Search Engines Set To Vie For China 194
ackthpt writes "Could China be where the battle for top search engine is waged? Reuters is carrying an article on the play for the Chinese search engine market. Already the second largest internet market in the world, there are estimated 80 million users in China and the number growing fast. Yahoo's acquisition 3721.com, Google-styled Baidu.com and Zhongsou.com are already poised and profitable. Where is Google? Blocked at one time, Google has made its way into China. Their handy cached pages are not available, but they do offer the Ad Words service in chinese to lure business. Those unfamiliar with China's rapid adoption of the internet might like to read up on the success of DangDang.Com an online bookseller, on the BBC, where it's noted that houses without heat or running water may actually have internet access. Thanks to China coming in where many growing pains, suffered by the west, have already passed or obstacles such as competing vested interests aren't as influential, so internet infrastructure is going in at a rapid pace."
Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:5, Funny)
He's gonna need an awfully big boot...
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:3, Funny)
OOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!
You're in trouble now.
No man has ever survived that minefield.
You wil just have to search the web somewhere else if you are going to make comments like that.
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:1)
He's gonna need an awfully big boot...
No, he'll just go pay off a government/military official and have Google blocked again. China is notorious for not playing fair and giving local companies huge advantages over foreign competition. I wish our own government would do this someday...
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:2)
Sivaram Velauthapillai
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:2)
An economy should focus on producing what it is "least worse" at producing. Any government intervention, through subsidies or tariffs or other means, ultimately damages the economy because it encourages production in innefficient industries. An economy should always focus on productive industries and import everything else.
Take a l
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:2)
Trade protectionism sometimes will not kill an economy. But it contributes to uncompetitiveness on the global market. If we still had an economy based on industry, we would be so uncompetive in that arena compared to countries like China and Indonesia that we would like
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:2)
I don't believe it is counter-intuitive. To me it's perfectly intuitive. To change the the type of production your country engages in requires that the people working in these new industries have new and different knowledge and new and different skills.
To acquire this new knowledge and these new skills requires time, effort and oftent
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:2)
Those who have money already make this transistion more easily than those who do not, which leads to an ever increasing disparity of wealth. This is the real source of complaint.
This is open for debate. Often, the executives and higher-ups of a failing company get the shaft as well. Of course, there has been an increasing disparity of wealth in the past few decades.
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:2)
Yes, but changing jobs sounds worse, because that would require some effort.
This is open for debate. Often, the executives and higher-ups of a failing company get the shaft as well.
However, if they have used their higher income to save some money, they are often able to afford re-training or to be able to move to another area.
Of course, there has been an increasing disparity of wealth in the past few decades.
Could that be because those who were richer to start with had the
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:2)
Again, look at the 1970's and early 1980's. If you want an example of a mass exodus of jobs overseas, you can find no better incidence. During this time, we lost a good portion of our heavy industry ov
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:2)
Did you read anything that I wrote? Layoffs and jobs moving overseas hurts. IN THE SHORT RUN. But economies need to evolve and move forward. If the
Re:Talk about Chutzpah... (Score:2)
Sorry if I made it sound that way. I was just keeping things simplistic. I was talking more about concentrating on sectors that we are the "least worst" at instead of innefficient industries.
Once that price becomes too high, then the current economic model (global economy) must change.
I'll have to disagree with you on the whole prices thing. We're seeing very low inflation right now. In fact, we've have completely low to moderate inflat
Wrong. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Wrong. (Score:2)
Wow! A Chinese lawyer on Slashdot. Thank-you for sharing your insights with us!
No running water? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Wifi in the outhouse? (Score:2)
I mean, maybe the electricity is expensive, but arn't these people supposed to be communists? I know they're adapting but I would think that things like electricity would be a base service.
Chinese Search Engines (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously though, China has the largest population in the world with India at a close second right now. OF course their internet usage is BOOMING. Good luck to all those who design the search engines.
Re:Chinese Search Engines (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Chinese Search Engines (Score:1)
Re:Chinese Search Engines (Score:2, Insightful)
That's my two cents.
Kev
Extra Radio Buttons? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Extra Radio Buttons? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Extra Radio Buttons? (Score:1)
Re:Extra Radio Buttons? (Score:1)
Re:Extra Radio Buttons? (Score:1)
search Chinese Content in the internet
Search symplified Chinese content in the internet
Re:Extra Radio Buttons? (Score:5, Informative)
(2) search Chinese webpages
(3) search (simplified) Chinese webpages
I think the last one refers to the simplified written dialect.
Re:Extra Radio Buttons? (Score:1, Informative)
Something like that - Simplified Chinese (GB2312) as opposed to other locales (Hong Kong, Taiwan) which use Traditional Chinese (Big5).
