phishing, scam or something like that on Yahoo

Got this e-mail in one of my Yahoo accounts. Looks soooo genuine, even “verified” it is coming from a Yahoo address (most probably is). Kind of frightening, gosh, my account is going to be closed. Reported it to Yahoo, no real reaction yet though to be fair the help section clearly mentions “Yahoo never asks for your password in an e-mail”.

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Those criminals (to be shot after a loooong stay in Gitzmo) are getting better every day.

Beijing taxis / traffic / pollution / English

The car & traffic restrictions are apparently not providing the expected smooth ride and clear skies.
On 18 August my illegal observation station in Julong (located in my off-limits library) hardly detects the presence of China World Trade Center Tower 3. See here how it looked on 10 August (of course Jacques Rogge was here that day?).
click to enlarge WTC3 seen from my library (Julong) on a better day
According to SEPA’s website, pollution index for Beijing is now a little over 90 (grade 2); it says major pollution is caused by PM10. The index is said to include SO2, NO2 and particles (PM10, particulate matter smaller than 10 microns – masks are useless). Right.
Now the SCMP reports the following comments on the present anti-pollution test:
Scientists also questioned the validity of Beijing’s air-quality standards since they excluded two key pollutants – fine particulate matter and ground-level ozone concentrations – which could cause health problems.
Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau chief engineer Chen Tian said it had noted the issue, but the ongoing tests did not include the two categories.
“We are not monitoring these two things. We will consider them in the future. But there are many problems in standards and regulation. We need time,” Mr. Chen said.

Now, anybody can explain all this contradiction – are “fine particles” included or not? Particles are the real bad ones, exactly what is messing up my very own lungs. Good luck athletes.
Traffic yesterday was indeed better. The previous days, despite a general (non-published) ban on certain cars, traffic was hell as usual. Our own car is banned from 7 to 20 August (wrong plate) and my driver is enjoying a “voluntary holiday”.
Talking with taxi drivers is often fun, interesting and very challenging for my Chinese skills. Drivers commented pollution was, well, kinda difficult to solve. Too many cars, Beijing is surrounded by mountains, not enough wind, etc.
I asked one of the very talkative drivers how his English was as I heard the city was urging all drivers to learn English. His reply was simple. All talk/talk, no meaning and no progress. He tried a little and gave it up soon. He added: “I cannot even understand all Chinese, there are so many dialects in China. How am I supposed to understand all those different types of English, like Australian, American, British, etc.?”.
He has a point… Might explain why until today I never met a taxi driver who talk some useful words of English. And understand “Hilton Hotel” or Swissotel”.
Still wondering where all those English speaking Beijing ren are, all those millions as announced by the city. They must be on holiday, like my driver. Hopefully they will pop up on 8 August next year.

Olivier Strebelle’s “The Athletes Alley”: now official

(edited 16 August)
Today on 14 August the Belgian Ambassador, Mr. Bernard Pierre, in the name of the Belgian Government, officially signed the Donation Agreement with the representatives of the Beijing Municipal Government. The Belgian side will donate the “Athletes Alley”, the work of the famous Belgian artist Olivier Strebelle. It will be a symbol of the Olympic spirit and of the friendship between China and Belgium.

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ready to sign with a small scale model on the table

The Chinese side was headed by Mr. Wang Wenhong, vice director of the Beijing Municipal Planning Commission, representing the Mayor’s Office. Also present was the Foreign Affairs Office of the Beijing Municipality.

