Archive for October, 2009

Japanese Oda continues good form to lead men’s short program at figure skating GP

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

Japanese skater Nobunari Oda continued his good form to lead the men’s short program at Cup of China ISU Grand Prix of figure skating here on Friday.

Oda, winner of the French Grand Prix earlier this month, posted a fair score of 83.35 points for his almost perfect spins and light-footed jumps to the music of Totentanz by M. Mrvica, took a slim lead for second-placed Sergei Voronov of Russia, who finished with 81.40.

Evan Lysacek of the United States, world champion in 2009, finished a disappointing third place with 80.80.

The 2009 European silver medalist Samuel Contesti of Italy took the fourth with 72.08, while Yang Chao of China finished fifth with 65.10. Another Chinese skater Xu Ming ranked 10th with 60.12 at the 12-man competition.

“I am very satisfied with my performance today,” said Oda, who won the 2005 World Junior Figure Skating Championships, becoming just the second Japanese man in history to win that competition, after Daisuke Takahashi.

“I wasn’t tired in France, but I felt tired here today. I made a few mistakes, but I think I will improve a lot in tomorrow’s free skating.”

“I want to skate very well this season, so I pushed myself really hard and it did work,” added Oda, who is known for being able to get very high scores without performing a quadruple jump because he has such good skating skills.

It may not be a good day for Evan Lysaced, as the world champion only settled for a third place in the short program.

“For the most part I was satisfied,” said the 24-year-old, who became the first American man since Todd Eldredge in 1996 to win the world title. “This is my first competition of the season, and I felt quite nervous. It definitely revitalized my passion and gave me much confidence.”

“It was a pretty new program and I really like the music and the costume. I hope it will be a good start for the season.” He said.

Lysaced was a member of the U.S. Olympic team at the 2006 Winter Olympics, where he placed fourth in the men’s event.

The yearly Cup of China ISU GP of figure skating was held on Oct. 30 to Nov. 1. Skaters will compete for a global prize money of 180,000 U.S. dollars per individual event and receive points according to their placements.

Top six skaters/couples of the series will proceed to the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final in Tokyo, Japan.

China to pursue trade case against US automakers

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

China has told the US that it will take steps that could lead to higher tariffs on imports of autos made by GM, Chrysler and Ford.

Steve Collins, president of industry trade group the American Automotive Policy Council, said Wednesday that US officials have told the three Detroit automakers that China is expected to begin an investigation under anti-dumping laws into their business practices as soon as next week.

If the investigation concludes that the companies receive government subsidies, or sell products in China at below-market prices, China could slap tariffs on US auto imports.

The move is the latest trade dispute between the two countries, which are already fighting over steel pipes, chicken products, and pirated movies and music. The trade spats worsened after the Obama administration last month announced up to 35 percent duties on Chinese-made tires, to be imposed for the next three years.

The US auto companies export only about 9,000 cars to China annually, Collins said. GM manufactures and sells more than a million cars a year in China, though those sales wouldn’t be affected. Mercedes-Benz, BMW and Nissan also export cars to China from plants in the United States, but those won’t be included in the investigation, Collins said.

GM and Chrysler have received billions of dollars in aid from the government’s $700 billion bailout fund, though Ford has not.

An e-mail to a spokeswoman for US Trade Representative Ron Kirk was not immediately returned. US trade officials, including Kirk and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, are currently in Hangzhou, China for high-level economic talks. President Obama will make his first visit to China on November 15-18.

Greg Martin, a spokesman for GM in Washington, said GM wanted to study the documents before commenting. Ford spokesman Mike Moran and Chrysler spokeswoman Linda Becker deferred comment to the trade group, and messages were left for two Chrysler spokeswomen Wednesday evening.

“The documents containing the charges were presented to the US government this week but have not yet been translated. Therefore we are not in a position to comment at this time,” Collins said in a statement.

