Sonntag, 24. August 2008

Most emotional moment of the Olympics in Beijing


Most emotional and truthful moment of the Beijing Games (for me)



All for love - Matthias Steiner won Gold for his dead wife - Olympia 2008 (Youtube)

... Matthias Steiner, of Germany, played out the great drama of his life yesterday, seizing an opportunity to lift the world above his head and then to sob his heart out for his dead wife, Susann, standing on the stage with her picture in one hand and his gold medal in the other.

She died in a car crash a year ago and since that terrible day Steiner has flung himself into his sport as if it was the only thing that could ever make life bearable.
...
Matthias Steiner’s triumph is worth the wait (Times online)
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/olympics/article4567241.ece

Mittwoch, 13. August 2008

Faked!? Yes, a difference in mentality – not surprising


A post at athlists.com has been enthusiastically digged (up to now 2,429 diggs!). Athlists.com finds itself in naive posture, I think, when listing some phenomena and summ it up as "Fake Olympics".

The deeper question is, what is behind the difference on the surface? The Western hemisphere has a different appreciation of authenticity, the "real thing", originality and feels deceived, when things like this happen.

I don't know enough about Chinese mentality, but I suppose it is deeper rooted than in the decades of stupid indoctrination of the "Communist Party" (which is more similar to feudalist structure and with so much corruption all over the country). Manic striving to perfection ends in
simulation and inhumanity. The idea of antique Olympics was quite the opposite of what is it today I suppose.

Athlists » Blog Archive » The Fake Olympics: How China Is Using Every Trick in the Book to Dazzle The World http://www.athlists.com/?p=36

Image source http://www.athlists.com/?p=36

Dienstag, 12. August 2008

The "tag movement" around #080808 (you must have twitter)


That cool 080808 mashup guys





Chinese Tweeters Celebrate Olympics With #080808


By STEVEN SCHWANKERT, IDG News Service\Beijing Bureau, IDG
Published: August 8, 2008

A new online movement less than 24 hours old seeks to spread the Olympic spirit among users of the Twitter micro-blogging site.

Using "#080808" (pronounced "tag 080808"), a symbol for the date of the Olympics opening day, August 8, 2008, is "just for fun, a way to 'write down' the day," said Steven Lin, one of the movement's co-founders, who works for official Olympic Web site Sohu.com as a project manager. ...

#080808 | Blog: New York Times Coverage of #080808 http://tag080808.com/2008/08/nytimes-coverage-of-080808-080808.html

Check it out: http://tag080808.appspot.com/


Just do it! Create a web page to collect all user generated content tagged with "#080808" all over the world? ...
#080808 | Blog: Junyu: How the mash-up was created http://tag080808.com/2008/08/junyu-how-mash-up-was-created.html

Compare the tag's fitness with the alternatives
  1. BEST #080808 - Twitter Search http://search.twitter.com/search?q=+%23080808+
  2. #olympics - Twitter Search http://search.twitter.com/search?q=+%23olympics
  3. #bg08 - Twitter Search http://search.twitter.com/search?q=+%23bg08
(search.twitter.com shows no numbers, but the popularity can be estimated when you look down to the date of the last tweet on the first page)

tag080808, 080808tag,

Sonntag, 10. August 2008

Good news: The Great Fire Wall comes down (Guardian)

... Just a week ago, it was impossible to connect to Chinese Wikipedia or the the Chinese BBC News site via a public ISP in China. Your browser either didn't respond or displayed an error message telling you that it couldn't connect to the site. What happened? They were blocked by the Great Fire Wall. Why? Because they were regarded as "dangerous sites... harmful information intending to demonise China and its people". The Chinese authorities think their people need no more information than what the official news agency feeds them. Or rather, they dare not allow them to find out more.

But things are changing. At the beginning of August, these sites suddenly became available to internet users in China. ...
Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/aug/10/censorship.china?gusrc=rss&feed=worldnews


I appreciate this and hope it will last.

Samstag, 9. August 2008

Behind the facade


The free flow of information is the purpose of the internet.

When your government does not like you to see something it is blocking this free flow.

Make the test:


世界人权宣言 / Universal Declaration of Human Rights
http://www.amnesty.org/

Chinese language page

Amnesty International Report 2008 http://thereport.amnesty.org/eng/Regions/Asia-Pacific/China

To remind all participants I have changed my twitter logo/avatar.

Donnerstag, 7. August 2008

Cool - BBC's Olympic Map shows tweets and blogs

This picture to the left is only a screenshot of course and NOT interactive.

Go to original site news.bbc.co.uk/..., roll over the mobile phone icon and latest twitter tweets occur. Same with the other icon – showing latest blog posts of BBC bloggers.

Mittwoch, 6. August 2008

China's hunt for medals and the price of childhood


Just saw a documentary film about the cruel "Chinese way" of training children. The Red Race. It was disgusting and makes one sad and angry. I think that China has a long way of civilisation-as-humanism ahead.

Image source: SILVERDOCS | Festival http://silverdocs.com/festival/films/2008/red-race/


It’s clear what Chao Gan, director of The Red Race, want us to feel about China’s gymnastics training schools for children. The documentary is mostly a series of scenes in which adorable kids are brought to tears by screaming coaches who push them past their breaking points physically and emotionally.
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/display.php?id=35722


more: Children taking the strain in China's hunt for medals
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1904325/Children-taking-the-strain-in-Chinas-hunt-for-medals.html