Archives
Categories
- 1510 Digest
- 2008 Beijing Olympic Games
- Advertisement – sponsored content
- Advertising and Marketing
- Airlines
- Announcements
- Architecture
- Art
- Automobiles
- BBS
- Beijing
- Blogs
- Books
- Breaking News
- Bureaucracy
- Business
- Business and Finance
- Business and the Economy
- Censorship
- Charity
- China and Africa
- China and foreign relations
- China Books
- China Information
- China Media Landscape
- China's neighborhood
- Cigarettes
- Comics
- Communist chic
- Computing
- Consumer Culture
- Corruption
- Crime
- Crime and Corruption
- Danwei FM
- Danwei Noon Report
- Danwei Picks
- Danwei TV
- Danwei Week
- Disaster Relief
- Editorial
- Electronic games
- Environmental problems
- Events
- Fashion
- Featured Video
- Festivals
- Film
- Financial crisis
- Food
- Foreign affairs
- Foreign media on China
- Freedom of expression
- From the Web
- Front Page of the Day
- Government
- Great Wall Fresh
- Guest Contributor
- Health and Medicine
- Health care and pharmaceuticals
- Here comes trouble
- History
- Humor
- Information
- Intellectual Property
- Internet
- Internet and Media
- Internet culture
- Internet video
- IP and Law
- Jobs available
- Land rights
- Language
- Law
- Learning Chinese
- Magazines
- Maps
- Media
- Media and Advertising
- Media and business gossip
- Media business
- Media regulation
- Migrant workers
- Milk
- Mobile phone and wireless
- Music
- Music, Books and Art
- Nationalism
- Natural Phenomena
- Net Nanny Follies
- Newspapers
- Oil, Energy and Resources
- Olympic Diary — Beijing 2008
- Olympic Nights
- Opinion
- Panda bears
- Paralympics
- People
- Photography
- Podcasts
- Propaganda
- Protests
- Public Relations
- Public toilets
- Publishing
- Quality control
- Radio
- Real Estate
- Recently on Danwei
- Recession 2009
- Rumors
- Scholarship and education
- School and Education
- Security
- Sex, Drugs and Vice
- Sexuality
- Shanghai
- Sichuan Earthquake
- Sinica Week
- Snark
- Space
- Sports
- State media
- Survey
- The Countryside
- The department of deranged foreigners
- The department of scary Santas
- The Earnshaw Vault
- The passing of the old guard
- The Thomas Crampton Channel
- Theater
- Tourism
- Traditions
- Translation
- Transport
- Trends and Buzz
- TV
- Typography
- Uncategorized
- Urban Culture and Cities
- Video
- Visas
- Wildlife
- Wildlife, Nature and the Environment
- Wireless and mobile Internet
Tags
- @altcat
- @classic
- advertising
- Beijing
- Beijing Times
- blogs
- books
- business
- CCTV
- censorship
- corruption
- crime
- Danwei.com
- earthquake
- education
- environment
- film
- GAPP
- history
- Hu Jintao
- Internet
- journalism
- law
- magazines
- media
- media regulation
- music
- net nanny
- New Express
- newspapers
- Olympics
- Oriental Outlook
- real estate
- SARFT
- Shanghai
- Sichuan
- Southern Metropolis Daily
- The Beijing News
- Tibet
- translation
- video
- Wang Xiaofeng
- Wen Jiabao
- Xinhua
- Yangtse Evening Post
Meta
Author Archives: Adam Schokora
More free Chinese music from Neocha
Neocha.com, a social networking site for Chinese creatives, has released a new and improved version of its popular music player NEXT.
Posted in Internet, Music
Tagged creative business, innovation, Internet, music, Neocha.com
Comments Off on More free Chinese music from Neocha
Nial O’Connor Introduces Jing Jing
In this video short, Nial O’Connor presents Jing Jing – the title character of the comic – and discusses her character, powers, and world.
