汕头中医白癜风教授挂号-【汕头中科白癜风医院】,汕头中科白癜风医院,汕尾治疗白癜风原则与方法,汕尾白癜风科研诊疗基地,白癜风照光能报揭阳医疗吗,潮州看白癜风病去哪里好,揭阳哪治疗白癜风效果最好,潮州人在潮州治疗白癜风
汕头中医白癜风教授挂号潮州市白癜风特需门诊,普宁治疗白癜风最好的方法,普宁儿童白癜风哪家最好,汕头是哪里治疗白癜风可靠,普宁哪儿做白癜风手术好,治白癜风汕头那里最好,梅州白癜风治疗效果好吗
BEIJING ,May 6 -- China Mobile on Wednesday launched an online platform that enables its subscribers to read and download digital publications through cell phones and e-book readers, as part of its effort to profit from the country's emerging mobile reading market.The world's biggest cellphone carrier in terms of subscribers kicked off an e-book store similar to Apple's iBook store, which gives users wireless access to a series of online publications such as e-books, comics and magazines."Reading habits have fundamentally changed," said Gao Nianshu, general manager of China Mobile's data department. He said the company hopes the new platform will attract over 200 million users in the near future. Primary school students in Yangzhou, Jiangsu province, read e-books. China Mobile hopes its newly launched platform will attract over 200 million users in the near future.According to figures from China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, cellphone users in the country reached 780 million at the end of March. Of that group, mobile readers surpassed 155 million, the ministry said.Interest in e-book readers made by firms such as Hanwang Technology, Amazon and Founder since last year also significantly boosted demand for mobile reading.Gao said China Mobile's new e-book platform, which currently covers about 40 percent of the best selling books in the country, has attracted over 15 million users during four months of testing in eight areas.He said the company's online e-book store will also support the iPad, the tablet computer launched by Apple Inc last month."Mobile reading has become a popular service with mobile Internet users in China," said Zhang Yanan, analyst from research firm Analysys International, in a research note.But he said that although about 45 percent of Chinese mobile Internet users read books at least once a day by mobile phone, few of them are willing to pay for online content.According to China Mobile, the subscription fee for its online e-book store is up to five yuan per month, 40 percent of which will be shared with copyright owners.Zhong Tianhua, head of China Mobile's subsidiary in Zhejiang province, who oversees the company's online e-book store business, said the company's strategy is to attract as many users as possible in the first three years with the lowest pricing possible.Companies including Nokia, Motorola, Hanwang, Founder, Datang and Huawei Technologies have released products that support China Mobile's new service. But many e-book makers have also established their own online e-book stores, putting them in competition with China Mobile.It was reported earlier this week that China Mobile plans to team up with Foxconn Electronics of Taiwan province to produce its own e-book readers.
XIANGNING, Shanxi, March 29 (Xinhua) -- Almost 1,000 rescuers were racing the clock through the drizzle Monday to pump water and reach the 153 people trapped underground in a flooded coal mine in north China's Shanxi Province.Altogether 261 workers were in the pit of Wangjialing Coal Mine, which was under construction, when underground water gushed in at about 1:40 p.m. Sunday. Although 108 were lifted safely to the ground, 153 others were trapped in the shaft. Rescuers carry pipes at the site of a flooding accident of Wangjialing Coal Mine, sitting astride Xiangning County of Linfen City and Hejin City of Yuncheng City, in north China's Shanxi Province, on March 29, 2010."Currently, more than 970 people are participating in the rescue operation," said Liu Dezheng, a spokesman of the rescue headquarters and deputy director of the General Office with the Shanxi Provincial Work Safety Committee, at a news conference late Monday."If everything goes smoothly, with the installation of two more high-power pumps, it is expected that 650 cubic meters of water can be pumped out of the shaft per hour tonight, and 2,000 cubic meters per hour tomorrow," he said.Previously, six pumps had been used to pump up to 300 cubic meters of water per hour around the clock.But Liu also pointed out that complicated conditions underground could hamper the operation."The coal mine has a high concentration of gas. Rescuers have to face the danger of toxic gas, while fighting the water," he said. "We must guard against secondary disasters."Therefore, rescuers had started to drill a hole and open a drainage channel in the shaft to divert water from the flooded tunnel to another unaffected tunnel, he said."The channel, with a length of more than 100 meters, is expected to be completed by 6 p.m. Tuesday," he added.Local authorities have dispatched more than 40 medical workers and 20 ambulances to stand by at the shaft entrance.President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have ordered local authorities to spare no effort in the rescue operation. Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang is at the site to oversee the operation.Most of those trapped were migrant workers from Shanxi, Hebei, Hunan and Guizhou provinces, rescuers said.Xu Shuwei was among the last group of workers to board a lift to escape the flood Sunday afternoon."Those trapped are my workmates, I just want to try my best to save them," said Xu, 40, who helped rescuers carry equipment throughout the night.The mine, which straddles Xiangning County, of Linfen City, and Hejin City, of Yuncheng City, covers about 180 square kilometers.The mining zone was estimated to have more than 2.3 billion tonnes of coal reserves, including 1.04 billion tonnes of proven reserves, according to the company's official website.The mine, affiliated with the state-owned Huajin Coking Coal Co. Ltd., is a major project approved by the provincial government. It is expected to produce 6 million tonnes of coal annually once in operation.Earlier this month, 32 workers were killed in a similar accident when underground water flooded a mine being built in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.One worker died after being lifted to the ground and 31 others were presumed dead two weeks after the accident happened on March 1.Rescue work, which took 14 days and involved 20,384 people, was halted on March 14 when those trapped were believed to have no chance of survival.
