Roman Tol
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13 May 2008, 2:03 pm
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tags: andrew chadwick, blogging, China, co-creation, collaborative government, collective intelligence, conference, cuiming pang, department of poitics and international relations, digital era governance, egham, greece, helen margetts, hezbollah, internet history, juba baghdad sniper, lisa McInerney, maura conway, micah sifry, michael turk, myspace, open source politics, participatory culture, paul zube, politics, politics 2.0, rachel gibson, rachel hayes, robin mansell, royal holloway university of london, severine arsene, terrorist videos, time person of the year 2006, trickle-up politics, web 2.0, youtube
Written for the Institute of Network Cultures
Crossposted at Institute of Network Cultures Weblog
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On April 17th and 18th 2008 the department of Politics and International Relations at the Royal Holloway University of London (RHUL) organized Politics: Web 2.0: an international conference. The conference was large and diverse, with six distinguished keynotes,…
Pieter-Paul Walraven
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09 May 2008, 1:36 pm
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tags: 51.com, baidu, Beijing, China, ChinaVortex, Culurefish, Danwei, Douban, Giant Interactive, HDT, hipihi, ItalkI, JL McGregor, MObinoDE, Novoking, Ogilvy, Perfect World, Plus8star, PPLive, Shanda, Shanghai, Sina, Softbank, Spill Group Asia, Tencent, tudou, web 2.0, WPP, Youku
It has been a while since I wrote my first post on international expansion of Chinese Internet companies and my experiences here in China. I wrote the post during a train ride from Guangzhou to Shanghai. A lot has happened after that. I have met so many interesting people, visited companies, and when there was time I also tried to…
Finally, after a 24 hour delay due to an annual trade fair in Guangzhou I am on my way to Shanghai. While listening to the snoring of my opposite bunk bed neighbor, smelling the noodles of the next door restaurant compartment and watching the rice fields blended with factories pass by, I will summarize some of my experiences and findings…
Pieter-Paul Walraven
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05 April 2008, 6:28 pm
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tags: baidu, China, Danwei, Giant Interactive, hipihi, Internet, JL McGregor, Netease, Ogilvy, Perfect World, Sina, Sohu, Tencent, Thesis, tudou
This Friday it is finally happening; I will head off to China for my research! After months of stalking people with interview requests and reading everything I could about Internet in China, I am going to visit some of the most innovative and prominent Chinese Internet companies. I am really looking forward to traveling through China, finally meeting all the…
I am currently reading a lot for my research and an interesting book I finished a few days ago is Fast Boat to China from Andrew Ross. In Fast Boat to China Andrew approaches the global outsourcing trend in a different way than most other writers on this subject…
The last few weeks it has been in the news numerous times; in Guangzhou, South China, snow and ice storms have stranded tens of millions of people, most of them migrant workers traveling to their families to celebrate the Chinese New Year. Since the storms began on January 10 officials have tried to keep more travelers from coming to the…
In general, a search engine is presented as an objective tool, although it is its underlying code which defines the possible outcomes.
An integral part of a search engine is the spelling control which suggests alternative words if it suspects that you have misspelled your search terms. However, since the early days of Usenet, misspellings have been used as a way to overcome censorship.
Nietzsche’s criticism of the mass culture emerged along with the rise of popular literature, journalism, and the modern press. With the explosive rise of weblogs, mobile devices, and online video, traditional journalism has been contested and challenged by a new model of journalism called citizen journalism. With Nietzsche’s critique of mass society in mind, can we actually consider citizen journalism…
Last Friday, I attended Creative China, a partner event at Picnic 2007. One of the main topics of this seminar was the use of Internet versus government regulations and Internet restrictions in China. The Internet is by no means a tool for self-expression, if it was up to the Chinese government to decide, but in reality, Chinese users are vehemently…