Posted in Comics, Featured Video, Mobile phone and wireless, Video
Tagged Adam Schokora, animation, comic, comic books, illustration, Jing Jing, Jing Squared, Nara, Nial O'Connor, Shanghai, Zeldz Magnoonis
Comments Off on Nial O’Connor Introduces Jing Jing
Carol Lin: “The Flavor of Freedom”
In this interview, Carol Lin (a.k.a. The Carol), a prolific Taiwanese blogger, microblogger, social activist and an all-around digital maven, who is also well known for her photography, shares her thoughts on the lack of development in the Chinese web 2.0 / Internet industry, Taiwan’s uncensored Internet, the opportunity average Chinese people got to “taste the flavor of freedom in an unblocked Internet” during the Olympics, and digitally savvy Chinese netizens.
Posted in Blogs, Featured Video, Internet
Tagged bloggers, Blogging, Carol Lin, CNBloggerCon, CNBloggercon Interviews
Comments Off on Carol Lin: “The Flavor of Freedom”
Blogger interview: Guo Daxia
An interview with Guo “Daxia” (郭”大虾”), a controversial and prolific grassroots Chinese blogger well-known for tackling many of China’s most sensitive social issues.
Posted in Blogs, Censorship, Freedom of expression, Internet
Tagged bloggers, censorship, CNBloggerCon, CNBloggercon Interviews, Guo Daxia
Comments Off on Blogger interview: Guo Daxia
Sharism: A Mind Revolution
Isaac Mao writes about sharing on the World Wide Web.
Posted in Internet culture, People
Tagged blog, Blogging, creativity, Isaac Mao, sharing
Comments Off on Sharism: A Mind Revolution
China’s first blogger: Isaac Mao
In this interview, Isaac Mao (毛向辉), China’s first blogger and a self proclaimed “free philosopher of sharism,” talks about how many major news stories in China first break online with local netizens using blogs and other social media tools to find, share, and uncover the truth about issues the mainstream / traditional media aren’t allowed to cover. Mao goes on to speak optimistically about China’s social progress and evolution, assuring that the country is moving toward a modern society very much worth looking forward to.
Posted in Blogs, Internet, Media, People
Tagged blogs, CNBloggerCon, CNBloggercon Interviews, Isaac Mao, social media, society
Comments Off on China’s first blogger: Isaac Mao
Shi Feng on education and the Internet in China
An interview with Shi Feng (石峰), a drop out from one of China’s most prestigious universities turned blogger, talks about the growing rift between education and social needs / society in China, and calls for everyone to participate in a transformation of China’s education system.
Posted in Blogs, Featured Video, Internet, People
Tagged blog, CNBloggercon Interviews, education reform, interviews, Shi Feng
Comments Off on Shi Feng on education and the Internet in China
Teacher Gui: Buy It or Get Out
93 year old Teacher Gui (Ms. Gui Biqing, 桂碧清) talks about her experiences with customer service in the times of government-assigned jobs and the “big rice pot,” a cousin of the ‘iron rice bowl.’
Posted in People
Tagged 56minus1, big rice pot, customer service, Gui Biqing, Gui Laoshi, interviews, Teacher Gui, 桂碧清
Comments Off on Teacher Gui: Buy It or Get Out
Bei Feng at China Blogger Conference
An interview with Wen Yunchao aka Bei Feng, a well-known journalist and blogger at the forefront of current social and political events in China, talks about censorship and the way netizens get around it.
Posted in Blogs, Featured Video, Internet, People
Tagged Bei Feng, blogs, CNBloggercon Interviews, Wen Yunchao
Comments Off on Bei Feng at China Blogger Conference
Liu Xiaoyuan: I fought the law and the law won
Adam Schokora interviews Liu Xiaoyuan at CNBloggercon 2008.
Posted in Blogs, Featured Video, Internet
Tagged CNBloggerCon, CNBloggercon Interviews, interview, Liu Xiaoyuan, Schokora
Comments Off on Liu Xiaoyuan: I fought the law and the law won