China is an important market for the US automakers, especially GM and Ford, whose sales have been growing there while developed markets like the US and Europe sputter.

Yet if China does impose tariffs, it’s not likely to hurt the automakers much. GM and Ford sell hundreds of thousands of vehicles there, but most are made in China. GM so far this year has sold 1.3 million cars and trucks in China, most of them built there in a joint venture with Chinese automaker SAIC.

Ford also builds most of the vehicles it sells in China at factories there, but has only a 2 percent market share. Last month the Dearborn, Michigan, automaker announced plans to build a new assembly plant in China to make the next-generation Focus compact car.

Ford has sold 316,639 vehicles in China from January through September, with last month’s sales jumping nearly 80 percent from the year before.

Chrysler has been pursuing partnerships in China and now only exports only a small number of vehicles to China.

Total auto sales in China so far this year have surpassed those in the US, giving China a wide lead over the US as the world’s top auto market. Through September, 9.66 million vehicles were sold in China, up 34 percent from the same period last year.

During the same time, US sales plunged 27 percent to 7.8 million units, according to Autodata Corp., a research firm.

Sales in China are expected to continue climbing to 12.6 million units in 2009, while analysts say US light vehicle sales for the year will wind up around the 10.5 million level.

U2 make history on YouTube

Monday, October 26th, 2009

U2, the Irish rock band from Dublin, made history Sunday performing a concert that was streamed live on the Internet to a worldwide audience.

While around 96,000 packed the packed the Rose Bowl on Sunday night to watch the group, millions more tuned in to a special YouTube channel. The event was all part of the U2 360° Tour which began on 30 June 2009 and features European and North American stadium dates in 2009. Additional shows are expected in 2010.

The band performed many of their fans favorite hits including “With or Without You”, “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” and “Where the Streets Have No Name”.

Michele Flannery, YouTube’s music manager, said the site was “thrilled” to team up with “one of the world’s greatest bands” and said YouTube was “always looking for new ways to connect fans around the world with their favorite artists, and this is the perfect opportunity to do just that.”

It wasn’t the first time YouTube had hosted a live streaming event. In November 2008 YouTube Live broadcast to the world and hosted artists including the Black Eyed Peas, the rapper will.i.am and singer Katy Perry amongst others.

However, Sunday’s event featured perhaps the highest profile artist to be streamed on YouTube. In November 2000, Madonna streamed a live concert she was performing in Brixton in south London. Her webcast, which was hosted by Microsoft, was criticized at the time for being unstable. Today’s broadband connections now make such experiences more enjoyable for the viewer.

Peking Opera master lives on

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

This year marks the 115th anniversary of the birth of Mei Lanfang, considered as one of the greatest Peking Opera artists in modern history. Mei Lanfang is known for his portrayal of dan characters, a type of young female role. He founded his own innovative style of the art form that continues to evolve and further increase in popularity to this day.

Peking Opera began just over 200 years ago and up until 1949, men played all of the roles, including the female characters. During his stage life, Mei added his own flair to traditional female roles, shaping a style of his own and forming the Mei school of Peking Opera. He is also credited as popularizing the art form overseas.

“My father broke the distinction between almost all types of female roles and founded the Mei school,” explained Mei Baojiu, son of Mei Lanfang.

“He was highly accomplished in singing, dancing and acting. In addition, he reformed the stage design, music score and makeup of Peking Opera, taking the art to new heights,” Mei Baojiu added.

Over the past 100 years, the Mei school of Peking Opera has attracted thousands of students and followers, many of them female.

“Not all males can take female roles in Peking Opera,” explained 77-year-old Du Jinfang, a master in Mei-style opera. “It requires good looks, figure, voice, talent and persistence toward this profession.”

Du Jinfang was chosen by Mei Lanfang when she was just 17, as she resembled him and his younger children.

