Thursday/ work etiquette in China

‘Impress your boss in China’ says a recent Bloomberg Businessweek article (picture from article), with some pointers.    So of course I could compare notes with my own experience here.
Greetings :  (Bloomberg) Reach for your boss’s hand first.   (Me)  It’s last name then first name, and use the full name, preferably with a title.   So Jiang Wang would be mister Wang Jiang for you, mister !
Business Cards :  Receive with both hands and have yours ready to give in return.
Numbers : 4 is bad and 8 is good.
Food :  Just eat it!
Hand Gestures :  This one I still didn’t know (yikes) –  do NOT use your index finger to point or gesture.   It is very rude.  Use your whole hand.
Smoking and Drinking :  This I know very well – at dinners one can get away with not smoking;  not so with drinking!
Feng Shui :  Explains the square ‘dragon’ holes in buildings.

One more.  The article fails to mention the important concept of ‘losing face’ in business relations.   Avoid confrontations, and the ones that would make someone look bad in front of his boss or colleagues,  almost at all costs.  (Come to think of it, this applies almost anywhere in the world).

Wednesday/ too big to fail?

I love the graphics that NHK World uses with their TV shows.    The first picture shows the General Election is Nov 6 with the Republican candidate still a question mark. Also that the last Republican primary is June 26, and the Democratic and Republican National Convention dates (at which the candidates are officially announced).   Next picture has Republican candidates Mitt Romney*, Ron Paul and Rick Santorum (no Newt Gingrich, hmm).   Never mind angry birds^, check out the angry donkey (Democratic mascot) and the big angry elephant (Republican mascot).   The last picture shows the 2008 outcome when Obama’s ‘Yes, we Can’ campaign prevailed 53% over 46% over John McCain.

*with his solid New Hampshire primary win, ‘Mitt Romney has become what every capitalist dreams of:  he has become too big to fail’ says a writer for politico.com.
^the smash hit Finnish computer game.

Tuesday/ watch that heater !

NHK World TV’s weather presenters put this picture up before they went to the weather forecast tonight.  All I could figure out with reverse translations is that is winter (character on the white t-shirt and on the blanket; is that Mr Winter sleeping in the bed, then?) and that is fire.    I guess the safety tips would be to hang up clothes well away from space heaters; have a fire extinguisher handy, and watch for items on the stove top.

Monday/ 2012 Year of the Dragon ‘bearista’ Bear

Here is the 2012 Year of the Dragon ‘bearista’ bear that I got in Shenzhen at a Starbucks.   I have a 2010 Year of the Tiger and a 2011 Year of the Rabbit bear, so I really had to get this fella with his ferocious dragon suit as well !   I will let the three of them pose together for a picture when I get back in Seattle.

Sunday/ I see red ..

.. whenever I watch a Republican debate, such as the one in New Hampshire on Sat night/ Sun morning in China.  I liked it when Jon Huntsman let loose with a flourish of Mandarin during an exchange between him and Mitt Romney over trade relations with China, though.  Go Jon!  And New Hampshire is actually a ‘blue’ state (voted mostly Democratic in 2008).   I made the map with http://nationalatlas.gov/mapmaker.  The little Granite State is wedged between Vermont and Maine, and touches Quebec province (Canada) in the north and the Atlantic Ocean in the south.   The mapmaker can also produce maps of crops, minerals, aquifers, avalanches, droughts, snows, hail, fog, the distribution of the big poplar sphinx moth, Africanized honey bees and zebra mussels.  Wow!

Saturday/ the Excellence Century Center

I caught a glimpse of these buildings in the Shenzhen central business district before and had time Saturday to go check them out up close.    They belong to the largest non-government developer of commercial properties in Shenzhen, the Excellence Group.   These buildings are called the Excellence Century Center.   The first picture was taken late afternoon .. those HAPPY NEW YEAR letters are enormous!, each two storeys tall.    The next two pictures are drawings, showing their location close to the Shenzhen Exhibition Center (flat building with the curved roof in the foreground).  The red blow-up arch, the kitty kat KFC billboard, and the street vendor selling pink and white mice-with-wheels-on-a-string were by the Exhibition Center.   Next stop was a department store Jusco close by where I found the plush dragons (2012 is the Year of the Dragon) and the anime-eyed little guy with the rosy cheeks in a red star uniform.   And then it was dark and I knew I had to go back to the Excellence Center buildings to catch them showing off in the dark.

