links for 2007-04-20
Aggregated Source: RConversation
April 20, 2007|
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"The words are out that Google’s new released Chinese Input Method Editor seems to be using similar vocabulary library with Sogou. ..." (missed this one earlier while sick)
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"Communist Party journals and the state-run news media have published a stream of commentaries by retired officials and academics on “political system reform” and the need for “socialist democracy,”..." I recall similar things being reported befor
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"A debate is emerging on the internet whether Google has for its newly released pinyin input system stolen the vocabulary of its competitor Sogou." (Catching up on a story I missed while sick)
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"For six years, the Bush administration, aided by Justice Department political appointees, has pursued an aggressive legal effort to restrict voter turnout in key battleground states in ways that favor Republican political candidates..."
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An awesome idea! PodCorps.org is "an all-volunteer team of audio/video producers who record and publish important spoken-word events anywhere in the world."
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"Doug’s idea is to create a corps of volunteer stringers who can show up at these events with their digital recorders, process the digital audio, and then publish it — typically at the Internet Archive."
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"As communicators - both private sector and public sector - attempt to understand the rapidly growing impact of the internet in China, I suggest this read taken from KNOWLEDGE WHARTON."
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"Yahoo China will change its name to China Yahoo after May 8, reports ChinaByte quoting Alibaba and Yahoo China insiders."
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The original Chinese-language article about Yahoo! China's name change on ChinaByte.
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"The intermediate court in Hangzhou ruled yesterday that the right to watchdog journalism is a "public right" (公共权利) -- that journalists doing monitoring, in other words, are performing a public duty -- and that Meng is therefore guilty of the com
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"A protester calling for free computer software and open source programming crashed a speech Friday by Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates at one of China's top universities."
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iYee in Shanghai has photos of the open source protester disrupting Bill Gates. It's not clear who took the photos.
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"It was a great picture and an irresistible story, but the saga of China’s nail house was more complicated than the media – Western and Chinese – let on. We can thank bloggers for digging into the reality."
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"First they commission a major profile of media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s young Chinese wife, then they spike the story. Could it be hazardous to upset Rupert down in Oz?"
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