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  WSJ: China’s billionaires seek hidden value in soccer
Posted by: greengiraffe - 13-06-2014, 08:18 PM - Forum: Others - No Replies

China’s billionaires seek hidden value in soccer
WEI GU THE WALL STREET JOURNAL JUNE 13, 2014 10:27AM

China’s billionaires are investing hundreds of millions of dollars in Chinese soccer, and it isn’t just for show.

Although a majority of Chinese soccer clubs are struggling financially, it is still possible to earn a return that beats that of real estate and even e-commerce.

Last week, Alibaba Group Holding, led by founder Jack Ma, paid 1.2 billion yuan ($205 million) for 50 per cent of the Guangzhou Evergrande soccer team. For property tycoon Xu Jiayin, whose Evergrande Real Estate Group bought the then-struggling team for 100 million yuan in 2010, the deal means a return of 23 times over four years, or an annualised return of 220 per cent.

There are other benefits. A soccer team can be a powerful marketing tool. As in most of the world, soccer in China has the highest marketing revenue and most TV viewers of any sport. Soccer matches accounted for half of all the sports games broadcast on China Central Television in 2013. Investments in a club help build government relations, because Beijing is keen to promote sports.

INTERACTIVE: Plan your World Cup with our tournament predictor

DETAILS: World Cup team previews, group stage fixtures and match schedule

“It is no coincidence that three of China’s 10 richest people are all investing in football,” said Rupert Hoogewerf, publisher of the Hurun China Rich List. “There is an element of ego, and there is an element of business sense.”

It helps when China’s top leader is a fan. “ Xi Jinping likes football,” Mr Hoogewerf said. “It is very good for developing local government relationships, and gives people access to networks they won’t normally have access to.”

A picture of Mr Xi kicking a football in Dublin’s Croke Park stadium in 2012 was placed in the Chinese president’s office, according to state media. Mr Xi has said he would like to see China qualify, host and win a World Cup one day. The country of 1.3 billion people has played only once in the World Cup, in 2002.

Business people, including China’s richest man, Wang Jianlin, have taken the cue. The company he founded, Dalian Wanda Group, agreed in 2011 to give 500 million yuan to China’s football association for activities such as training Chinese youth football players in Europe. Wanda is renewing the program for another three years, and it has come up with a new plan to spend 200 million yuan annually over the next 10 years to train young football players in China.

Still, on the international stage, China remains much stronger in sports such as table tennis, badminton and diving. The state has invested heavily in sports that have potential to garner a large number of Olympic medals. China ranked No. 2 behind the US in total medals at the 2012 Summer Olympics.

Chinese love watching football on TV, but the Chinese Football Association has only 8000 registered players, equal to one for every 173,000 people. In terms of participation, average Chinese prefer strolling, badminton and cycling, according to Cvsc-Sofres Media, a media research firm.

It remains to be seen whether Chinese billionaires can kick the national team into shape. China’s place on the ranking of national teams has mostly stayed within a range of 70 to 100 out of 207 teams since 2008, according to FIFA World Ranking, although the team is currently ranked 103.

But things are looking up. The new investors are bringing capital, management know-how and marketing expertise to domestic clubs. In November, Guangzhou Evergrande clinched the Asian Champions League title, making it the first Chinese club to win the tournament in more than two decades. Evergrande turned around the club by signing up Italian football manager Marcello Lippi, who formerly headed Juventus Football Club, and Argentine striker Lucas Barrios on a four-year deal for a domestic record contract.

Unlike Evergrande’s Mr Xu and Wanda’s Mr Wang, Mr Ma isn’t an avid fan. He has kept quiet about why he is buying a football team, except to say that it is cheap.

Chinese are becoming more interested in health and sports as they get richer. The government has encouraged sports-related entertainment. What the country lacks is an inspirational team.

Based on what Mr Ma paid, Guangzhou Evergrande is the world’s 16th-most-valuable soccer team, ahead of Atletico de Madrid, a Spanish team valued at $328 million by Forbes.

“Because Chinese football is so underdeveloped, there are a lot of opportunities,” said Leo Liu, CEO of soccer gaming company KT Football and a former member of China women’s national soccer team.

“More involvement of businessmen will help unlock the hidden value of this growth industry.”

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  Another law suit ?
Posted by: Lancelot - 13-06-2014, 10:02 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (2)

Member of Parliament (MP) Baey Yam Keng has called on his party “to consider legal action” as a response to edits made to the party’s Wikipedia page.

“Wikipedia is a free encyclopedia, written collaboratively by the people who use it,” the Wikiepedia site says. “It is a special type of website designed to make collaboration easy, called a wiki.”