Friday/ the qílín brings good luck

A few colleagues and I are staying put for the weekend.  So we had a beer at the Sheraton – to celebrate the end of the work week, of course! I actually had a German Erdinger Weissbier.   The Kirin beer can pictures are from my flight in back on Tue night. Kirin beer is named after a qílín – a mythical hooved Chinese chimerical* creature known throughout various East Asian cultures, said to bring good luck.   *composed of the parts of different animals.   The Japanese braille (yes, just a little different from standard Braille!) on the can says ‘Kirin beer’ and has been on their cans for a few years now.  Could it say ‘open’? I thought when I saw it, then realized that cannot be, since it’s so easy for exploring fingers to find the pull tab.  But in the dark or if you cannot see, it will distinguish this can from ones with soda pop or something else!  Finally, a really close look reveals that the Kanji characters キリンfor Kirin are hidden in the creature’s mane and tail.

This last picture is from a post from a blog called ‘Tokyo Five’, showing the hidden characters キリンin the picture.

Thursday/ put on your North Face

It’s a good thing I packed my North Face jacket because it’s in the 40s here (about 5 °C). These jackets come in many styles and colors, and I saw this article in the Korea Joongang Daily newspaper on a previous trip back to the States. Turns out the jackets reflect a social hierarchy at some Seoul high schools. The ‘layers’ of the hierarchy are :  the Loser (even though that jacket costs 250,000 Korean won or $215) , the Commoner, distinctly Middle class, the Bully, a Rich Family Punk or a Captain (700,000 won or $600).    Which one am I?  Well, my jacket is all black – and I got it at a sale two winters ago for $150, seemingly too cheap to even be a ‘loser’.

Wednesday (Tuesday in the USA)/ eyes on Iowa アイオワ州

Even the Japanese station NHK World reported on the first Republican primary vote on Tuesday in Iowa, noting Mitt Romney’s ‘win’.  (It was by a sliver of 8 votes, over Rick Santorum).    Hey, and it takes 5 Kanji characters to spell Iowa!  The state derives its name from the Ioway people, one of many American Indian tribes that occupied the territory at the time of European exploration.

Tuesday/ the long haul from Seattle to Shenzhen

I have said it before :  it’s a long haul from stepping into the taxi cab in Seattle for the airport until I step into my hotel room in Shenzhen, China!  Here’s how it broke down this time.   

Mon 10.00 am leave for the airport from home.  
Mon 1.30 pm Tokyo-bound Boeing 777 departs.
Mon 11.00 pm  Arrive at Narita airport in Tokyo (picture of plane at gate).
> Switch to Tokyo time which is Tue 4 pm !
Tue 4.00 pm  2 hr lay-over at Narita airport.  The Choken Bako bank (picture) from the Akhihabara electronics toy store has a hungry friendly pooch sitting on top.  Drop some coins into his dish and he immediately goes for it, gobbling it up.  (The coins are stored inside the box). 
Tue 7.00 pm Late departure for Hong Kong, skirting by Mount Fuji’s south side (see map, but too dark to see the mountain).   Eat Japanese dinner (picture – rice, veggies, fish : delicious). 
Tue Midnight Arrive Hong Kong.
> Switch to Hong Kong time which is Tue 11.00 pm.  
Tue 11.00 pm Stand in customs line for 40 mins, even then my one checked bag had not arrived.   Bag finally arrives (whew), and driver is still there. 
Wed 1.00 am Go through Hong Kong – Mainland border crossings (even at that time, a long line of vehicles). 
Wed 2.00 am Arrive at hotel in Dameisha in the outskirts of Shenzhen.         

Monday/ to Tokyo and then Hong Kong

 

 

I’m waiting for my flight to Narita airport in Tokyo on United Airlines.  From there Japan’s All Nippon Airlines will take me to Hong Kong.  Seattle-Tacoma airport is busy .. many people are going home after visiting friends and family, of course.

I was grumpy this morning and endured the strip-and-body scan at security the best I could.  One’s belt and shoes have to come off, as well as everything in pockets, even plastic items.    So the number of items coming out in trays through the carry-on scanner is ever-growing.  The other thing is that Europe has now banned X-ray body scanners, which use back-scatter ionized radiation, due to health and safety concerns.   Instead of X-ray scanners, European airports will use millimeter-wave scanners that utilize low-energy radio waves.    The article in Forbes magazine reports that in the USA, the TSA uses both types of scanners: some 250 X-ray scanners and 264 millimeter wave scanners.   Sea-Tac airport uses the ‘bad’ one, the back-scatter X-ray machine.

