With the Internet itself not expected to reach a majority of China's vast population until 2015, Qzone may even be able to overhaul Facebook's active user figures without having to expand very much outside Chinese borders.
Compare this to Spanish (807 percent), Chinese (1,479 percent) or Arabic (a massive increase of more than 2,500 percent). The incidence of mobile search is also high in other developing markets, including the other emerging economic powerhouses of...
The Chinesesearch giant is often considered crucial by businesses attempting to break into that vast emerging market. It's worth bearing in mind however that you'll need a local presence with a Chinese domain website and a valid business...
As the platform is primarily in Chinese, your search results will be much richer when searching in the local language. While Baidu is the search giant in China, microblog Sina Weibo is fast becoming the social darling of brand advertisers targeting...
It is unclear how Yahoo’s algorithm transition will impact organic search results for Chinese speaking cities such as Hong Kong and Taiwan where Yahoo search continues to dominate. Although Google Analytics is the most popular web analytics tool...
Meanwhile China’s search giant, Baidu has its own video search vertical called Baidu Video that indexes videos from a multitude of Chinese online video providers, including Youku, Tudou, Sohu, and others.
While sites from Google, Yahoo, and Bing may be able to get products into the Chinese market – on a technical level – groups like Facebook have little chance for success. Google actually withdrew after censorship debates in early 2010, and the...
The Chinese government has launched a new search engine called Panguso that aims to not only become a top search engine in China but lead in the international market. Comparing Goso's mobile feature to Panguso, it seems Goso understands the...
To succeed in China it's critical to understand Chinese consumers, how they use the Internet, and how they would engage your products in their local markets. Simplified Chinese is the primary language of Mainland China so it is important to make...
Kai-Fu Lee has resigned as Google Vice President and President of GoogleGreaterChina to work with Chinese start-ups at a new company he founded, Innovation Works. GoogleChina Head Departs Posted by Kevin Newcomb Sep 8, 2009 Dr.
Kai-Fu Lee has resigned as Google Vice President and President of GoogleGreaterChina to work with Chinese start-ups at a new company he founded, Innovation Works. The loss of Lee could put Google back in its push into the Chinese market.
But Google.com
has remained held out by the company as a way for those in China to still get an
uncensored look at search results (at least uncensored according to Chinese
laws; US laws still get a far more limited amount of material removed).
He will work alongside former Microsoft executive Kai-Fu Lee, recruited by Google to create a Chinese research and development center. Chou spent the last nine years at telecommunications company UT StarCom, where he was most recently president of...
He will work alongside former Microsoft executive Kai-Fu Lee, recruited by Google to create a Chinese research and development center. Chou spent the last nine years at telecommunications company UT StarCom, where he was most recently president of...
The China Daily reports that Yahoo China has formed alliances with 12 Chinese companies and will provide them with email, IM, and search. Yahoo China Forms Alliances By Gary Price, Oct.http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/041020-552a
More accurately, it seems to power a version of keyword navigation akin to the former RealNames, helping those in China enter Chinese characters into the IE address bar to reach web sites. Chinese Homegrown Search Engine Eyes Overseas IPO Reuters...
In fairness to the misguided Chinese authorities, they did apparently deem AltaVista subversive enough to block as well. Just this week, China apparently deemed Google so potentially subversive that it blocked access to the search engine.
In fairness to the misguided Chinese authorities, they did apparently deem AltaVista subversive enough to block as well. Just this week, China apparently deemed Google so potentially subversive that it blocked access to the search engine.