Archive for July, 2007

Hanzi

Rice

Okay, so as you all know I took a year of Chinese. I understand that my Chinese is laudably bad, but I still know some, and and pick up random words in conversations. I can even have small conversations. The problem is that most of these conversations would never occur. For example, I could understand this:

A: Hello, good morning!
B: I don’t recognize you.
A: I am Professor Ding. And you are?
B: Good morning Professor Ding. I am Marco Polo. Do you have class today?
A: Yes, I have history, mathematics, engineering and computer. What is your favorite traditional Chinese holiday?
B: Dragon Boat Festival, but I like Chinese New Year too. I speak Chinese fluently, but write slowly. Do you have a garage near your apartment?
A: Yes, my apartment has a garage. I drive a car. Do you watch a movie right after going to the bank?
B: No, I do not watch a movie right after going to the bank. What do you do on the weekend?
A: I watch TV with my foreign student friend Anna in the student dormitory at the university which is directly to the left of the Police station and to the right of a Supermarket Parking Lot.
B: I have 3 red shirts, and 4 blue tennis shoes. I also have 2 hats and 3 ducks. (Note in this sentence all measure words would be replaced with “ge”)
A: I like shoes, but tennis is too difficult. Do you play ping pong?
B: Yes I play ping pong, do you have 3 blackboard erasers and a pencil and speak French fluently?
A: No I do not have 3 blackboard erasers and a pencil and speak French fluently, but I want to become a doctor.
B: Very good. My health is good, but my foot hurts.
A: Sorry, but 3+3 is not equal to 9. 3 * 3 = 9.
B: See you again soon! I wake up at 6am and goto school at 7am then eat lunch at noon and work on homework in the library.
A: Your welcome!

While I can understand that, and can actually add more to it, these conversations don’t tend to come up too often.

Anyways, believe it or not, there are lots of asian people where I work. There is a mixture of cultures (Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Taiwanese), but a lot of people seem to speak Chinese.

Now, here is where I’m not sure what to do… and this has actually come up a lot and I’m not sure what to do. If people are conversing in Chinese they often switch to English whenever someone who doesn’t speak Chinese joins the conversation or gets near to them etc.. just being polite. Well, should I ever say something in Chinese or basically communicate that I could have some understanding of what they are saying? You see, I am interested in listening to the conversations to try to pick up what they are talking about. At work they are obviously talking about work-related stuff and it is often interesting to hear how they do it.

This is where I’m not sure what to do. If I don’t say anything, I’m eavesdropping. Granted, I can barely understand anything they say, but it is even shadier because by default they would assume I have no idea what they are saying. Also, I often DO try to understand what they are saying just out of curiosity.

However, if I say something to them it would be extremely random. Clearly they weren’t talking about American people speaking Chinese.. they were just talking about work. I feel like it would only be me bragging or if not bragging, calling attention to something totally irrelevant and random. Also if I did bring it up, it would be a big letdown when they ask me some simple question that I can’t answer because I don’t remember or learn the simplest word. Also, when I speak my tones are horrible, so I would be lucky to find a person who would be able to understand what I am able to say. The best thing is to just listen and see what I can understand.

If you’re curious, the image is the 2nd most popular image result for “Chinese” on the stock image website I use. I was hoping to find some elaborate characters, but I guess this is Asian enough.

Photos 2.0: flickr

 This is the first web 2.0 company I’m talking about.  If you haven’t already, read the introduction post here.

Flickr

No, not photobucket, or sony image station, and DEFINITELY not facebook. Flickr is an amazing photo sharing website. I got myself a pro account, and I haven’t ever looked back. The pro account is $25 / year, and gives you unlimited uploads and storage and access to everything on the website. (Free accounts are limited to 200mb upload every month, and only 200 pictures can show up in your public album). Even though it costs money, it is a great service. It is amazingly easy to add pictures (just drag and drop onto a program in windows, then click upload), and then the interface is great.

It is a very open system. The four pictures that show up on the right side of my website are pulled directly from flickr. Also, if you have noticed the photos section of my website is generated directly from my flickr account. That means when I upload a picture to flickr it goes everywhere. With wordpress (the system that controls this site), I use FAlbum for the gallery, flickrRSS for the side of the front page, and Flickr Photo Gallery so I can add pictures to posts easily.

As a side note, Flickr has been around forever. It was eventually bought by Yahoo, which makes it one of the only Yahoo products that are really decent (and better than google’s picassaweb). Also, it was just about the first big web 2.0 site that had a name that was slightly misspelled.. it was strange then, but is all too common now. Also, the logo is typical of all web 2.0 companies. (Basic text with flashy colors)

Add me, or look at my stuff on flickr (i prefer their system to my system :-P). Username: nmcbean

Web 2.0 (an explanation)

Spiderweb

Web 2.0 is much better than the web as you know it. Anyways I seem to participate in a lot of sites that would be considered 2.0esque. If you have been living in a cave where the interwebs don’t quite reach you, or if you just don’t read as much crap as I do you will not know what web 2.0 is.

Well there actually is no specific technology change between 2.0 and 1.0. Websites just looks different. Web 2.0 websites all are almost normal names, but have nuisances. For example, they will drop a letter or use creative spelling. (flickr instead of flicker, pownce instead of pounce) EVERY website has a funky name. I should probably change my name to http://nat.we.b right now. Then maybe I’d be at least Web 1.5.

Not only do newer websites have snazzy names, but they all also have snazzy interfaces. They use AJAX (asynchronous javascript and xml == in english this means the pages load faster, and are harder to bookmark). They also revolve around SOCIETY. Well, more being social with information. The idea is to make everything better by sharing information and comparing information. This is what make the internet go ’round, connecting to everyone anywhere.

Anyways, there are a number of websites that I really use regularly, and YOU my dedicated readers (all maybe 3 of you), might be interested in trying out one. Not only will I talk about the service, but I’ll link to MY INFORMATION on the service. What a gold mine of information, you can now see how some of my snazzy site features really just pull from other places. For example.. look at the top right. see that “currently” thing? Well I update that by just IMing someone. And here you thought I went here and had to edit the HTML. Pfft not in the year 2007! I’ll even divide this into categories somewhat.

Note that this doesn’t cover websites that I just read. Maybe I’ll talk about that later, but these websites all have some sort of interactivity. This makes them so web 2.0 you might go crazy.

Now this was a huge post with tons of websites and all their information out there, but it was too long. So I have broken it down into mini-posts. This information post marks the beginning. I even created a category for this stuff. Wow, so advanced!