Sunday/ Auld Lang Syne

As I approached the neighborhood pub called Smiths here on 15th Ave around 3 pm, I heard the sounds of people singing Auld Lang Syne to bagpipe music.   So I joined the little crowd that watched them from outside until they were done.   ‘Let’s go occupy Victrola!‘ joked one band member, and they were off to the Victrola coffee shop down the street.

‘Occupy’ has become a political word in 2011, of course (poster picture from http://occupywallst.org/) – and makes me wonder what will become of the Occupy movement in 2012.  Also check out the poster for a New Years Eve benefit concert for Somalia.  A few more things to contemplate would be :  if we will get a new US president in the November 2012 general election; if the 2012 London Summer Olympics (the opening ceremony, say) will be as spectacular as Beijing in 2008 (probably not), and if the world will come to an end as per the Mayan calendar.   On this last one, let me stick my neck out and say that is a ‘no’.

Saturday/ Happy New Year!

2012 is here, also in Seattle! The Space Needle picture is from King 5 TV, and the other one is from my desk.   Happy New Year!  I wish everyone a year filled with health, happiness and prosperity !

Friday/ good to go to China too

I will start out on my next trip to China on Monday, and needed a new Chinese visa.   I picked up my passport on Thu night at the Fedex ‘World Service Center’ here in Seattle.   ‘You should see our collection (of souvenirs from around the world)’ says the poster from there.    The list of countries Fedex ships to includes just about every single country and island on the globe, but since Cuba, Iran, North Korea and Syria are countries non grata, they are not on the list.   I was surprised to see Afghanistan and Iraq both listed as Fedex destinations, though.

Thursday/ I am good to go

Tolling started today on State Route 520’s floating bridge, one of two bridges that connect the city of Seattle to ‘the other side’ or ‘the East side’.   The money is needed for an upgrade to the bridge (see ‘existing’ and ‘new’ pictures .. the option with Light Rail will be possible but is not yet approved or funded).   By the year 2030, our region is expected to grow by more than 1.3 million people and add 700,000 jobs.  (Here’s the link http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/Projects/SR520Bridge/questions.htm).

Drivers have to buy transponders (roughly half a credit card size, as shown on the mobile kiosk selling them), stick it inside their cars’ windshields and activate the account.   And then you are good to go.  There is no stopping on the bridge and throwing coins in a basket (aww, that was always fun!) or saying ‘hello’ to an attendant as in days gone by.  The approaching car sends back its signal, and the driver’s account gets debited with varying amounts – free between midnight and 5 a.m. and then up to $3.50 for rush hour (5 bucks if you’re without a good to go pass! .. you will get charged by mail).

I have had my pass for awhile and drove across the bridge and back last night.  Sure enough, back home a check of my account showed an update with the charges and times that I crossed the bridge.   So I can see why there are some privacy concerns out there.   The little transponder enables Big Brother to track you, in places other than the bridge as well.  Yes. The radar is out there and you cannot drive ‘under’ it.

Wednesday/ some North Korea factoids*

*A factoid is a questionable or spurious—unverified, incorrect, or fabricated—statement presented as a fact, but with no veracity.

(Long post ahead!). North Korean Dictator Kim Jong Il’s funeral was Wednesday.  Regarded as one of the few Stalinist regimes persisting into the post-Cold War era, North Korea—along with its culture, history, and society, and the daily lives of its residents—is hidden behind iron curtains even in today’s information age.   One official picture (first one below) turned out to have been Photoshopped – to make people milling around in the white snow section on the left disappear by adding ‘snow’ over them.

But more information from North Korea is emerging. Further down are pictures I took a few weeks ago from NHK World’s TV coverage when Kim Jong Il died, as well as some culled from the web.   The map picture shows the major roads in the country, even though private car ownership is almost non-existent.   (You use the bus or a train to get around).   What about flying?  Well, North Korea’s sole airline, Air Koryo, currently has scheduled flights from Beijing, which depart at 11:30AM every Tuesday and Saturday, and return from Pyongyang at 9AM on the same days.  Air Koryo is the only 1-star (worst) airline on Skytrax’s list.  (Yes, you can fly in on this airline – but only as part of an official tour group. Another option is to go check out the jointly controlled truce village in the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) dividing the two Koreas, which has regular one-day bus tours from Seoul).   The airline does operate internal flights as well.

