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Max

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Max's Space

7月30日

看到彩虹

      有点俗,不过忍不住也来怡情一把,爬上公司天台,一道彩虹连接金融中心与天际

       20090730003[(000001)20-38-47]

       20090730018

       最近真的有点忙,其实也就是又上班又上课弄得自己没周末休息,因为有事忙着了倒也给了自己不更新空间的理由,现在想想,耕作就免了,那就来锄锄草吧。

3月9日

三八节纪事

    三八妇女节的大好日子里我也出动了,全天做伴郞跑前跑后,当然头一遭的事,不免有不了解情况不尽职的地方。但可以说我已经尽心尽力了,无奈两边的亲朋的确够厉害,才十桌的酒席,在大杯红酒全被我挡下的情况下,新郞新娘全都吐倒。文彬同子,真对不住你啊,但我已经尽力啦(:

3月2日

破财在二月

    自从报名心理咨询师破产后,就开始破财。二月最后一天,招聘会门口瞅瞅展板也会被偷手机,郁闷至极。赶紧参加参加婚礼充充喜去。

2月27日

三八妇女节在上海动物园做伴郞

    很久不写博,别人问起你忙啥呢?我脑袋里就想着了这么一句话。不过事实也就是和标题一样,最近尽瞎忙些奇怪的事。

    参加一个媒体公司笔试,招电视剧研究。对着200道什么《闯关东》男女主角编剧是谁,湖南卫视春节放了啥电视剧,CCTV电视剧频道海外剧场每晚放几集这样的题目,我掏出手机给某人发了短信说,你非常适合来做这个笔试……

    朋友打电话来说帮忙做伴郞,做就做吧,还再三确认说你确定没结婚?能做的?那叫一个叫汗啊。一问时间,三八妇女节,真是好日子。再一问地点,得西效公园里。得,天时地利呀。

    MSN从过年后就一直抽筋,后来严重到一到晚上就连不上线了。直接Dew同子提醒,说升级9.0会好的。前连看到很多朋友的博说9.0掉线严重很烂别升,现在不得不一试。结果就好了-_-难道MSN点名我一定得升级不然掉线到死的吗?

1月15日

!!Curse of Silence!! S60智能手机的攻击漏洞证实,用NOKIA的同子严重注意

    十多天手机没有短信,直到昨天一朋友说连发我两条短信我都没有回音才发觉我的N73不能接收短信了。然后试着发送短信也不能发送成功。于是重启,发现短信能够发送了,但还是不接收短信。回家后上网查找了一下,发现12月30日,德国人发现了S60的这个漏洞,只要向S60V2.8-3.0的智能手机发送一条发送格式为电子邮件的短信,发送成功手被攻击手机没有任务反应,于是就再也不能接收短信了,其它功能一切正常。建议用N记手机子同子发10086试试有没有回音。V3.1的要连续发送11条,然后进入收件信箱会有内存不足的提示。

    起初我以为只是谣言,也可能是网络的关系,但后来更换手机发现就可以接收短信了,说明的确是机器的问题。于是下了网站上的专杀工具FortiCleanup_CurseSMS_v_1_0_3,重启后自动扫描,还真扫描到了。扫描后会收到一条短信"CurseSMS attack from +861922162818 found and deleted by FortiCleanUP.”然后功能恢复正常-_-看来手机以后也要进入病毒与防毒时代了。

    P.S. 感谢张看同子N70配合实验,不过不知道为什么没有激发漏洞。还有一灵异事件是装杀毒软件之前我居然收到了一条来自霄枫同子的短信,真是奇怪,一度让我觉得不是中毒了。因为攻击方式很简单,所以这里就不公布了。还有攻击我的手机号是13922162818,谁知道这是谁的号码?太缺德了(:用N记智能手机的同子强烈注意了要。

   再P.S.感觉虾皮同子N73配合实验,为带来不便表示歉意(:

12月30日

Seven ways China might surprise us in 2009

OCTOBER 2008 • Gordon Orr

How will China surprise us next? Shocks, tipping points, and revelations have become basic staples of the world’s daily news diet. But with so many eyes now on this emerging Asian giant, what happens there continues to have an exceptional ability to draw attention and to shift perceptions drastically and suddenly.

Will the surprise be planned, like the magnificent Beijing Olympics Games, whose nearly flawless execution set a counterpoint to China’s image as an economic laggard buoyed mainly by cheap labor? Will it repel, like the tainted-milk scandal? Or will it send a message, as Lenovo’s takeover of IBM’s personal-computer business did in serving notice that Chinese companies were ready to enter the global fray?

Here’s a list of some realistic possibilities for the next year. Will all of them come to pass? I doubt it. But any one of them could, and each might make us see China and its future in a new light. What do you think?

China announces that by 2020, half of the cars in the country will be electric. It invests tens of billions of dollars in R&D toward achieving that goal.

Such a move could make China the leader in the automotive technology of the future, with other countries struggling to keep pace. Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation (SAIC) or newcomer BYD Auto could become the Ford Motor of the 21st century, propelled by a new technology—much as Ford capitalized on the internal-combustion engine at the start of the 20th century.

The Chinese government buys a 50-year lease on an entire geographic region of Mexico, enabling Chinese companies to build factories there to supply the North American market more easily.

