Posts Tagged ‘China’

Posted by admin at 31 August 2010

Category: Apple

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Chinese customers who want a jailbroken iPhone but lack the nerve or time to do it now have a reliable option, as distributor China Unicom (CU) is offering jailbreaking as a service in their retail stores.

Chinese language site WeiPhone notes (here’s the English translation) that customers can have their iPhones jailbroken by the store’s staff, who will also trim SIM cards to fit the iPhone 4’s micro-SIM tray. Additionally, some are even advertising that they’ll install apps for their customers after the jailbreak is complete.

Note that the iPhone 4 is not yet officially available for sale in China, so we assume that CU staff are jailbreaking older models.

As The Mac Observer notes, Apple has not yet commented on the practice. Any comment from the company should be a good one.

[Via The Mac Observer]

TUAWChina Unicom offering in-store jailbreaking originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 30 Aug 2010 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 28 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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There is a huge untapped market for console manufacturers: China. While Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo struggle to deal with Chinese government regulations, one company is seeking to create a new console specifically for the territory. Lenovo is prepping the “eBox,” a new console that has Kinect-esque functionality in mind. With 120 million families as “potential buyers” in China, it’s certainly a lucrative opportunity for the company to pursue.

A team of 40 Lenovo engineers are now working at a spin-off firm called Beijing eedoo Technology, and although the company has been in operation for less than a month, it seems confident in what the eBox can do. “We are the world’s second company to produce a controller-free game console, behind only Microsoft,” eedoo’s Jack Luo told China Daily. Although there’s no mention of a playable prototype, or finalized design, the eBox is expected to be available as soon as the first quarter of 2011, with a price higher than the Wii, and possibly lower than the Xbox.

Like the Wii, eBox won’t be designed to have “exquisite game graphics.” Instead, it will serve to “inspire family members to get off the couch and get some exercise” — a mantra that has served Nintendo well this generation. With eedoo claiming 16 “global video game developers” working on content for the eBox, it won’t be long until China will be able to get its share of yoga, pilates and dancing video games.

JoystiqLenovo spin-off announces Kinect-inspired eBox console for China originally appeared on Joystiq on Sat, 28 Aug 2010 03:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 19 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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Remember this scandalous little leak from back in June? It looks to have been validated today, as imagery of Nokia’s MeeGo-powered N9 QWERTY slider has emerged over in China. As usual with these things, we can’t be certain that this hardware is in fact part of Nokia’s upcoming roadmap and not just another creative hardware emulation, but it sure seems to have our old buddy Eldar Murtazin convinced. One more image after the break and plenty more at the source.

Continue reading Nokia’s QWERTY-slidin’ N9 shows up in the wilds of China?

Nokia’s QWERTY-slidin’ N9 shows up in the wilds of China? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Aug 2010 06:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 4 August 2010

Category: Apple

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On Monday, the iPad moved one small step closer to the Chinese market when it received the China Compulsory Certification from the China Quality Certification Center. Other certifications will be necessary, but this important first step has been taken.

The Chinese government will ultimately determine if and when the device is sold. Before that happens, it will be subject to other regulating bodies like China’s Telecommunications Equipment and Certification Center.

Liu Liang with the consulting group iResearch suggests that the iPad would sell well in China, despite competition from other devices. “The iPad is a top tier device,” he said, “and the Apple brand has a great deal of influence among consumers.”

You’ll remember the trouble Apple had before bringing the iPhone to the Chinese market. Initially, wireless devices were required to use China’s own WAPI standard, a measure that was relaxed earlier this year, when devices were allowed to have both WAPI and Wi-Fi. Since then, the iPhone has gone on to sell very well.

Apple has not announced formal plans to sell the iPad in China, but (slow) progress is being made. Here’s hoping our friends in China can get their hands on iPads soon.

TUAWiPad moves closer to sale in China originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 04 Aug 2010 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 1 August 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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When you’ve gone and built yourself an imitation MacBook Pro, a Magic Mouse-equipped pseudo-iMac, and an upcoming iPad-esque tablet, there’s little reason left to be shy with your website. That must be the thinking behind the design of Dragonfly’s web portal, which seems to have taken plenty of inspiration from Apple’s home on the internet. Upon visiting the Qing Ting address, users are confronted with a glamorous product shot, set against a black backdrop and accessorized only with some bold words — which happen to be as inane as the overreaching exaltations Apple likes to post up. So full marks for realism, but these aspiring KIRF merchants seem to have omitted the most important aspect: there’s no online store! How are we supposed to get our Q Pad now?

Keepin’ it real fake: because in China, even websites aren’t safe from knockoffs originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 01 Aug 2010 14:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 23 July 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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Once again, China has proven to the world that it’s the place to be for all sorts of gadgetry miracle. Just look at this 10-inch Windows 7 tablet here — it may not be a full clone of the forthcoming 8.9-inch HP Slate, but it does come with a couple of interesting features: a 1366 x 768 resistive multitouch display (ideal for tackling the complicated Chinese characters with a stylus) and a webcam. You’ll also find a handful of regular tidbits on this 1.66GHz Atom N450 device: a regular USB port coupled by a mini version, 3.5mm headphone jack, VGA port, LAN port, accelerometer, Bluetooth, WiFi and 3G. Oh, and you’ll get a free stand, too, but we’ll be minding our own business until this no-frills tablet gets a price.

