China Web 2.0 News Roundup
- Baidu launched company blog: Baidu recently launched its company blog in Baidu Space, some users found that Baidu deleted one post by its CEO to ask employees of Baidu to keep its enterpreneurship. Previously, Baidu also open several blogs for its various products, such as blog for Baidu top search, Baidu Space, Baidu Knows, and Baidu Post Bar.
- Linkist to join club of Digg clone: Linkist, a Taiwan-headquartered social networking site, is planning a digg feature for its uers to recommend news and information. The site is developed using open source software pligg.
- Chinaren rolled out a new campus SNS: Chinaren, one of the most famous alumi site acuquired by Sohu, recently rolled out a new campus social networking service, or another China’s Facebook. Users can write blogs, add friends, create and join groups, share objectives. There is a bug in its homepage, when you user firefox, you can browser users profile, which is designed to be only available for registered users.
- VQQ: Another web chatting tool: VQQ, similar to Sina’s Woocall, is another web chatting tool which can be embeded into websites or blogs. You can also add http://vqq.com/+URL of website to add VQQ to any site, without needing to change templates of website, similar to Gabbly, or even access all chatting room created by users in VQQ’s own sites.
-
Related Posts
3 Responses to “China Web 2.0 News Roundup”
Post a comment
Subscribe
[...] China Web 2.0 News Roundup — China Web2.0 Review China Web 2.0 News Roundup — China Web2.0 Review [...]
[...] One area where Chinese tech companies seem to find success is adapting Web services successful in the English speaking world to a culture that primarily reads Chinese. It was not surprising to see QuDing.com present something that is sort of a cross between social booking marking sites like del.icio.us, Digg, and even a hint of online news reader Bloglines. China already has its fair share of Digg clones. Dingr and diglog are both very similar to Digg in the way they function. A couple of others have been shut down for names and appears that looked too much like Digg itself. China Web2.0 recently pointed to the new Linkist foray into the land of Digging based on open source voting engine Pligg. Of course Linkist is itself a social networking clone of Linked In [...]
[...] ChinaRen has just launched a new version of campus social network recently (profile). Before that ChinaRen was one of the largest online contact services for students. [...]