QQ for the iPhone? Well that is what LumaQQ set out to do and have succeeded. Check it out and download it for yourself now that it is out of beta!
iJiang is the latest project from wahkiz, a developer on the modmyifone.com community. iJiang if said in chinese, sounds a lot like “love to talk”. And that is the whole point of this app. This app provides the essential chinese phrases for everyday speech.
Ok. So most of us are well aware of the Chinese Chat software, QQ. Chances are, if you know a Chinese person, or someone learning Chinese, you know a registered QQ user. But until recently there was no English sign-up page or a Mac version of the QQ application...
Just two weeks after Baidu Hi launched its public beta test, Baidu announced on yesterday that over 1 million users has tried Baidu Hi. An IM service from Baidu will definitely attracts users’ attention, similar to Google’s GTalk. The real challenge is how many percentage of registered users will r
Kaiser Kuo's review of QQ currency and fears of it contributing to RMB money supply and inflation, and also stock price manipulation for Tencent. Virtual currency fans should read this!
Wars: corporate, ideological and personal are now being fought online...
According to estimates from the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC), Beijing research firm BDA and the online market anlayst Nielsen/NetRatings, China has overtaken the US in the number of internet users at around 220 million. These numbers were estimated based on the online growth of
This post goes into the following questions:
How did IPR begin? When did it develop in China and what was unique about IPR in China? What is the current situation today for IPR?
One should be careful to equate fast growth, large numbers, and impressive actions with that of how China will overtake other first world nations in the near future. Strong growth now, does not mean it will continue to do so in the future.
Yes, the growth and money put into China has been tremen
I happened upon a podcast interview over at Thomas Crampton’s blog of Duncan Hewitt, veteran China correspondent and best-selling author of Getting Rich First, who thinks that money and angry people will play a growing role in the battle against China’s Great Firewall. Though I agree with his comme
Innovative tv format usuable for international knowlegde competence competition.
NY Times asserts China is sucking "lost iPhones" from US market. Same analysis I did three weeks ago, with revenue impacts in US & UK markets.