“I remember when I was young, my mentor Mei Lanfang, his daughter Mei Baoyue and I staged The Drunken Beauty together, when he started to sing, the audience began to laugh,” Du recalled. “Backstage, he asked the manager of the theater why, later he figured out that it was because the three of us looked so much alike.”

Inheriting the extensive repertories of Mei Lanfang, Du’s stage presence and interpretation is flamboyant and engaging.

Du’s work The Legend of White Snake was staged Monday in Beijing, starring one of Du’s pupils, Ding Xiaojun. Differing from traditional works, the production was complete with choreographed battle scenes, glittering costumes and modern intonations.

“My teacher adapted and expanded the story of White Snake based on a few excerpts performed by Mei Lanfang,” Ding explained.

“The action scene represents the innovation in fighting techniques and costume design of the Mei school. It greatly dramatizes the show,” she added.

As one of the current generation of Peking Opera performers, Ding cites her influences as television, film and new media.

“The centuries-old plots that bear no relevance to modern society are of little interest to today’s youth,” Ding explained. “The problem we are facing now is the lack of stage opportunities and audience members.”

“It’s not that we are not interested in Peking Opera,” commented Zhang Xin, a college student who attended The Legend of White Snake. “We bought tickets to watch the show in order to have a taste of it.”

“But the lines are hard to understand and young people today do not have enough opportunities to be exposed to it,” Zhang added. “I’m sure if Peking Opera stars organized concerts like pop singers do, they would draw a huge crowd.”

In recent years, the government has gone to great lengths to preserve Peking Opera and encourage its development. Modern theaters such as the Mei Lanfang Theater have been built to boost audience numbers. The teaching of Peking Opera has also been introduced into primary and secondary school curriculums.

“For me, Peking Opera is something you have to spend time to understand,” Ding explained. “The next step for us is to walk onto campuses, to spread Peking Opera among younger generations.”

“There are signs of recovery for Peking Opera,” Ding added. “As living standards improve, people pay more attention to cultural pursuits.”

She is …Beyoncé, She is …in Beijing

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Riding the wave of international music and film stardom, R&B, pop and acting sensation Beyonce is performing her highly acclaimed I AM… spectacular in Beijing Friday night, one of the few truly international stars to do so at the peak of their career.

“I am so excited to be playing my first concert in Beijing,” Beyonce exclaimed to the Global Times. “I have heard so much about the beauty of the city and I cannot wait to see all the fans.”

As one stop on her I AM… world tour, the Beijing performance is part of the multi-award-winning artist’s first full-length concert tour since 2007’s sold-out The Beyonce Experience, which included a show in Shanghai.

“The I AM… tour is di. Erent from the Experience tour in that it is more of a spectacle,” she explained. Instead of the usual stage design, Beyonce said that she would take full advantage of Wukesong’s large scale stadium and use a multitude of performance platforms. “I have already seen the blueprints of the Wukesong Arena and I believe I will enjoy performing in the middle of it very much.”

“It is going to be a memorable concert experience for the Beijing audience,” added Jim Alison, head of concert organizer AEG. According to Alison, 7,000 of the 18,000 seats in the arena have been devoted to building the stage, which enables audience members with the cheapest tickets to have an up-close-and-personal experience of the performance and really enjoy the state-of-the-art visuals.

Beyonce said that tomorrow evening’s show will be two hours of nonstop entertainment. She will perform tracks from her latest international No.1 chart-topping album I AM… Sasha Fierce, as well as favorites from previous releases and even some Destiny’s Child tracks.

“I will also do some special tributes to some of my favorite artists,” Beyonce added.

She said that although she loves collaborating with other performers, the Beijing concert will just be herself and her all-female band. “And I have some great dancers who will help make it a great show,” she said.

Beyonce also mysteriously revealed that she plans to incorporate some special surprises for Beijing that she has never done before in a show, but she refused to give away any details. “That is all I can tell you now. Just wait for the show to happen!” she laughed.