Chinese companies would then become the undisputed leaders in outsourced production. No longer constrained by geography, they could bring their expertise in low-cost manufacturing to Mexico (or Poland or Turkey), greatly expanding their reach and overcoming obstacles—such as maintaining supply chains across the Pacific—that still hinder their growth.

A major office block collapses in Chaoyang, Beijing’s central business district.

Although officials would scramble to rewrite construction regulations, a disaster in the capital or another large city would change the relationship between the country’s growing middle class and the government and might threaten its ability to keep social unrest in check. True, construction standards came under fire after the May 2008 Sichuan earthquake felled many school buildings. But the reaction to that tragedy would pale beside the response to a similar one in a rich urban area with immediate media access.

A leading Chinese company tries to buy an iconic US technology firm (or two).

A major deal could be worth 10 or 100 times Lenovo’s $1.35 billion purchase of IBM’s PC division. If the US government blocked the sale, the acquisition’s failure could herald an era of renewed corporate nationalism in China, just as its companies were becoming more global. You could expect an aggressive increase in domestic R&D spending as the country focused on homegrown technology, as well as a chillier climate for multinationals with research operations in China.

A successful deal, by contrast, could create a truly global company, unlike anything seen before, with a multinational culture superseding any sense of national origins.

A restructuring of China’s telecommunications industry turns into a complete consolidation.

Regulatory failure and competitive imbalances have already reduced competition down to three major players, from four, and telecom companies are now being encouraged to share infrastructure. If stock prices continue their freefall and these imbalances remain, the inability of the second- and third-ranked players to chart a path to success could bring a full reconsolidation of the domestic industry.

The English Premier League football association buys its Chinese counterpart, the Chinese Super League.

What better way to signal a coming of age for China’s urban middle class? The takeover would be a major bet that this growing socioeconomic group is ready to spend heavily on sports and entertainment—a bet that could open the floodgates for investment in other consumer sectors. Wallets are already opening up: witness the Olympics and the US National Basketball Association’s exploration of franchise and stadium deals in China. Such a purchase would also show that the country is willing to bring outside expertise and professionalism into a challenged domestic industry.

Warming cross-strait relationships lead to a merger between the mainland’s Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and a leading Taiwanese financial institution.

The reaction in Taiwan would probably be ambivalent—just another large business deal. But in China, a cross-strait merger of powerhouses like these, in banking or some other sector, would be applauded as an affirmation of its One China worldview.

11月17日

北京游

    本来想着去北京过过生活,城市就是应该这样感受的。结果像外地人第一次上京一样,能去的景点一个接一个地跑,累个半死。不知道是因为生病还是因为年纪大了体力不行了呢?不过第一次上京还是得总结总结。

    一、开会

    首先还是要感谢北大的,忙活一暑假还不忘邀请咱上京转转交流交流。说实话,要不是有这么个契机,我这么一懒人是难得想着出去走动走动的。于是,经过11/7一整晚的颠簸,还没睡醒的我就迷迷糊糊地被拉到北京大西山脚下一山庄里。很俗套的“会议”然后照例是夜间活动把能玩的玩个遍,结果夜感风寒,一到北京就感冒了。

    二、住房

    这次上京最开心的就是有地方住了,还要感谢房主及时地出差一星期,北京的二人世界呀哈哈。房子在朝阳区石佛营,一室一厅小屋,据说还是拍《奋斗》的小区。北京最不一样的就是用的地点名了,不像上海都是啥路啥路,直到我离开也还不知道门口那路口两条路叫啥名,只记得那车站叫啥八里庄北里东站。所以一开始十分不适应,还好出租司机大多知道地点,走着走着居然就走到了,我很是惊奇。

    三、道路

     北京除了用地名外,给人感觉就是马路很宽。传说中的N环都不是立体交通而是地面的,双向8车道再加上环线外的车道很是壮观。就连普通的道路也很宽,边上还有两道叫辅路,弄得和环线差不多。路是宽了,但车也多了,高峰时期也时不时的拥堵一下。不过没某人说得那么夸张。

    四、景点

    和道路一样,不愧是京城,都很大。这么大居然也叫公园,给我印象最深的就是在天坛公园里的找厕所,看见一指示牌上书“厕所,前950米”-_-其它的景点也一样,一个个走进去走出来很累。

    五、很好的公共交通

    不得不羡慕北京的公共交通,的确很很很便宜。出行如果不是高峰时非常方便,这次失误不带电脑去,地图上也没有公交线路,不过随便找个公交车站,上面的站名又都是地点,所以基本都能找到车坐。不会出现上海公交上这写XX路,那也写XX路但两个站相差十万八千里的情况。对了,还要感谢王同学借的交通卡,公交4角地铁怎么坐都是2元,公共交通就应该做成这样。哪里像上海做坐倒地铁算算还不如开车油钱省呢。

    六、失望的后海

    不知道那几位极力推荐后海的朋友是不是不太泡吧,把后海描述得很有感觉的样子,以至于让我挺失望的。首先不明白为什么叫后海?酒吧基本全在前海嘛,还有门口全是拉客的,还好没有站街的呵呵。一圈下来都大同小意,后来走不动了进了个叫吉它吧的,感觉像是那种开在小区边上的小酒吧。

    总的感觉大都市现在都没有本质上的区别了,车水马龙人来人往。不过北京毕竟是古城,感觉大气不少。写着写着老给打断,先想着这么些下次再写吧。

 
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