“Don’t be afraid to edit,” the page says, “anyone can edit almost every page, and we are encouraged to be bold!”

But to Mr Baey, who is the People’s Action Party (PAP) MP for Tampines GRC, the edits made to the PAP Wikipedia page were “vicious”, according to local news reports.

The text of the PAP Wikipedia page is believed to have been edited apparently without the PAP’s knowledge on Wednesday.

The name of the page, for example, was changed from “People’s Action Party” to “Party Against People”, a phrase which has been used by some people to describe the party.

The edited Wikipedia page also described the PAP as a “fascist regime”.

“Down with the Fascists, down with the tyrants, long live the people, long live equality, long live socialism!”

It accused the PAP of “suppression of freedom of speech”. It cited the recent legal action taken by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong against blogger Roy Ngerng as proof of this.

Mr Lee is also the secretary general of the PAP.

The edited page urged Singaporeans to “make the right choice” in 2016, a reference to the expected date of the next general elections.

“Only then will the tyranny of Lee Hsien Loong and his cronies will [sic] end.”

“If I get arrested for editing this article,” the user said, “this shows that the government of Singapore is nothing but a fascist regime that should be wiped off the earth.”

According to local news reports, Wikipedia had “addressed a note on the site to AlikVesilev about the June 11 edits.” Wikipedia apparently said the edits “appear to constitute vandalism.”

Mr Baey, who is the deputy chairman of the Government Parliamentary Committee (GPC) for communications and information, said the modifications to the page “are certainly not something we would condone or support.”

“Whether any legal action can be taken is something we need to consider,” he added. “We need to look at whether there is indeed any legal recourse for us. Ultimately, it is quite a vicious attack.”

He said his party has not decided if it would make a police report about the incident.

According to lawyers, seeking legal recourse might prove futile or difficult, as it may for example “require an extremely expansive reading of the Vandalism Act for this [incident] to qualify”, the news reported Mr Choo Zheng Xi as having said.

According to another lawyer, the Vandalism Act “does not seem to cover such edits to Wikipedia pages.”

Edits to Wikipedia pages, however, can be reversed or undone.

“Remember – you can’t break Wikipedia; all edits can be reversed, fixed or improved later,” the Wikipedia site says.

“Wikipedia is allowed to be imperfect. So go ahead, edit an article and help make Wikipedia the best information source on the Internet!”

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  WSJ: How to use tech like a teenager
Posted by: greengiraffe - 11-06-2014, 12:37 PM - Forum: Others - No Replies

How to use tech like a teenager
GEOFFREY A. FOWLER THE WALL STREET JOURNAL JUNE 11, 2014 11:03AM


ENOUGH with the complaints that young people these days are glued to their phones. The question you should ask is: What do they know that you don’t?

Believe it or not, there are advantages to using technology like a teen. I asked a handful of 11- to 17-year-olds to tell me what apps and gear they couldn’t live without. They taught me to question my own habits: Why do I use email to talk with friends? Why do I only share my best photos?

Teens are among the most creative users of technology, in part because they don’t have adults’ assumptions about how things are supposed to work.

“I will just throw away the directions and see what I can make of it,” Kapp Singer, a 14-year-old from San Francisco, told me.

Owning a smartphone, often a hand-me-down, means many teens can be pretty much always online, changing how they stay in touch with friends and express themselves.

Snapchat, the photo-messaging app in which images disappear after a few seconds, often puzzles adults who think of photos as formal, even permanent. But teens love it because of what can be said with instant pictures, especially disposable ones.

I’m not suggesting that everyone should immediately use Snapchat, but what if you tried it?

I tried it for a week, with my good-natured septuagenarian parents. After some trial and error, they were sending me “snaps”: my dad struggling to pack a suitcase, my mum making funny faces. I shared a snap of tomatoes starting to grow in my garden.

My mum didn’t like how quickly snaps disappeared. (A tip for Snapchatting mums: Press an iPhone’s home and power buttons at the same time to save a screenshot of the snap.) But my dad thought it would be a good way to keep up with children and grandchildren. The ability to communicate with my parents in snippets meant I could keep up with them even when I didn’t have time to call or write.

The experience mostly taught us we should share a lot more photos. The snaps we send aren’t “important,” but sharing those moments brings us closer together.

We can’t just think of young people as future adults. Some of their habits are borne of uniquely teen circumstances, like not having a car. Yet from my conversations with them — and the social scientists who study them like a foreign culture — I found five practices that could change how you use technology.

Ditch Email

Scotty Reifsnyder

Only 6 per cent of teens exchange email daily, according to the Pew Research Centre. They reserve email for official communications, or venues like school where alternatives are banned.