BEIJING, April 5 --The People's Bank of China says the country will be more open to foreign capital this year even though the prospect of a strong economic recovery is still unclear.Although the impending withdrawals of various countries' economic stimulus packages may also complicate the efforts to end the global economic crisis, the Chinese government has decided to increase the penetration of foreign capital into the country's financial industry in an appropriate way.An editorial in the "Global Times" quotes some western officials who said if China opened its market to western financial institutions the way it opened its market to five-star hotels, the potential risks would be huge for the country itself and the world at large.The editorial warns the doors to free trade should not swing open too quickly and that market openness should be managed at the right pace, as China has done during the past three decades. But it also notes that the stakes are higher in the country's financial industry. It argues that if China is fully open to foreign capital, the capital operation pattern common in developed economies such as the United States and several European nations will not suit its existing financial system on such short notice. As a result, chaos would erupt sooner or later in the financial sector.The editorial concludes that China should gradually liberalize its financial industry, because a sudden torrent of foreign capital would be undesirable. It calls for a prudent approach to financial liberalization that would yield a productive outcome as evidenced over the past three decades of gradual financial reform whereby more market competition has been encouraged and distressed loans have been effectively curbed. Such a policy has shielded China from being hit as severely by the current financial crisis and enabled it to rebound quicker than other advanced nations.
NARA, Japan, April 19 (Xinhua) -- Former Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan said Monday that China, Japan and South Korea are " mutually complementary in economy and closely linked in trade.""The considerable disparity in their resources, technological levels and labor costs highlights enterprises' comparative advantages and is conducive to transnational investments and trade, " said Zeng in his keynote speech at the fifth session of the Northeast Asia Trilateral Forum."Japan and South Korea are more advanced than China in economic development, and have accumulated much experience in achieving economic transformation, dealing with the relation of development and environment and tackling international trade frictions, from which China could draw lessons and benefit," he said at the one- day forum taking place in the ancient Japanese city of Nara.There thus exists great potential as well as a broad prospect for their future practical cooperation among the three nations, said Zeng.The three need to continuously substantialize the content of their partnership, infuse new elements in their cooperation and improve their communication and coordination from trilateral, regional and global aspect, he said.In his keynote speech, former Japanese Prime Minister Nakasone Yasuhiro said that Japan, China and South Korea should further prompt their cooperation and make their voice more clearly heard on the world stage in a bid to safeguard the stability of Asia as well as that of the world at large.The three need to set as their long-term aim the establishment of a regional cooperative mechanism in areas of East Asia's politics and security, economy and culture, and jointly play a leading role to that end.Former South Korean Prime Minister Lee Hong-koo, for his part, said that faced with problems such as the security and stability of global financial markets, trade liberalization, climate change and the proliferation of nuclear weapons, it draws worldwide attention how the three nations coordinate with each other to adopt a unanimous stance.Zeng arrived here Saturday to attend the fifth session of the Northeast Asia Trilateral Forum that opened earlier Monday.The trilateral gathering drew 29 former high-ranking officials and prominent figures from political, academic and business circles of China, Japan and South Korea.The forum, cosponsored by China's Xinhua News Agency, Japan's Nikkei news group and South Korea's leading daily newspaper JoongAng Ilbo, aims to strengthen non-governmental exchanges among the three nations.The yearly event has been held alternately in the three countries since 2006.
YUSHU, Qinghai, April 25 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Hui Liangyu Saturday stressed that the quake relief work in northwest China's Qinghai Province should focus on resettling survivors and the area's reconstruction."The focus should now be shifted from searching the quake victims and treating the injured and building temporary shelters to resettling survivors, restoring social order and carrying out reconstruction," Hui said at a meeting held Friday night in Qinghai.Saturday was the last day for rescuers to comb the quake-hit Yushu region in a bid to find survivors buried underneath the rubble. Chinese Vice Premier Hui Liangyu (2nd R) visits a woman injured in earthquake in Gyegu Town of quake-hit Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Yushu, northwest China's Qinghai Province, April 23, 2010. The death toll from the 7.1-magnitude earthquake on April 14 climbed to 2,203 as of 5 p.m. Saturday, with 73 people still missing, more than 12,000 injured, tens of thousands of residential buildings flattened and huge economic losses.