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the signing ceremony
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preliminary views of the art work, from the side and from the front

Five groups of abstract sculptures made of stainless steel tubes are spread over an area of 100 meters long and 20 meters wide. The average height is 14.5 meters and the highest point is 20 m.
From a precise point of view at the entry of the alley, the abstract elements become a figurative ensemble revealing the logo of the Olympic Games, held up by five athletes.
The sculptures will be located in the western part of the Olympic Forest Park, north of the International Area and the Olympic Village and south of the Tennis Venue, the Archery Field and the Hockey Field.
After the Games, the Archery Field and the Hockey Field will be removed and the area will become a park.
The area will remain a central entry point to the western part of the Forest Park as well as to the central area of the Forest part, through a road and bridge going from west to east.
After the Games, most of the International Area will become a park except for a few buildings that will remain.
The Belgian side will soon start implementing the project and the art work should be ready by the end of March 2008. It will remain an attraction after the Games.
We are very thankful to all the relentless efforts of the Belgian Ambassador in Beijing, the Chinese Ambassador in Brussels, the Beijing Municipal Government in general and the Beijing Municipal Planning Commission in particular. Not to forget many other friends who helped this project become a reality, such as Tsinghua University.
Now, let’s go and “do it”!
See also earlier postings on the project in this blog, like the signing ceremony of the first tube.
The website of BOCOG also reported the signing ceremony of the first tube, see the following link:
http://en.beijing2008.cn/bocog/bocognews/headlines/n214098678.shtml
Note: more info can be found on the following website, dedicated to the project:
www.athletesalley.be
For the moment the site is in French only, English version to follow.

Sunny sky, storm, Beijing disease and more

Not exactly the Sunday I had planned. Woke up with one more attack of the Beijing disease, i.e. cough, sore throat and feeling lousy. I am repeating myself – living in Beijing is really bad for your health. I blame the pollution, the stress, the bouts of depression, etc. Not good for your immune system and worse for your respiratory system. Guess I will have to really stop smoking my favorite cigars. I’ll miss them. Try to sleep more (good luck). Get less stressed (good luck again). I already stopped any outdoor exercise and recently tried to be very careful in the gym – avoiding massive sweating while running, I can lose like 2 liters in one hour…. and staff has to mop the floor next to the treadmill!
I miss my days in Mongolia next to Lake Toilogt. No mobile, no e-mail, no pollution. Peace.
There is always a bright side to misery. I went through a mountain of unread newspapers and magazines and let my iMac run through test programs for nearly 24 hours (TechTool Pro4). Seems all is OK now and the disappearing act of my iDisk on the desktop seems to be solved.
We had a wonderful blue sky, some clouds that disappeared and then in the evening suddenly one of the most violent rain and storm I have seen over here.
This Monday morning, blue sky, seems it will be a hot day. I continue coughing, taking medicine fit to cure a horse while having bouts of fever. In my pajamas. Another advantage working in a “SOHO”. And the iMac seems fine, at least for now.

11 August 07: with tennis champion Michael Chang

[updated 18 August, see down below)
Under a bright and blue sky (yep, happens sometimes) I had the pleasure to join the famous star Michael Chang for the opening ceremony of the “2007 Beijing International Tennis Festival”, in Chaoyang Park.
The event is organized by the Beijing Sports Bureau, Beijing Sports Federation, Beijing Tennis Association, Beijing International Sports Exchange Center, Beijing Veteran Tennis Association and also the “Beijing Association for Promoting International Sports Exchanges” (of which I am the honorary director of the board).

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hip dancers – folkloric dances – Michael arriving

The competition is open for all interested players aged 18-50. Registration is at the following website (Chinese only….): www.united-mission.com
Finals will be on 22 and 23 September 07.

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speech by Michael – demo tennis – Michael invites a kid

I had distributed many tickets during the recent Amcham event (“countdown”), not sure if people turned up, well, too bad if they missed the star. There were some real cool girls dancing – I took some good movie and pictures.
For more and better quality pictures of the event, open this link: http://homepage.mac.com/bjprc/PhotoAlbum3.html
To see a short movie, click the following link (sorry, I am still learning how to do this and have better quality… maybe I need to buy iMovie PRO version…): http://homepage.mac.com/bjprc/iMovieTheater4.html
And yes, this is being added on 18 August: the full quality clip is online:
http://homepage.mac.com/bjprc/iMovieTheater5.html
Let me know how it turns out for you… The clip was made with the basic version of iMovie.