“Email is just where all the college applications go,” says Ryan Orbuch, a 17-year-old from Boulder, Colorado. (The only thing he finds more laborious is email’s even more antiquated cousin, voicemail.)

Instead, he uses a fragmented set of messaging apps based on the people he wants to communicate with. For example, he uses Snapchat for one-on-one conversations, Facebook Messenger to chat with groups and Twitter to keep up with people he’s never met in person.

For teens and adults alike, a message app is only as good as the network of people you can reach with it. The lesson for adults is that these newer tools, including apps like Apple’s iMessage, WhatsApp and Kik, drop the cumbersome formalities of email. There’s no “Dear,” no “Best Regards.”

These apps also do a better job at managing conversations: Facebook Messenger lets you excuse yourself from irrelevant conversations, for instance.

There’s also value in not having every single message stored on an email server. The idea is to just enable a regular conversation.

“If someone was recording us as we were walking down the street, that would be weird — not because we have something to hide,” Ryan says.

Express Yourself Through Images

Scotty Reifsnyder

Today, 91 per cent of teens post a photo of themselves on social media sites, according to Pew. Photos and short videos shared on Instagram or Vine can capture a funny moment, or say something that might offend (or anger parents) if it were written out.

The lesson for adults is that you can express things in images that would be time-consuming to write out, or read. “I couldn’t scan 50 people’s posts and texts as quickly as I could 50 people’s posts on Instagram,” says Kapp, the San Francisco 14-year-old.

But who wants to see all of these images? Oversharing can annoy teens, too. Instagram and other photo apps are actually an antidote: Instead of filling everyone’s inbox, people share an image widely, while viewers choose whom they want to “follow.” If people have too much to say, you can simply unfollow or mute them.

Hide in Plain Sight

Scotty Reifsnyder

Adults assume that young people don’t care about privacy. But look closer: Some 58 per cent of teen social-media users say they cloak their messages, according to Pew, using inscrutable pictures and unexplained jokes to communicate in code.

“Teenagers are growing up in a world where they assume surveillance,” says Danah Boyd, author of “It’s Complicated: The Social Lives of Networked Teens.”

Natalie Jaffe, a 17-year-old from Pittsburgh, says she adjusts what she shares based on who may be able to see it. “I just make sure what I post is appropriate,” she says, knowing that her 600 Instagram followers include both friends and parents.

The lesson: You can be “public” without having embarrassing things on the permanent record.

This could involve carefully managing the flow of information, through using disappearing-message apps or Facebook audience-privacy controls. It could also mean posting publicly about something without specifically naming it, known as subtweeting.

But take it from a teen: Subtweets can backfire. “That can always cause drama or confusion,” Natalie warns.

Find Your Own Server

Scotty Reifsnyder

The internet is a big public square. But it also has neighbourhoods where you gather with friends and just hang out.

That’s one reason playing the online game Minecraft has caught on like wildfire among teens, particularly with middle schoolers who have limited ability to gather on their own in the real world. Minecraft is like a gargantuan virtual Lego set you can work on together, without having to go to anyone’s house.

After school, San Francisco 11-year-old Traylor Smith-Wallis logs into Minecraft and a group Skype chat with as many as 18 buddies.

When they gather online, it’s often on a server Traylor or one of his friends runs — that is to say, creep-free. “It’s our virtual world, and you can make it whatever you want,” he says. (His parents usually listen in the background, he adds, just in case one of his friends curses.)

The internet has long had equivalents to Minecraft servers for niche communities. Even in the age of social networks, adults often form groups or discussion boards for their neighbourhoods, hobbies or health interests.

Throw Away the User Manual

Scotty Reifsnyder

The reason teens are such avid early adopters isn’t that they have an innate knowledge of tech — it’s that they aren’t afraid to break it.

Teens think, “How can I test and experiment and bend this thing to my will, and make it do what I want?” says Pew Research Centre’s Amanda Lenhart, who studies how youths use tech.

(Of course, there are also adults with this mindset. They’re called hackers, and some of them are billionaires.)

Sometimes, they’ll even invent new uses. Teen users of Venmo, an app for exchanging small amounts of money, have begun to pay friends $1 or another token amount, just to say “thanks” or “high-five.” It’s like a Like button with monetary value. Part of the reason may be that Venmo makes transactions public, though not the amounts.

The lesson: Experimentation is just as important as instructions, and don’t despair if you don’t have instant competence. Talk about new technology with your friends.

And when all else fails, flag down a teenager — you’d be surprised what you can learn.