Google handles Chinese searches very well.
short-form (simplified) vs long-form characters (Score:2)
(Disclaimer: I haven't looked at the site yet.)
One of Mao's reforms in the 1940s was to simplify thousands of Chinese characters. These are called 'short-form' (jian ti zi). The people on Taiwan, however, were not subject to the update of the language, and 'long-form' characters (fan ti zi) were standard there for a long time. I believe the short-form versions have been adopted on a small scale.
That the mainland China site offers both short- and long-form is probably an oblique assertion that [acco
Short-form quite widespread (Score:2)
Reading Comprehension 101 for autopr0n (Score:2)
Your asertion that short-form characters were adopted on a "small scale" is way off.
Your reading comprehension is way off: I was talking about the use of short-form characters in Taiwan, not mainland China. Can you address that or would you like to misread something else?
As an aside, jiantizi still have the radicals and other visual and auditory clues [for reading] but are much easier to write when not using a computer, which is how at least 80% of mainland China does it. I don't think Mao was conc
Re:short-form (simplified) vs long-form characters (Score:2)
Huh... (Score:2)
Re:Extra Radio Buttons? (Score:1)
BusinessWeek articles on the internet in china (Score:5, Informative)
China will soon be No. 1 in Web users. That will unleash a world of opportunity
An Open Society Online? Not Yet [businessweek.com]
eBay's Patient Bid on China [businessweek.com]
Re:BusinessWeek articles on the internet in china (Score:1)
That will unleash a world of opportunity
Yeah, it means my googling will get even more chinese results than those in english! Now I just need to learn chinese!
That sounds like an endorsement of Communism (Score:3, Funny)
Or at the very least, of dictators. Yay for the efficiency that comes with lack of choice!
Re:That sounds like an endorsement of Communism (Score:2)
Basically, for example, in the US, the development of Cell Phone standards was screwed by competing behemoths that already had a stranglehold on the telecoms market. Ditto with Broadband/DSL deployment. I guess in China, they have nothing much, so they will start off with the now state of the Art... whereas
Just a simple(?) question (Score:5, Insightful)
But does it really exist? The government has shown a marked distaste for anything that may threaten their power/viewpoint, and with many poor people in china (farmers, et al) does this market really exist, or are large corps. trying to forcibly open them up like they did with Japan in the early times?
Re:Just a simple(?) question (Score:2, Insightful)
But does it really exist? The government has shown a marked distaste for anything that may threaten their power/viewpoint, and with many poor people in china (farmers, et al) does this market really exist, or are large corps. trying to forcibly open them up like they did with Japan in the early times?
Mao, back during the 1920's fond his support in the overlooked and abused peasants, abused first by the outgoing Manchu Dynasty then by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek. In the ba
Re:Just a simple(?) question (Score:1)
Expect the peasants to lose considerable clout.
I was playing my favorite RTS the other day and my peasants took down a wolly mammoth. They are hard to beat with their pitchforks, torches, and mob mentality. Dont underestimate the little guys!
Re:Just a simple(?) question (Score:2)
Yup, and then he fucked them harder then they'd ever been fucked before. Under Mao, peasents had a quota of grain they had to provide to the government, and a perminant minder. Pesants would often go hungry if they couldn't provide enough grain to meet their quota, even though they had produced more then enough to feed themselves. If they produced extra grain, they could only sell it at extra low prices. Mao's incompi
Re:Just a simple(?) question (Score:2)
There is no such thing as peasents; rather it's more like low class (as opposed to upper classes). In any case, they are already struggling these days. The restructuring of the Chinese economy meant that millions of lower class people were put out of jobs. So right now you have the situation where some people in the coastal areas are getting very rich while the interior is poor. A lot of these so-called migrants flock to the cities but they still struggle.
Re:Just a simple(?) question (Score:2)
From the CIA factbook.
Population:
China: 1.287 billion
India: 1.05 billion
USA: 0.290 billion
Japan: 0.127 billion
Another in a long history of naive calculations (Score:2)
Since before the west (and Japan) worked at divvying the country up in the 19th century, businesses have been salivating over how much money they'd make if only they could sell shoes, or a steak, or a sports shirt, or a Yugo, to every person in China. The calculations always amount to "if we could only sell to X percentage of the population, well, multiply that by our profit margin and... wow!"
This is the neocolonial version, embedded in internet bubble-think. You may as well insert that step that shows u
Re:Just a simple(?) question (Score:2)
The western media makes a big deal about the lack of freedom in China, but what about the attitude of the Chinese? Most people there don't seem to believe that they are being oppressed. None of the Chinese immigrants I know seem to care about the lack of "freedom" in China (okay, so I don't know any Falun Gong).