The overwhelming success of her 100 million-plus album and DVD sales has established Beyonce as one of the most marketable and popular artists in the music industry Thursday. In 2009, she was listed fourth on Forbes’ list of the “100 Most Powerful and Influential Celebrities” in the world. She credits her success and fame to her fellow artists who have always been an inspiring influence on her.

“Personally I am fortunate to be surrounded by some great people,” she commented.

Since starring in the musical film Carmen: A Hip Hopera in 2001, Beyonce has expanded her career to acting and product endorsement. She insisted that music will always be a major part of her life, but that she also loves making movies.

“In the next five to 10 years I’m sure I will still be making music, good music. I’d like to maybe do a Broadway production and make a few movies with dramatic roles that challenge me to grow as an actress,” she said.

She added that after executive producing her last two films Cadillac Records and Obsessed, she has begun to like the business side of making movies as well and she hopes to do more of that too.

Edinburgh, Cervantino festivals to launch joint art productions

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Representatives of two international art festivals of Mexico and Scotland had signed an agreement on art cooperation, the Mexican National Council for Culture and Arts said Monday.

The agreement, signed Friday night, aims at developing different art projects in Mexico and Edinburgh, which will be presented at both festivals starting in 2010.

FIC is the most widely known and well-established cultural event in Latin America. The EIF is held for three weeks every summer and offers music and theater productions.

The agreement would allow FIC representatives to travel to Edinburgh to broaden their understanding of how festivals are organized.

It also establishes a consultation committee to analyze programming strategies and organize workshops, conferences, symposiums and debates for academics and public audience.

Google, Baidu eye new mobile market

Monday, October 19th, 2009

As China ushers in a new generation of snazzy smartphones and 3G networks, Google and Baidu are shifting their battle from the Internet to China’s mobile search market.

The country’s mobile search market is likely to become the world’s largest, with the potential promise of billions of dollars in revenue.

However, experts said that putting a price tag on the potentially massive market is tough.

Any future riches could be years off due to a lack of clear business models and potential competition, as well as the political risk in China’s tightly controlled media markets, the experts said.

“Everything is growing very fast, but who is going to make money?” asked Wallace Cheung, an analyst with Credit Suisse.

“The (mobile search) market is so diverse, even globally there is no sure business model yet,” Cheung said.

Google, a distant second to Baidu in China’s 1.8 billion yuan ($263.66 million) PC search market, is the world leader in mobile search by revenue and determined not to cede control of mobile search in the Chinese market.

Google said recently it expects mobile search revenues to surpass PC search revenues in a few years.

China’s mobile search market, where Google and Baidu are currently tied with a market share of about 26 percent each, is potentially huge due to China’s more than 700 million mobile subscribers. That’s about double its 338 million Internet users.

Billions of dollars in revenue could be at stake if the market develops along lines similar to PC Internet search.

According to government data, at the end of June this year China had 155 million mobile Internet users, and more than 40 million of them used mobile search.

China’s mobile Internet market numbers far surpass those of the United States, where there were only about 40 million mobile Internet surfers at the start of the year, according to a JP Morgan report.

“For the mobile search market, the number is still small but the growth potential is extremely high,” Baidu Chief Technology Officer Li Yinan told Reuters in a recent interview. “It is an important area.”

China’s mobile advertising industry was worth 754 million yuan last year and is set to nearly double by 2010.

Mobile search volume rose 120 percent in the second quarter alone to 272 million clicks, according to Analysys International.

Some analysts said the mobile platform could actually be easier to monetize, too, since mobile carriers can also double as bill collectors. This function has helped texting services run by companies such as Sina and Sohu.com to reap profits.

“We expect China’s mobile value-added services industry to have another two to three years of rapid growth with a compound annual growth rate of 22 percent from 2009 to 2012,” Alan Hellawell, a Deutsche Bank analyst, said in a recent report.