The Wall Street Journal

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  CPF
Posted by: Behappyalways - 11-06-2014, 09:56 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (137)

http://www.therealsingapore.com/content/...f-dialogue

http://investideas.net/forum/index.php

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  Tan Tock Seng Hospital dismisses blogger Roy Ngerng
Posted by: Art or Science - 10-06-2014, 08:42 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (105)

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/sing...0.facebook

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  SCMP : Why so eager to publicise ?
Posted by: cfa - 10-06-2014, 09:10 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (4)

Dr. Catherine open letter to PM Lee

http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/article/15...dia-debate

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  $1m gone in one year: Widow of killed Changi Airport worker is now broke
Posted by: LionFlyer - 08-06-2014, 02:35 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (54)

I must say, this is quite sad and shows that once you got a windfall, even your family members can have intentions.

Going by her description of the failed business venture (SGD400k for 3 trucks, are you kidding me?!), it smells like a scam from the start to get her to part with the cash.


Quote:Two years ago, after her husband was killed in a freak accident while working at Changi Airport's Budget Terminal, she received nearly $1 million in insurance payouts and donations from the public.

Today, that money is all gone.

Madam Pusparani Mohan, 34, is now looking for work in Singapore to support her four young children back in Johor Baru.

"I made a mistake. People knew I had so much money and they all came to me. I am so stupid. I never buy house and finished all the money meant for my children," Madam Pusparani told The Sunday Times from her home in Skudai.

(see link for remainder of the story)
http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapo...e-20140608

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  Cashed-up Chinese students turn to Australia
Posted by: greengiraffe - 07-06-2014, 03:22 PM - Forum: Others - No Replies

http://www.afr.com/p/national/arts_saler...dy0lOMsoWK

Cashed-up Chinese students turn to Australia

PUBLISHED: 14 HOURS 18 MINUTES AGO | UPDATE: 12 HOURS 26 MINUTES AGO
print-font+fontReprints & permissions
Cashed-up Chinese students turn to Australia
Qing Qing outside St Barnabas church in Sydney’s Ultimo ... ‘there’s this thinking that if you have the money and the chance to go to Australia, then you should’.  Photo: Dominic Lorrimer
SAMANTHA HUTCHINSON

Patrick Tian, owner of Waitan restaurant, says today’s wave of Chinese students have it easier than their predecessors.  Photo: Rob Homer
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Fashion designer and student Qing Qing has her heart set on permanent residency in Australia. But that didn’t stop her delaying her departure date three times when it came to leaving her home in the wealthy industrial city of Hangzhou, an hour south of Shanghai.

“I was going to miss everything, my parents, my friends, my dogs . . . I just didn’t want to get on the plane,” the University of NSW student says. “But there’s this thinking that if you have the money and the chance to go to Australia, then you should.”

Qing Qing is one of the 88,000 Chinese students enrolled in Australian universities, leading the most influential migratory wave to hit Australia since the country was remade by southern Europeans after World War II. She struggles with her English, she enjoys going to church and she spends her weekends in Sydney having dinner at World Square or Chinatown and dancing with friends at bars in Darling Harbour.

But that is where the parallels between Qing Qing’s life and that of the typical university student end. Hers is not made up of cramped inner-city hovels subsisting on cups of two-minute noodles. She has Chanel in her wardrobe. She drives a late-model Mini Countryman, a smart four-wheel-drive made by luxury car maker BMW under the Mini marque. She owns a two-bedroom apartment in the inner suburb of Zetland and another off-the-plan apartment under construction in the waterfront suburb of Wentworth Point near Homebush in Sydney’s west. Qing Qing has work experience under her belt, but her parents have also helped finance the move.

It’s a lifestyle that agents, immigration lawyers and migration consultants say is becoming more common among young Chinese students.

The Department of Immigration is unable to release information revealing the average net wealth of Chinese immigrants on arrival. But members of the Chinese community say Australia is becoming a more attractive destination for the middle class. And there are many reasons, they say. One is to do with scholarships and financial aid: Australia, with many fewer enticements, is more popular for those who can pay their own way; the United States is more attractive for the cash-strapped.

“You know from the start that you are going to have to pay for yourself, you can’t rely on scholarships or anything like that which they have in America,” MBA graduate Li Shen says.

GEOGRAPHICAL PROXIMITY
Others say the proximity of Australia to China appeals to migrants with business interests back home who want to have the lifestyle benefits of living in a Western city. “There’s an idea that both [the] parents’ business and children can benefit from the arrangement [of living here],” Melbourne-based immigration lawyer Lily Ong says.

Compass Global Markets chief executive Andrew Su says many of his clients choose Australia for the time zone, which makes it relatively easy to keep a handle on business in one country while living in the other. A Vietnamese immigrant, Su has worked behind the scenes procuring funding on some of Australia’s biggest residential transactions, and plays a central role in helping finance ventures in Australia for offshore professionals.

