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Breaking News
Microsoft legalizing Indonesian government piracy?Posted by Jeremy Goldkorn, June 21, 2005 4:18 PM
Asia Times Online: In Jakarta, piracy is official Excerpt: "US software giant Microsoft, which turned over a gross profit of more than US$30 billion for the financial year ending March 31, 2005, last week denied media reports of a deal with Jakarta to "legalize" the software in tens of thousands of pirated versions of Windows programs used in government departments. The reports claimed the amnesty offer, which would allow the government to pay $1 for each computer running an illegal version of the operating system, emerged after President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono met with Microsoft chairman Bill Gates in Seattle last month." |
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Xujun Eberlein's Apologies Forthcoming: Hong Kong's Blacksmith Books has published a short story collection by Xujun Eberlein.
Princess Der Ling: Two Years in the Forbidden City: Two years in the Forbidden City is largely a reminiscence of the minutiae of life for one of history's most powerful women, by one of her court attendants, a Manchu noble's daughter by the name of Der Ling.
Carl Crow's The Long Road Back to China: In 1939 Carl Crow - an American journalist, advertising executive and author who had lived in Shanghai for 25 years until forced out by the Japanese - travelled up the Burma Road from Rangoon to Chongqing on assignment for Liberty magazine - 'the most interesting assignment I have ever been given'.
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+ The 'national' in National Day (2006.10): Xiao Feng writes about China's national flavor, national curse, national bird, national car, and so forth, Dongfang Yu writes on the true meaning of China's National Day in the age of angry youth. + Don't ask so laowai don't have to tell (2008.07): An essay was written by Geremie Barmé, scholar, filmmaker and author of the new book The Forbidden City. + Religion and government in an uneasy mix (2008.03): Phoenix Weekly (凤凰周刊) article from October, 2007, on government influence on religious practice in Tibet.
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