They didn't grow up in
Re:Just a simple(?) question (Score:2)
If you grow up without the concept of freedom, then perhaps you haven't lost anything (or don't know any better) but when (if?) the internet comes in full force, and the people see what they might never have had...what then?
They won't care. (Score:2)
Love of freedom is something that some people have an inate desire for, but for most people that isn't true. However, it can be sold and packaged by like any product (for example, equate personal freedom with national freedom and make persona
Re:Just a simple(?) question (Score:2)
Sivaram Velauthapillai
VI or Emacs? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:VI or Emacs? (Score:1)
I look at it in the perspective that the Chinese have a unique cultural outlook on life and philosophy that has been sharpened and refined over millenia. Odds are fairly good that they could put it to use in finding a way to do something (searching stuff online in a most relevant way) that many still regard as an art more than as an exercise in math and coding.
(man, emacs is ugly enough in English... I don't wanna know how many fingers wou
Re:VI or Emacs? (Score:1)
Google Cache Pages for China? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Google Cache Pages for China? (Score:1)
The Chinese authorities however did at one point block both Google and Altavista - dubbed "The Chinese Firewall" by the press - due to the fact that sites that they explicitly blocked from viewing could be accessed through Google's cache.
Re:Google Cache Pages for China? (Score:2)
Before, if you accessed e.g. http://66.102.11.104/search?q=cache:jo3aRe29uHsJ:
I can vouch for... (Score:5, Interesting)
It would be foolish for any large (maybe even some small) business to ignore the Chinese market. Give'm too much of a head start and they'll have their own market locked up tight internally.
--
I'm robSlimo [slashdot.org], the username is a product of frustration after losing the pwd to RatOmeter [slashdot.org].
3721? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:3721? (Score:4, Informative)
"Q: Where does the name 3721 come from?
The founders believed that 3721 was an appropriate name for the company, as 3721 is a Chinese saying that means "No matter 3 by 7 is 21, Just do it." The name is also suitable since it is a number, therefore the company's website URL is the same in English and Chinese - which is in line with 3721's philosophy of making the Internet simple for users."
Bite the wax tadpole (Score:2)
I bet Nike's lawyers are getting ready to 'just do it'..
Re:3721? (Score:2)
Re:Arabic? (Score:2)
I'm not sure but I always thought humans used Arabic numerals everwhere (of course, I'm talking about now--clearly it wasn't the case before).
Sivaram Velauthapillai
Unlucky numerology (Score:2)
13 --> 1 + 3 = 4
Uh-oh. Looks like they're dead.
Baidu.com mp3 search :) (Score:4, Interesting)
run a search for "metallica" or whatever..
kind of useful.. glad these guys can get away with that where mp3.lycos.com had to shut down.
Re:Baidu.com mp3 search :) (Score:1)
Re:Baidu.com mp3 search :) (Score:2)
baidu actually has a lot of returned results.
not as many as some place like soulreactor.com but they are direct links at least.
No surprise (Score:5, Interesting)
They're slowing modernizing. (Score:1)
Gradually, there will be more and more high rise apartment buildings to replace these houses. This will make sense as both the population grows and as people slowly gain personal riches to afford better living conditions.
Re:No surprise (Score:1)
Population density (Score:2)
Slashdot Double Standards (Score:4, Insightful)
Just curious.
Re:Slashdot Double Standards (Score:2)
MS (Score:2, Interesting)
"...notably our collaboration with MSN enhances the users' search and navigation experience on the IE browser in China..."
What is the leading browser over there - if they were all using IE then you'd say that Yahoo have the advantage here but since they have a tendancy to prefer their own Linux distro's I guess it's all up in the air?
Re:MS (Score:1)
google.cn (Score:1)
Technical Challenges - languages vs dialects (Score:5, Interesting)
Chinese Dialects -
http://www.glossika.com/en/dict/dialectmap.htm
Indian languages -
http://www.sanyal.com/india/indlang.html
With a handful of dialects & Mandarin being the mainstream language, a Chinese search engine will have a comparitively smaller problem sifting through the problem space than an Indian search engine that would have to deal with content in 325 distinct languages ( not dialects...India has 1000s of dialects! ) with atleast 100+ different scripts.
Ofcourse, IT tends to penetrate the English speaking population first & foremost, so most search engines, as a first cut, focus on content written in English & ignore the rest.
Re:Technical Challenges - languages vs dialects (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Technical Challenges - languages vs dialects (Score:2)
Second, most educated people in India also know English. Granted, most people in India cannot afford to be educated, but neither can they afford computers and internet to do
Re:Technical Challenges - languages vs dialects (Score:2)
But that wasn't the OP's point; he was merely saying it would be much more difficult, technically speaking, than it is for Chinese, to take search engines to all Indians, wh
Re:Technical Challenges - languages vs dialects (Score:2)
I speak five (Indian) languages, and have always wondered at Google's ability at searching Unicode characters across all languages (and, of course, their commitment to serving their UI in many [google.com] Indian [google.com] languages [google.com]).