Ong has had clients who have given up permanent residency in Canada in favour of setting up in Australia for the same reason. That proximity, coupled with the country’s internationally recognised universities and established international student programs, means Australia offers a compelling destination for China’s middle class, she says.

“These factors added together help Chinese family’s decide to send their children here,” Ong says.

Master’s graduate Li Shen cites concerns about the air quality and food safety in the People’s Republic, but lists other attributes that make Australia attractive to young Chinese professionals. Shen recently graduated with a master’s of business administration from the University of NSW, and is now looking for a job here to add to her CV, which already includes marketing manager roles in China, with Siemens and Symantec.

Originally from Guilin in China’s south, Shen lives on Sydney’s north shore with her husband, who works in finance and risk management and has held roles in Australia with Westpac and Macquarie Group.

“My old bosses at Siemens [in China] were from Germany and America, and it made me want to look outside and to see what another part of the world looked like,” she says. “And America is too far away from the Chinese market.”

STRAIGHT INTO THE PROPERTY MARKET
Shen says many Chinese professionals understand that some work practices in China may not be the norm in other countries, and it makes international experience crucial.

A rising wave of mergers and acquisition activity in China has also prompted the computer science graduate to learn finance skills. While a young employee at Siemens, Shen watched French group Atos acquire Siemens’s IT arm in 2011 for almost €430 million ($631 million). “I see a lot of M&A going on – not just within China, but in other countries as well – but a lot of Chinese companies are [at the centre of these deals] . . . and I thought, ‘I have the tech background, why don’t I learn some finance and do these things for them?’ ” Like Qing Qing, Li Shen and her husband wasted no time jumping into the property market, buying a three-bedroom apartment behind Melbourne’s Central ­Station off the plan within a couple of months of arriving.

Their buying plans in Sydney were more considered. They wanted to make the city their home, but they also had some concerns about the stability of property prices.

“We didn’t want to buy anything off the plan. There’s some risk in Sydney with these sorts of properties because there’s so much more supply coming on stream,” she says.

The couple are now looking for a third property which could in time become a family home, not just for the children but for their parents, too. Chinese students buy about 15 per cent of every Sydney inner-city apartment development handled by CBRE residential head David Milton. But his best customers, he says, are Chinese parents. “Most buyers come from China because their children study here,” he says.

“That’s probably our biggest market for inner-city apartments.”

Melbourne’s property market has also felt the effects of stronger interest from Chinese students and their families. “Melbourne historically has had strong demand from international investors,” Oliver Hume residential director Jamie Kay says.

“Most notably, it originally came from ­Singapore and the Malaysians, but the ­Chinese market – in the sense of a huge increase in buyers – has really opened up in the past three and four years. They’ve been driven by a desire for education, but they’re also after residency. They want an Australian lifestyle, they like Australian governance and sovereignty, and they also like Australian property fundamentals.”

It’s clear Li Shen feels uncomfortable talking about her property holdings.“I know this is really Chinese behaviour,” she says with a nervous laugh as she shifts in her seat. “Maybe I can explain why we decided to buy it? We trust the Australian system, we know the developer is going to stay there and they won’t run away,” she says. “When Chinese people buy something offshore, even if they never see it, they trust the Australian credit system.”

Are developers in China hard to trust?

“We have to check their reputation first. Maybe if they’re a large company, it’s OK, but if it’s a small one, then maybe no – to be very frank.”

LOOKING FOR A BETTER LIFESTYLE
Compass’s Su says such cases are common: “It’s not like they’re selling out of China and disposing of things left, right and centre, it’s a process of diversification. They will continue to build their businesses in China, but they’re also looking for better health and education standards in Australia,” he says.

I meet Su for the first time on a cold Monday evening in autumn over dinner at Waitan, a lavish restaurant known for its wine list and which features a $50,000 bottle of cognac. It is popular among Sydney’s Chinese bright young things.

Monday is a typically quiet night for restaurants, but Waitan’s dining room was near full and humming with steady chatter, its dark mahogany tables surrounded by the young members of the Chinese community, the men in Zegna suits, the women sporting the latest Chloe or Chanel handbags.

Groups of friends in their 20s and early 30s hover in clusters at each other’s tables, often getting up to chat as new diners, also friends, arrive throughout the evening.

Two prominent real estate agents acknowledge one another politely as they make their way to separate tables, while Jason Lin, a young project marketing director, who has led international marketing campaigns for large-scale residential developments by the likes of Crown Group and Chinese developer Country Garden, steadily works his way around the room.