HP Slate lookalike spotted in China, might beat the real thing to the market originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Jul 2010 21:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 15 July 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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Demonoid is without doubt one of the best known BitTorrent trackers on the Internet. Unfortunately, this Internet fame makes the tracker a target for numerous DoS attacks. Following one of the latest attacks Demonoid has decided to block many Taiwanese and Chinese IP-ranges.

demonoidDemonoid is one of the biggest torrent sites around. Hosted to the west of Russia in Ukraine, the site has settled outside the reach of the various anti-piracy outfits that previously tried to shutter the tracker.

Threats from the movie and music industry aside, Demonoid has also been the target for dozens of large and small DoS attacks. Usually these attacks only slow the site down a bit, and in the worst case they result in several hours of downtime before Demonoid staff takes care of the problem.

During mid-June reports started to come in to TorrentFreak from Chinese and Taiwanese Demonoid users who complained that the site was inaccessible to them. Both the site and tracker were no longer functioning. Browsers reported a “server not found” error and torrents with a Demonoid tracker returned a “error: hostname not found” message.

For the affected users this could mean only two things. Since Demonoid was working fine in other countries, either Chinese and Taiwanese ISPs has started to block Demonoid’s website and tracker, or the people running Demonoid had decided to block IP-ranges from these countries.

To find out more about the origin of the connection issues, a TorrentFreak reader based in Taiwan decided to contact his Internet provider, who dismissed the first option after some investigating.

“We cannot access Demonoid.com either,” he was informed by his ISP. “We attempted to access the site via the other ISPs in Taiwan but all these attempts failed. We determined that there is no connection problem. The Demonoid server is rejecting all requests from Taiwanese IP-addresses.”

Despite the fact that Demonoid’s owner has never responded to our inquiries in the past, we asked for a comment on the blocking issue and got a swift response. Indeed, as we initially guessed, Demonoid is actively blocking IP-ranges in Taiwan and parts of China because that’s where the DoS attacks come from.

“There is a DoS coming mostly from there,” Demonoid’s admin told TorrentFreak in a brief reply.

We have yet to receive an answer to the question whether the block is temporary or permanent. In the meantime, affected users can bypass the restrictions by using a VPN-service. Both ItsHidden and VPNReactor offer free, but limited accounts.

Demonoid’s servers.. Made in Taiwan

demonoid

Article from: TorrentFreak.

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Posted by admin at 15 July 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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Ericsson — one of the world’s top-tier infrastructure suppliers for mobile networks — has crunched some numbers recently, figuring the five billionth cellphone line came into existence last Wednesday, July 8, largely from major surges in uptake in emerging markets like China and India. Mobile broadband access (which we take to mean access to 3G speeds and beyond) still trails significantly at just 360 million in 2009, though they’re predicting a cool 3.4 billion users by 2015. To put things in perspective, Ericsson points out that we were at 720 million mobile lines in 2000 (and about 2.7 billion in 2007), so that’s some pretty spectacular growth over the decade — particularly considering that we’re coming up on the Earth’s population now. Of course, we don’t know what happens when the world finally has more mobile subscriptions than it has humans — but need we remind you that 2012 is drawing near? Follow the break for the full press release.

Continue reading Ericsson estimates mobile lines have hit 5 billion, gives shout out to China and India for the help

Ericsson estimates mobile lines have hit 5 billion, gives shout out to China and India for the help originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Jul 2010 15:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 10 July 2010

Category: Tech Industry

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China’s Ministry of Culture is once again cracking down on the online game industry in an attempt to limit the amount of “unwholesome” content the sector produces. According to a report from China Daily, the nation’s officials are prohibiting the use of sex, violence or gambling to market Chinese developers’ online games. Like the other regulations under this initiative, these restrictions will be effective as of August 1.

According to the government’s report on sexually-charged advertising, hiring adult film stars to serve as spokespeople for online games is a surprisingly common practice in China. Over here, we get Mr. T and Ozzy Osbourne. That’s a pretty fair trade-off, right?

JoystiqReport: China to ban violent, sexual marketing of online games originally appeared on Joystiq on Sat, 10 Jul 2010 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Posted by admin at 9 July 2010

Category: Apple

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We’ve heard great things already about the brand new Apple Store in Shanghai, but this one’s interesting: on the back of employees’ t-shirts there (which are red, apparently, rather than the usual black found in North America), Apple has printed “Designed in California, Made for China” in Chinese. That’s obviously a play on the “Designed by Apple in California, Assembled in China” that you’ll find on the back of your iPhone and many of Apple’s other products.

Cult of Mac checked in with Chinese gadget blogger Chris Chang, and he says that the reference does play in Shanghai. He was at the store when it opened, and says that Apple is definitely pushing to do better in China, and create more of a presence there. That’s really interesting — Apple’s not only trying to simply sell its products over there, but it’s actually localizing the brand a bit to do so.

TUAWApple’s Shanghai shirt: “Made for China” originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 09 Jul 2010 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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