China’s Scalping Problem

It happened again: total hell broke out as the iPhone 4S went on sale. Angered scalpers who didn’t get their phone pelted eggs at the Apple Store.

The problem: The whole system.

As of late, the world’s largest “migration” of sorts — the Spring Travel Peak Travel Season — is in full swing. Thankfully, photo ID is required to get a ticket. This means that those with legitimate needs can get around with a valid ticket. High speed rail has been doing exceptionally well this year, helping get riders to destinations faster and packing in far more riders than regular rail.

Apple needs a similar “real ID” system for at least select new products such as the iPhone. It needs to set up a blacklist (similar to that at the railways) of scalpers, and deny iPhones to them. It needs to give iPhones out to end users, not scalpers. Only a “real ID” system would work here.

The police must be harsher still as well. In a capital where social stability is of paramount importance — indeed, the capital of the world’s most populous country and the second largest economy worldwide. The legislature would do well to enact anti-scalping acts to put the scalpers out of business. On wider topics, we need to make it economically better in such a way that scalpers find that their “biz” just won’t work any more.

We can’t stand here doing nothing. Apple and the whole system, so to speak, have a job on their hands. As the founder of the beimac circle community, and one of the major leaders there, we have to put the interests of the user base at the top.

Starting A New Journey With Penn Olson

I am pleased to announce that I’m starting a new journey today with Penn Olson (an Asia-centric English-language tech, mobile, and startup blog), thus bringing me back into the tech world. I’m now officially a blogger (contributor) at Penn Olson. And here’s my first article

Willis Wee, Rick Martin and Steve Millward got me interested into the next big tech gig my end after a brief tech blogging shtick in late 2007 (which lasted just a few months). Back then, I was in charge of “blognation China”, which was part of the then-”blognation” network. Although I ultimately didn’t get the “final package”, I still had enough dough my end to keep me alive and living very well, thanks to my many other commitments.

“blognation China” tested my tech involvement. I was quoted by world media including Spiegel magazine of Germany, and in the three months I “went it alone” on the China site while still with a very cordial and friendly site-wide team, I was told that I grew this China site to being one of the “top three” country-specific sites. This was amazing. It’d be an involvement I’d do at the Starbucks, add in a bit of little-league offbeat or unplugged tech tastiness, and still be able to fit in my hectic lifestyle. News would be updated daily, including over the weekend or during holidays, and they’d be short, brief and “understandable” (which to me as a PhD Candidate so-called meant no super-difficult academiaspeak!).

I now re-enter the tech blogging world with the amazing gang at Penn Olson. We basically met the day I got off the train, fresh and back from a three-week teaching assignment from northeastern China, and agreed to start almost immediately. I will be covering Greater China-central tech, mobile and startup gems, with a focus on the first two. (Those of you who read my articles at “blognation China” will know that you’re getting pretty much the same that you did four years back!) I’ll also be doing weekend specials on little-league and offbeat / unplugged tech stories. I’ll give particular focus to the iWorld (chez Apple) and to the Weibosphere (and the Chinese Twittersphere). And I’ll add (especially over the weekend) a little bit about the Chinese tech world with a little rail flavour…

(It probably makes sense for a rider of the rails at over 20,000 km for just this year…)

Please, folks: I welcome roses and stinky eggs my way when it comes to my articles. And although I don’t advocate hate mail, I am ready to be seriously grilled in the comments box on every article I do. Write me about what you’d like to see from me: I’m alive, breathing and responsive. (Although you might have to wait a few hours should you email me at 3 AM…) Finally, you can always contact me by email or tweet me. I’m no invisible secretive agent, nor do I bite your head off should you use anything with the words “no”, “not” or anything like that. So please — let’s get the convo started and keep it a healthy conversation…

PS: Sorry folks… I was a tad too excited and got the spelling wrong. It’s Penn Olson, not Penn “Olsen“. I don’t know if I can blame my particular accent on this…

Redoing the Foursquare Beijing Subway Venues

As of late, tweep @bfishadow has been redoing the Beijing Subway venues. I love this, but I’m going to be redoing these venues based on my principles as set below:

  • Foursquare is an English-language site; this is why I’m going to be putting English text before text in the local language (ie, Chinese).
  • The names of the stations will be as such: Sunhe Subway 地铁孙河站 — and the reason I’m doing that is because I’d like to keep it short and sweet.
  • I’m going to be realigning pins on Google Maps according to the satellite view — the map view in China is flawed and off-centre.
  • Finally, for every station, I’ll write a description telling you which lines there are — and if it’s above-ground, underground, ground level, or mixed.

That reminds me: I’ve got to get my butt back in the Subway soon…

Blogging Versus Tweeting…

I have to give to over to Jian Shuo Wang, who has been faithfully blogging for a full decade since 2001. If you want stuff from Shanghai, fresh off someone who’s been there, you’d be well served at Jian Shuo’s place. Recently, he posted his own views about whether the blog is better than the microblog.

To which I’ve the following to add “in light of my actual circumstances”…

  1. I blog because I did that since late 2005 (I tweeted only as of late 2007);
  2. I blog because Twitter and Weibo limit me to 140 characters a tweet (which to a Big Mouth like me is considered cruel and unusual punishment);
  3. I’d enjoy an extra “propaganda channel” (actually, no… just pulling your leg)… actually, I’ve stuff I have on the blog that I don’t have on my tweets because I can think it out a little more here…

Jian Shuo’s one of the more active bloggers there, and he’s a reliable source if you’re into technology. We met many times, most recently with @elliottng in mid-2010. Like me, he’s into Starbucks! I’m absolutely jealous of the guy, who claims he lives two minutes away from the Siren. I want that for Beijing!…

Angry Birds in Nanjing!