“The deployment of 3G networks will enable a far broader and deeper market for mobile applications,” he said.

Mobile competition

Google and Baidu have been aggressively courting mobile users this year. Google, which recently introduced new mobile services in China, launched an advertising campaign in Shanghai, Beijing and Guangzhou to market its mobile services.

Baidu, which holds 61 percent of the desktop search market, said in early September it planned to hire two software engineers to focus specifically on the mobile platform.

Baidu and Google already have mobile products and provide free services such as maps, games and news over cell phones.

Analysts said Baidu still has the edge in China’s mobile market given its brand, depth of local information and its dominant position in the desktop search market.

The rollout of 3G will lead to faster downloads and offer users more sophisticated functions such as global positioning search, mobile reading and music search.

“The market is still young, so it is hard to say. But with 3G, a lot more people will use mobile search because the data speed allows them to get on the Internet,” said Dick Wei, an analyst with JPMorgan.

If the market really takes off, Baidu and Google could also face the potential for competition from other companies such as Tencent Holdings. The operator of China’s largest instant messaging platform has been experimenting with its own search algorithms, industry sources said.

“It’s going to take some time for them to figure out what is the right business model to generate revenue on the mobile platform,” said Elinor Leung, a CLSA analyst.

Myanmar to hold cultural performing arts competitions

Friday, October 16th, 2009

Myanmar is to hold its 17th Myanmar traditional cultural performing arts competitions on Saturday in the new capital of Nay Pyi Taw, aimed at thriving its traditional fine arts.

The two-week-long competitions, participated by contestants across the country, will last until Oct. 30, official sources said,adding that the formal opening ceremony will be held on Sunday.

“The holding of Myanmar traditional cultural performing arts competitions is to ensure emergence of new generations of artists and musicians who will work for uplifting of national prestige and integrity and preservation and safeguarding of cultural heritage and national character,” official media said.

Myanmar has held the traditional cultural performing arts competitions annually since 1993. Last year’s event included modern music contest.

The competitions were yearly participated by thousands of youth contestants, include contests of song, dance, composition, music and play at different stages such as professional, amateur, higher education and basic education levels.

Kindle lightens textbook load, but flaws remain

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

It’s an experiment that has made back-to-school a little easier on the back: Amazon.com gave more than 200 college students its Kindle e-reading device this fall, loaded with digital versions of their textbooks.

But some students are finding they miss the decidedly low-tech conveniences of paper — highlighting, flagging pages with sticky notes and scribbling in the margins.

“I like the aspect of writing something down on paper and having it be so easy and just kind of writing whatever comes to my mind,” says Claire Becerra, a freshman at Arizona State University.

Becerra tried typing notes on the Kindle’s small keyboard, but when she went back to reread them she found they were laden with typos and didn’t make sense. After a month, she says she takes far fewer notes and relies on the Kindle’s highlighter tool instead.

Amazon wants to adapt the Kindle to academia, where it could reduce the notoriously high cost of textbooks. The Kindle DX, with a larger screen than the regular model, costs $489, but digital books can cost less than half what physical ones do.

While it might be the future of textbooks, Amazon or any other e-reader company has a long way to go to make it happen — even for a technology-saturated generation that should be more receptive to the shift.

When The Associated Press hit five of the test campuses to ask students how they felt about the Kindle, the responses were lukewarm.

Most said they liked the prospect of having anytime access to a semester’s worth of reading on the Kindle, which can wirelessly download books or get material by being plugged into a PC.

But several disliked taking notes on a keyboard with Tic-Tac-sized keys that sits under a 9.7-inch screen.

Students can also highlight text or bookmark pages — the digital equivalent of dog-earing — then look at those excerpts and links on separate screens.

Madeline Kraizel, a freshman at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, has amassed three Kindle pages of bookmarks for her chemistry textbook. That’s getting unwieldy, and she isn’t sure whether there’s a better way to organize them.