Where does the flag (next picture) come from?  It came into being in 1948 when the country was founded as a result of the post-colonial settlement handed down by the United States and the Soviet Union (USSR).  The Korean War between the north and South Korea of 1950-1953 in which some 54,000 US personnel were killed is sometime called The Forgotten War (from the US perspective).  And today I learned that M*A*S*H (popular 70s-80s TV series) stands for 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital in Uijeongbu, South Korea, so it depicts the Korean War and NOT the Vietnam War.

Food? Frequent food shortages.  Basic food is rationed, while one can buy canned meat or a small amount of vegetables either from a store or farmers’ market.  The local specialty liquor is insam-ju, Korean vodka infused with ginseng roots.  Spicy food seems to be is short supply; there is no kimchee (spicy cabbage, found everywhere in South Korea, as in the picture I took at a shop at Seoul’s international airport).  No candies or sweets for children.

Language?  They speak Korean, much the same as in South Korea.   From Wikipedia (I will have to research what the heck this means) ‘The genealogical classification of the Korean language is debated by a number of historical linguists. Most classify it as a language isolate while a few consider it to be in the Altaic language family.  The Korean language is agglutinative in its morphology and SOV in its syntax’.  Ooh, sounds complicated.  I love it !

Cell phones?  There has been cell phone service since 2008 and reportedly 60% of Pyongyang residents and many ordinary citizens now have phones.  (And some even have iPhones).  An Egyptian company was contracted to help build out the infrastructure.

Defections.  I think the last picture I snapped from NHK TV shows the latest defectors in 2011 that were found by the Japan Coast Guard – a wooden boat carrying nine people, three men, three women and three boys. The group had been sailing for five days towards South Korea but drifted towards the Noto Peninsula.   The first famous defection occurred shortly after the signing of the armistice ending the Korean War, on September 21, 1953, when then 21-year-old No Kum-Sok, a senior lieutenant in the North Korean air force, flew his MiG-15 to the South.  No was awarded the then immense sum of $100,000 and the right to reside in the United States.

 

 

Tuesday/ Google ‘interview’ answers .. check ’em out

Alright, here are the ‘official’ answers! (picture from Wall Street Journal Weekend Edition Dec 24-25, 2011).  And how did I do? (If you are a Google recruiter, stop reading).  My response to Question 1‘s answer is .. Ok, if you say so (there is an infinite number of correct answers).   I didn’t get it.  I tried prime factors, differences to three levels and other weird things. Which, after not working, is of course a clue that it’s something still different.  Then I thought it could be years in the 20th century with significant events, but still no luck.    Question 2.   I thought the answer is, first – the balloon stays put for an instant, due to inertia (Newton’s First Law), and then thought it would move forward but couldn’t explain as nicely as in the newspaper answer as to why.   Question 3.   I got this one .. and I got Question 4.  Fairly easy to solve with algebra, and making the number of pages in the book the unknown quantity x to solve for in a single equation.   Question 5.  Missed it!  Aargh.  Best I could offer was that it was a reference to Wheel of Fortune (very popular TV game show), and that the guy tried to spell ‘HOTEL’ or something of that sort, and lost the money he had.

Monday/ so you think you can work at Google?

.. that’s what this weekend’s Wall Street Journal Review section challenges its readers with, with an article about interview questions candidates can expect at Google.   Want to give them a try? (If you don’t have training in math and engineering, just try Question 5).   I’m going to take a crack at them myself without peeking at the answers at the back of the newspaper, and will report back tomorrow!

Question 1 : What is the next number in the sequence 10, 9, 60, 90, 70, 66, .. ?

Question 2: You’re in a car with a helium balloon on a string that is tied to the floor. The windows are closed. When you step on the gas pedal, what happens to the balloon – does it move forward, move backward, or stay put?

Question 3 : Using only a 4-minute hourglass and a 7-minute hourglass, measure exactly 9 minutes – without the process taking longer than 9 minutes.

Question 4 : A book has N pages, numbered the usual way, from 1 to N. The total number of digits in the page numbers is 1,095.  How many pages does the book have?

Question 5 : A man pushed his car to a hotel and lost his fortune.  What happened?

Saturday/ a dry December in Seattle

The two pictures from below are from my walk this afternoon. Yes, the sun does shine in Seattle in wintertime! .. and it has been very dry the last few weeks.  Precipitation for Dec 1 to 22 is running 3.61 inches below normal at 0.25 inches (compared to the normal 3.86 inches).  Santa is bringing some wet weather with him tomorrow, though.  (That 39 to 42 temperature is in °F and is equal to 4 to 5.5 °C).