In the corner, a dozen or so senior executives and board members of Hong Kong-based television network TVB-A sit at a round table, locked in conversation.

Upstairs, most of the restaurant’s 14 private dining rooms are booked out by companies entertaining clients with karaoke in between plates of Waitan’s signature Peking duck and glasses of Chinese wine.

Owner and property developer Patrick Tian arrived in Australia in 2000 as a student. The son of Tian Junting, China’s then consul-general to Australia, who was based first in Perth and then Melbourne, he changed his given name to the more easily pronounced “Patrick” on arrival. He studied business in Perth and went about setting himself up without the support network he says international students now enjoy.

COMMUNITY SUPPORT
“Kids arriving here today have it a lot easier than 15 or 20 years ago,” he says.

Tian reckons the Chinese community has reached a critical mass, allowing more migrants to help one another. Each of the students interviewed agree. They have all benefited from strong support networks in Australia – from the day they arrived, they say, whether cousins, family friends, church or university groups. They also say there is a trend to keep their Chinese name, rather than assume an English version.

“It was a different world back then, but young Chinese can easily find their way now,” Tian says.

But the transition can be rocky. For some students, opportunities in Australia are laden with big pressures.

Qing Qing admits to feeling stressed and regularly sees a free counsellor at university to talk about her fears that her application for permanent residency will not be successful.

“I have a job now so I’m worried whether I can do the job well, and I also worry whether I can stay here eventually,” she says. Qing Qing’s father has no desire to move to Australia. Pollution levels don’t concern him, he is dismissive about fears of food contamination and is too attached to his property development business in Hangzhou to run it at arm’s length. But her mother has her heart set on a new life in Australia.

“My mum’s wish is to come here, so I think [residency] is not only for me but it’s for my parents as well,” she says.

For many, the pressure is financial.

Waitan marketing manager and communications graduate Amy Xu is not yet 25 but is already responsible for paying the lion’s share of the mortgage on her parents’ apartment above Rockdale Plaza in Sydney’s south, and another two-bedder in Hurstville.

She works days and most nights promoting the restaurant and liaising with its guests, while doing work for National Australia Bank at large events where they require a Mandarin-speaking MC.

Xu studied a communications degree at Sydney’s Macquarie University, during which time she shared a three-bedroom house with six others. Things were tight, she says, and she found it hard to manage her study load with her 40-hour-a-week job.

But it wasn’t as difficult as it was for one of her flatmates. “He lived on one sushi roll a day,” she says. “That was all he could afford.”

She now works more than 60 hours a week to support herself, in addition to stumping up the $500 she needs for the family’s weekly mortgage repayments.

In China, her father was a psychiatrist and her mother worked in health research for international pharmaceutical companies. But lack of English has meant they have been factory workers since emigrating in 1999.

“It’s been difficult for them, but they think it’s worth it,” Xu says in her broad Australian accent. “I graduated school here. I went to university and now I’ve got a good job and I can earn money to buy a home and to take care of my parents.

“And besides,” she adds, “they would never dream of going back.”

BMW Sydney corporate manager Tony Wakefield knows first-hand what life looks like for the more fortunate. He estimates that young Chinese students and professionals in the early stages of their career make up about one-third of would-be buyers coming into the showroom.

‘A CHOICE OF SEVEN SPORTS CARS’
“The kids I see all work incredibly hard, but their parents are also incredibly generous and will do a lot to make sure their children are safe, and are being looked after,” he says. “My customers are hard-working professionals who have made a lot of money. Their attitude is that why shouldn’t their kids live the same way their parents do?”

“But I ask them what marks the kids get at university, and they are always very high.”

Even within the seriously well-heeled ranks, there are obvious differences between those who simply have, and those who have everything.

Su has clients whose children will pick from a choice of seven sports cars sitting in the garage. “And I’ve also got other clients who spend more than $20,000 a night at Marquee at The Star [casino],” he says.

But even within a community in which cash and labels reign supreme, there are limits. “These kids know what it looks like to be driving these cars, and to be spending the amount they do. But they know their parents wouldn’t be impressed, and for that reason they don’t want to talk about it.”

Despite repeated invitations, the super high-net-worth Chinese students all refused to be interviewed. “Of course they’re not going to talk to you,” one Shanghai-based reporter says. “This is the worst possible time for a Chinese person anywhere in the world to show they have any wealth.”

The public displays of wealth have riled older members of Australia’s Chinese community, many of whom arrived as refugees after the Tiananmen Square massacre.

“All the bad culture is being brought from China to here,” said one former student, who arrived in 1989. “[The 1989 arrivals] have become the minority.”

