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Bumps on the SuperHighway

** note that a number of the sites listed here will require the use of a proxy address if accessed from within China. Various arms of the government of PR China block access from inside China to many sites outside of China. The process itself is rather crude, so that, for example, all of the several million Geocities sites are blocked (as of the year 2000), presumably because one of them offended some official sensibility. In general, anything with a political flavour about it, or social comment, may be blocked, but the criteria seem erratic and unpredictable. Blocking or not blocking is pretty accidental. Fairly outspoken sites may remain untouched for a long time, until some zealot makes a complaint. Then all hell breaks loose; (this seems to be true of life in general in the People's Republic). The way around official blocks from inside China is to dogleg through a "proxy" address which acts as a blind for the final destination (your browser has a setup category for this). Asking half-known acquaintances in an embarrassed murmur for a working proxy is the closest most foreign residents (and knowledgable locals) come to being guilty of "unChinese activities". Of course, as soon as the proxy is discovered by the people's guardians, it too disappears .... [p.s. I do NOT know of any current proxy addresses]

** note2 : line speeds are often so slow inside of China (yes, *really* slow), that you may conclude that a site has been blocked, when a week later the thing suddenly works .....

** note3 : anyone setting up a site targeting a readership which is at least partly in China should check that sites sponsored by their Internet Provider are not blocked wholesale by the Chinese government already (e.g. Geocities is a no-no). If your own site is blocked at a later date, there is not much you can do, except set up a mirror site.

Finding Links

The following advice applies to finding information about almost anything on the net. There are literally tens of millions of internet sites out there, probably including tens of thousands about China. You know what happens when you use a search engine: several thousand links pop up, mostly irrelevant to your purpose. You waste days shovelling through this muck. Among the internet pages are also millions of personal homepages. Again, these are mostly tiny personal ego trips, decked out with some loud graphics. However some individuals do spend a lot of time and ingenuity collecting (or sometimes writing) truly useful information. The best of these will be more insightful than any corporate effort. How do you find them? Yes, it still takes a lot of shovelling... However, one of the most useful tools I have found for this purpose is called the webring. A webring is a collection of sites on a particular topic. Go to a big provider like Yahoo. Log into their webring section, and type in your topic of fascination ..... Somewhere amongst all the "Hello, admire me.." sites, you will find someone who has already spent half a lifetime collecting all the real links you need. Good luck!

Teaching Jobs in China

Note that many universities (but few high schools) have authority to employ foreigners directly. They prefer exchange agreements with foreign universities so that their own staff can get coveted overseas trips. The demand for foreign teachers is so great that this doesn't cover their needs though. Most institutions lack initiative, and pick from the pool offered by the Foreign Expert's Bureau in Beijing. It used to be possible to register with this bureau directly. More recently they appear to be using several American organizations (especially) as proxies (but now see China TEFL below). To be employed as a "foreign expert" as opposed to a foreign nobody, you generally need a Masters degree or better. This difference is reflected in your visa status, salary, living conditions etc. Increasing numbers of private schools are also authorized to employ foreigners, often at better salaries to the public institutions, but they actually want you to work for pretty long hours. They might or might not provide accommodation, and you take your chances with actually getting paid. The university jobs may have a few quaint perks, like three budgeted banquets, a birthday cake and one or more visits to regional tourist attractions. If your get a chance, eyeball the accommodation before accepting a job : there are significant variations in standards.


map courtesty of HotUAE.com - China


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owner:       Thorold (Thor) May
 
contacts:         thormay@yahoo.com


copyright (c) Thor May 2001, all rights reserved
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