successfully involved in Social Media at the prime of their sweet sixteens.

On one hand however, I would think that successful Social Media presence and influence requires a certain degree of Public Relations, and People Relations maturity and sensitivity, which should not yet have appeared in their school curriculumn.

On the other hand, The relative lack of worldly experience could be their springboard to creative realms beyond the mind of the seasoned professional who knows and abides by the Do’s and Dont’s.

“In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities, but in the expert’s mind there are few.” - Shunryu Suzuki, Japanese Zen Priest.

Stanley is also the author of a book, eMillions: Behind-The-Scenes Stories of 14 Successful Internet Millionaires. I regret that I’m not inspired enough to purchase the book to appreciate the teen blogger’s creative inputs. Must be all the recent negative people around me.

These teens bloggers have taken big strides into the Social Media arena, with substantial visitor traffic and Twitter followers. What will be interesting to see in time, is if they can engage the professionals and veterans in meaningful discourse, providing insight and feedback on issues from their unique perspective, and that the professionals and veterans would give them due credit when they deserve it.


btw, when Junde was 15,
He made his first website with Microsoft Publisher 97 (Academic copy), and then later went on to do a series of sites on www.geocities.com/junde2, which he no longer updates because he lost the account and Geocities did not bother to entertain the kiddo who wrote in to complain in kiddo language.

 
 
 

Guangzhouer: Southern China Commentary

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

It’s here! Guangzhouer, the Southern China answer to Shanghaiist albeit with humble beginnings.

It’s and effort by me and Jay Sun (ABC-of-sorts expat in GZ), to present things modestly through the prism of our Ameri-Singa-Sino-Southern perspective, and in the process share informative and entertaining nougats of Guangzhou life. We are lazy people, if someone else had already done it, we wouldn’t be sitting here typing this in the plural personal pronoun. As for how we plan to evolve … laissez-faire! How else would a Southerner do it?

We would like to invite all to our blog, and feel free to leave on and off-topic comments. We are also looking for guest writers, food reviewers, people who wish to be featured/interviewed. This is our little gesture of further self-promotion and also giving something back to the wonderful communities in GZ.

Visit Guangzhouer: Southern China Commentary now