BLATANT DISPLAYS OF WEALTH
Chinese-born Sydneysider Michael Zhong, who also arrived in 1989, is concerned that China’s reform agenda is weakening as streams of bright and wealthy young people emigrate to Australia for good.

“Many people, after they get permanent residency, just forget [about China] and don’t care,” he says.

In some pockets of Sydney and Melbourne, the parade continues.

Li Shen and Qing Qing often find themselves rolling their eyes at the blatant displays of wealth common among some of their friends and fellow students.

“I have some friends who pose on Instagram and say things like, ‘I have a new bag’, but I don’t want to be like that,” Qing Qing says. “I used to like labels. I used to wear Louis Vuitton, Miu Miu . . . but I’m not like that any more.

“I got to a point where I didn’t want other people to think, ‘You have lots of money, you can buy this, you can buy that.’ ”

The trend towards designer labels is more common in Shanghai and Beijing, and the cities close by, says Li Shen.

The cultish devotion to labels is inspired partly by a reverence for Western pop culture and films, she says. Equally, it traces to the millennials from Korea, Taiwan, Japan and Hong Kong, where wealth was accumulated at the same breakneck speed as in China, only earlier.

Li Shen and her husband drive a Corolla, although they could afford a Mercedes or BMW, and designer clothes – if they wanted them.

“My bag is from [US high-street label] Forever New, and I think my dress cost about $50. Spending lots of money on things like clothes and cars just isn’t important to us,” Li Shen says. “We’d prefer to spend our money on nice wine, or a trip to New Zealand. I suppose we’re a bit Australian in that way.”

BUOYED BY WORK OPPORTUNITIES
The couple haven’t yet decided whether they will settle in Australia. They are open to stints in Hong Kong and Singapore, but they are buoyed by the work opportunities here.

Shen points to BHP Billiton executive Michael Henry as an example of someone from a Chinese background who climbed to the top ranks of an Australian listed company. Telstra international president Tim Chen is another.

It’s inspiring, she says. “Some Chinese students studying in Australia will say, ‘We cannot get involved in the local society, we’re finding it difficult to get a good job; we just live at the bottom’, but I know people who have really successful careers here.

“If you prove that you are really passionate about something, you can do a great a job here. Australia’s the type of place where that can happen.”

What about America?

“America has plenty of opportunities, but there are so many talented people over there. It’s like you’re not the only one working hard. Everyone worked hard over there, everyone has brilliant ideas, and sometimes you have to rely on some relationships.

“But Australians are quite laid-back and there’s more of an equal opportunity.”

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  Solar Roadways...
Posted by: greengiraffe - 01-06-2014, 09:39 AM - Forum: Others - Replies (1)

http://www.cnbc.com/id/101718219

Forget high-tech cars—Dreaming up high-tech roads
Paul A. Eisenstein | @DetroitBureau
9 Hours Ago
CNBC.com

Step onto the pavement on a hot day and you might get a sense of the energy that Scott and Julie Brusaw hope to tap into.

The Idaho couple are thinking up a way to pave the country's roadways with solar cells, rather than asphalt or concrete. The so-called Solar Roadways are an edgy idea that the entrepreneurs said could replace much of the need for traditional sources of generating electricity in the U.S., including coal-fired power plants.

And they aren't the only ones who see the potential for roadways to become energy sources.

Artist's rendition of a solar roadway, by Solar Roadways
Source: Solar Roadways
Artist's rendition of a solar roadway, by Solar Roadways
Volvo is working with the Swedish Transport Association to turn a stretch of roadway in the city of Gothenburg into a rolling battery charger that would be used by specially equipped electric buses for recharging. The concept could someday help eliminate the "range anxiety" that electric vehicle owners suffer due to the limited capacity of today's batteries.

Read MoreThese eight cars are tops in high-tech crash prevention
"Years ago, when the phrase 'global warming' began gaining popularity, we started batting around the idea of replacing asphalt and concrete surfaces with solar panels that could be driven upon," according to the Solar Roadways website.

Translating that into a practical solution hasn't been easy, as it isn't as simple as taking solar cells off of a rooftop and burying them into the pavement. Scott, who was trained as an electrical engineer, has come up with a hexagonal block that contains a solar cell protected by a thick glass cover. Add LEDs, and there would be no need to paint lines or messages on the roadway. Small heating elements could also be installed in colder climates.

Read MoreUber CEO: Sorry drivers, future is no-driver cars
Laid out like pavers, he contends they are strong enough to support a truck weighing as much as 250,000 pounds. And with an estimated 29,000 square miles of roadways making up the U.S. landscape, according to Solar Roadways, the couple claims that if they were all converted to the solar pavement system, there'd be enough power to eliminate the use of fossil fuel generators.