The difficulty, therefore, is not in terms of *languages* per se, but in terms of encoding; 99% of the stuff out there in my mother tongue, Telugu, uses non-Unicode rendering with proprietary fonts (often dynamic, so the display gets screwed up in browsers other than IE). Not to mention the fact tha
Re:Technical Challenges - languages vs dialects (Score:2)
You seem to be hinting that India isn't ready for an "actual" great technological leap forward because we don't speak a common tongue. I disagree; where there is complexity, there is creativity. It is pretty trivial for end-users to transliterate between scripts using the Indian Standard Code for Inform
That's a good goal (Score:2)
Priorities (Score:3, Funny)
Glad to see they have their priorities straight.
Re:Priorities (Score:2)
The question is.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Chinese Google? (Score:1)
Internet in China (Score:2, Interesting)
I would be interested in knowing to which point the Chinese government limits and will limit the access to information on the Internet, as after all it could be very easy to find documents discussing the way the Chinese government works, and which the Chinese leadership could find "a negative influence" over the population. After all, we in Europe, on a country-per-country base alone, have some problems blocking sensitive content which is uploaded and exchanged on the Internet - but then as soon as the gove
My Favorite China Internet Statistics (Score:3, Informative)
Internet Providers: 3 (2000)
Internet Users: 45.8 million (2002)
Now I know these are dated, but c'mon ya'll, someone open up some ISPs there!! Do you think it's the government stifling competitior, or just that AOL can't afford to mail out 1.3 billion CDs there...
Pretty soon, all our webpages will be.. (Score:2)
i can't read (Score:3, Funny)
"No Leutenant! Not out engines, our Search engines!"
"Yes sir, setting search engines to 'Fuscia'"
"Fuscia!? No, set them to 'Vie'"
"Violet, Sir?"
"Leutenant, set our search engines to 'vie', thats an order!"
"What color is 'Vie', Sir?"
Growth to what end? (Score:2)
Thanks to China coming in where many growing pains, suffered by the west, have already passed or obstacles such as competing vested interests aren't as influential, so internet infrastructure is going in at a rapid pace.
What good is the growth of network infrastructure when users cannot communicate freely or visit unapproved websites? "Vested interests" of Chinese citizens are routinely trampled by a gang of Communist cronies. Why is that so great? Seems to me that the network simply another way to en
Re:Growth to what end? (Score:2)
What people missunderstand about China is that though it comes from a place of centralised state economic control, that the government is strongly committed to rapid economic growth. Growth that is happening. There are many contries that have gone from largely agricultural economies to modern industrialisation in 20
Hi tech companies who think they can make money... (Score:2)
Search engines will be the same. Chinese will demand that they be able to censor anything they want. They'll be asking for backdoors and ways to track who accesses what.
Just when you think you've jumped through the last hoop, there will be another one waiting for y
Search Engine Censorship (Score:2, Interesting)
If I type in 'Falun Gong' or 'VIP Reference' [rand.org] (page 30-31)' in any of these new search engines, I recieve no content. Sure these my offer
3721 = san chi er yi? (Score:2)
One of the most interesting is using 88 rather then ttyl when signing of instant messanges. 88 = "bai bai"
Re:3721 = san chi er yi? (Score:2)
The sentence is like "I don't care 3721, let's go to the pub before heading back home"
Couple of Points (Score:2, Troll)
The worst issue is when the lady being interviewed says "Everywhere we go there are good internet connections." This statement needs to be qualified, since a good "broadband" internet connection in China is typically on par with a decent dialup setup in the US. Most Chinese cities have less bandwidth than a typical large state university. The city I lived in until recently only had 2 T3 lines for
Re:Confucius Say:"Many search engine but few conte (Score:2, Insightful)
Who are we to say what they can do with the new tools that they will be provided? The combination of Yahoo going to China and the following article regarding the "deep web" makes me think that there will be new ways of conceptualizing and approaching the online universe.
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/03/09/13
Re:Facts for grandparent poster: (Score:2)
Did you know the Golden Rule of humanity "do unto others as you would have them do unto you" is from Confucious? That "unto" King James lingo bullshit was added in to make people think only the Bible has any wisdom in the world.
Give it a break
Re:I think I know what the problem is... (Score:2)
Your character set can't represent the ideograms.
Get a browser that dosn't suck. (Score:2)
Re:The next big religious movie (Score:2)
Sivaram Velauthapillai