Another drawback: The Kindle doesn’t show page numbers. Because text can be made bigger or smaller, a turn of the virtual page doesn’t necessarily correspond to the printed book. Instead, Kindle uses “location” markers.

That threw Kraizel and one of her classmates, Hun Jae Lee. Lee, 19, says professors had to give Kindle-equipped students a few words to search for. Eventually, they started referring to both Kindle locations and textbook page numbers.

Other students struggled when professors had them read documents in PDF format, which doesn’t show up well on the Kindle. Users can’t zoom in or make notes on them, and diagrams sometimes get separated from notes explaining them.

John Sherman, a first-year MBA student at the University of Virginia, says he can read some case studies on the Kindle but still needs to print others.

“For the cases that require a lot of calculations, I find paper cases to be better,” says Sherman, 31. “For me, it helps to scribble my thoughts in the margins.”

Todd Schiller, 22, a student in the University of Washington’s doctorate program in computer science, says he prefers the visual cues of a paper textbook to the “tunnel vision” that today’s e-reading promotes.

Opening two big textbook pages puts the section he’s reading into context: Seeing how many pages remain in a chapter or the book helps him understand how far along he is in the author’s plot or argument.

Students at seven schools are responding to surveys throughout this academic year and get to keep their Kindles. Amazon.com Inc. hasn’t speculated on what improvements or new products might result and declined comment for this story.

The dozen or so students interviewed by the AP had compliments for the Kindle, too.

Most like how light the device is — just over a pound — and many would be willing to overlook technical hassles if it meant not having to carry any books. Most still had to buy and carry textbooks for non-Kindle classes this fall.

Students were also impressed with the “electronic ink” screen, which Amazon touts as far easier on the eyes than reading off a computer monitor. But it can’t be backlit, disappointing one student who wants to read during dark early-morning bus commutes.

Kraizel, the Case Western freshman, says always having the Kindle with her has improved her study habits. It’s much easier to cram in a few minutes of studying between classes, she says, and she’s noticed that when she sits down for a serious study session she’s more familiar with the material.

The Kindle can also do things books can’t, like read homework aloud. Una Hopkins, a 46-year-old student in the nurse-practitioner program at Pace University in New York, got five chapters finished that way when she was stuck in traffic.

“It was robotic, but it got me where I needed to go,” Hopkins says.

The device’s usefulness goes beyond textbooks: Another Washington grad student in computer science, Franziska Roesner, has used the Web browser to read and write e-mail when she’s away from her computer. It’s slow, but it worked, she says.

And sometimes its uses go beyond productivity entirely. Students at Arizona State have found the Minesweeper video game that comes with the device. They’ve also figured out how to download music.

Roesner, who was steeped in Kindle hype as an intern at Amazon over the past two summers, lamented the device’s problems with PDFs, which make up the bulk of this quarter’s assignments. Still, she won’t write off e-readers.

“If reading devices like this really come to replace reading paper,” she wrote in an e-mail, “I think in 20 years we’ll look back at the Kindle with nostalgic affection and amusement, like we now look back at 1990s computers.”

Mexico’s Cervantino festival to attract 2,300 participants from 20 nations

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

The 37th annual International Cervantes Culture Festival will begin on Wednesday in central Mexican city Guanajuato, which is expected to attract more than 2,300 artists from 20 nations.

Music and drama from Canadian city Quebec, one of two guests of honor, will be played during the 19-day festival, including recitals from the Montreal Symphony Orchestra.

Nearby Mexican state Zacatecas, the other guest of honor, will present its own Philharmonic Orchestra, International Music Group and Folklore Dance Troupe.

The festival will also celebrate the United Nations year of astronomy with the theme “400 Years of Galileo and His Telescope”, with performances of Mexico’s City’s Fine Arts Theater Orchestra and Choir.

The city is also expected to set a new world record for the most people observing the stars simultaneously by telescope in one place.