The transition wouldn't be cheap. Scott estimates the cost would run anywhere from 50 percent to 300 percent more than the cost of using asphalt to pave a roadway. How the material would stand up to weather, road salt in colder climates, snowplows, crashes and other challenges also remains to be seen.

While there are plenty of skeptics, the Brusaws also have been gaining backers. They've secured several grants from the Federal Highway Administration, including one for $750,000 in 2011.

They've since turned to the Indiegogo crowdsourcing site for more support, and the reception has substantially exceeded their $1 million goal . As of Friday, Solar Roadways had already pulled in more than $1.6 million from more than 38,000 supporters, a record for the most individual contributions to a single campaign.

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While the Brusaws want to use roads to generate electricity, others see a way to provide electric power through the roads to power battery vehicles. That could be a major breakthrough for proponents of alternative energy, offering a way to overcome the limitations of battery-based vehicles.

Volvo is pairing up with the Swedish Transport Association to create short stretches of electrified roadway in Gothenberg, the Scandinavian country's second-largest city. Using a concept called inductive charging—essentially, what's used to wirelessly charge many electric razors and toothbrushes—specially designed city buses would simply have to drive along dedicated portions of pavement to partially replenish their batteries.

Because there are no exposed wires, the system would be safe for humans and animals, who might inadvertently walk across the chargers.

"Vehicles capable of being charged directly from the road during operation could become the next pioneering step in the development towards reduced environmental impact," said Niklas Gustavsson, executive vice president of corporate sustainability for the Volvo Group.

Other induction charging systems have been put to use in several locations, including Utah; Torin, Italy; and Gumi, South Korea, with more under study. Longer-term, proponents believe the technology could be incorporated into highways for use by electric passenger cars such as the Nissan Leaf and the Tesla Model S—perhaps built into existing high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes or dedicated lanes for use by battery cars only.

Right now, such induction charging systems have to be linked to the conventional electric power grid. But the Brusaws have suggested that they could combine in-road chargers with their solar roadways, eventually allowing highways to both generate power and use that energy to operate a fleet of zero-emissions cars, trucks and buses.

—By CNBC Contributor Paul A. Eisenstein. Follow him on Twitter @DetroitBureau or at thedetroitbureau.com.

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  Uproar in China after woman bashed to death at McDonald’s
Posted by: greengiraffe - 31-05-2014, 11:37 PM - Forum: Others - Replies (2)

Uproar in China after woman bashed to death at McDonald’s and burger eaters just watch
THE AUSTRALIAN MAY 31, 2014 8:18PM

Scott Murdoch
China Correspendent
Beijing
MANY people in China are in uproar after a young mother was bashed to death in a busy McDonald’s restaurant, while dozens of customers watched without helping her, in an attack police have tentatively linked to a fringe sect.

The attack happened in the Shandong province, in China’s far east, on Thursday night when the woman was set upon by a family of six.

It has been reported the woman, whose surname was Wu, was approached by a man and asked for her telephone number.

When she refused the man, surnamed Zhang, started to attack her and was joined by his two daughter, young son and two other women.

The son is too young to be criminally charged but authorities have promised he would be ‘‘dealt with separately’’.

There is speculation in China today that the group are part of a religious cult trying to recruit members in Zhaoyuan city in Shandong, which has been known in the past as the home of some sectarian organisations.

The group of six have been arrested and have allegedly pleaded guilty to murder.

The Zhaoyuan police posted on its microblog that it was believed the attackers belonged to a group called the “All Powerful Spirits” while CCTV, the state broadcaster, said religious material had been found near the scene of the crime.

Organised religion is prohibited in China but there has been a growing number of Christian and Buddhist movements starting to emerge in the past few years.

The voraciousness of the attack has stunned China, especially as it was witnessed by dozens of people in the store who did not intervene. Ms Wu, who was taken to hospital but died later, is reported to have a young son.

Uncensored websites have reported the women in the group joined in the attack after initially shouting ‘‘beat her to death’’ when the man was hitting her with a mop.

Graphic images of the victim laying in blood are circulating online while a three-minute clip of the incident has gone viral.

Xinhua, China’s official news agency, said Shandong authorities has promised to stamp out religious-based crime.

“Local provincial police authorities vowed to severely punish illegal activities of heretic sects to protect the safety of people’s lives and property,” it said.

China’s online army of netizens, however, are critical of the witnesses, especially those who filmed it, for not helping Ms Wu.

The uproar is similar as to three years ago when a baby wandered into the path of the truck and was run over repeatedly while people watched and did not help.

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