Angry Birds in Nanjing! by DavidFeng
Angry Birds in Nanjing!, a photo by DavidFeng on Flickr.

It’s a little amazing where you can pick ‘em Angry Birds out these days… although I’m not sure whether or not this is a legit Rovio product, I’m pretty amazed that I met those birds in a Nanjing department store.

Tracy and I are big-time fans of those Angry Birds. I like the “flip-back” Green Bird, while Tracy likes the explosive Black Bird. We took this pic about a week ago, while we were in Nanjing.

China Joins World in Mourning Sudden Loss of Great Leader Steve Jobs

The Apple people of China, as well as the entire general public, join their American and worldwide counterparts in unspeakable pain as the terrifying news of the Great Leader Steve Jobs’s sudden and unfortunate passing away spread like wildfire, with the shock of the news painfully stabbing the hearts of Mac enthusiasts and users everywhere.

At the Sanlitun Apple Store, the first such store in the People’s Republic of China, people gathered outside and inside the Apple Store to mourn the loss of the Great Leader. Dedicated space was graciously allocated inside the store, along with a picture in black and white of the Great Leader. The masses gathered outside the Apple Store to take pictures of the flowers and of pictures of the Great Leader.

David Feng, one of the founders of the Beijing Macintosh User Group (now the beimac circle), represented the entire community by laying a white flower to remember the deceased Great Leader. He arrived with his wife. Earlier, he, like many others, sent email to Apple, to mourn the loss of the Great Leader and to pledge unconditional support for the new generation Apple leadership under CEO Tim Cook.

The masses also came out for the mourning in a myriad of different ways in other cities around the nation.

At the newly-opened Nanjing East Road Apple Store in Shanghai, China’s biggest city, to remember the beloved late leader, people left bitten apples as a symbolic gesture to their beloved company, Apple Inc.

A 19-year old designer from the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region designed a touching and striking icon, where the head of the late leader “became” the bite in the apple.

Government-owned Chinese Central Television’s Chinese-language 24-hour news channel dedicated 15-20 minutes of uninterrupted airtime to mourn the loss of the Great Leader and exhibited his magnificent efforts during his 56 years of life.

The people of China join their American counterparts and counterparts everywhere in remembering the late Great Leader. His body has passed on but he will forever remain in the minds of everyone, and the spirit of the Great Leader will forever be the foundation of Apple.

The Great Leader Steve Jobs is immortal.

Rest in peace, Steve.

Angry Birds in Harbin

Tracy, I, and her family were up in Harbin, northeastern China, in mid-July 2011. We were there to get ourselves legally married — but also for a totally unexpected dose of Angry Birds up north northeast…

Nobody would have imagined that up in the place historically known as Manchuria, there’s a secret Angry Birds fanbase. Either that, or some enterprising mall by the well-known Harbin Central Avenue decided to run a summer sale — by bringing out Angry Birds.

We don’t know if Rovio endorses it. We know that we loved. Tracy knows me as a secret fanboy of the Green Bird (I call it the Flip Bird, as it flips back; in Chinese, the secret codename is zhefan niao (折返鳥), or U-Turn Bird). She loves the Black Bird! That’s one of my favourites as well.

It’s autumn now, so I suppose the summer sale’s gone and the birds and the pigs are thinking of hibernating a little for the upcoming winter (well, you know, the birds also have an option to flip to destinations further south). But the summer 2011 will always be remembered chez nous as the summer of Angry Birds in the northeast of China.

Does Rovio want the first Angry Birds theme park in Harbin?

Cloud Computing in Baby Language

Ordinary hard drive: My files are on my hard drive.
Cloud drive: My files will ultimately be on someone else’s drive.

That’s how I differentiate between the two. The files on my local Mac will forever belong to me — and the same will apply to all other Mac users as well. Lest someone breaks in your system, your files are safe with you for life. (Or until the HD clicks into death. Yikes.)

But were you thinking of unloading your secret passwords onto, say, Dropbox? Not that I detest Dropbox — in fact, quite the opposite is true chez moi. But I don’t think a cloud drive’s a safe bet (yet) for your 50-character long banking passcode for the simple (conservative) reason that you don’t (physically) own your drive. Worst case scenario: your enemy owns the drive. (Very rare indeed — but who knows?) Now that’s going to kind of hurt…

Let’s say you’re storing files you shouldn’t. The worst thing you can do to dump it is to incinerate your Mac if it’s on your local drive. But on a cloud drive? Short of knowing which exact drive(s) your file’s on, you’d have to bring a whole data centre to their makers, and that’d be one heck of an offence.

Of course, there’s something else about cloud drives: the fact that you’d be able to travel without, say, the need for a clunky laptop (which with the iPad and the MacBook Air are no longer clunky thingies — and the 16-pound large Mac Portable was a late 1980s device just about every last soul on the planet has already forgotten about). I personally find that more comforting. The faregates chez the Beijing Subway were obviously not designed for regular Fatburger patrons, and more than once did I take a fair bit of time to clear these. Without a laptop (and with your file saved on to a cloud drive), you’d be easily be able to make it through the gates and onto a crowded subway train.

And if you were tuning into Sliding Doors, two different worlds might await you — depending on if you caught your train — or not…