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Barcamp Shanghai 2011!


Well gee, we’ve done it again: Barcamp Shanghai 2011 is tomorrow, at Weiden and Kennedy Shanghai. Doors at 9am, planning at 930, talks start at 10. It’s gonna be epic. After party for geeks and geek admirers on the superfly WK Shanghai rooftop, starting at 5.

I’ll probably recover enough to write a post mortem on Monday or Tuesday. Thanks to the techyizu team for helping bring BarcampSH to the next level.

Barcamp 上海于 2011 3月12日, 召集各路技术人才, 创业先锋, 和社交达人参加我们这一届活动,千万别错过咯!

Barcamp是一种富有乐趣的”非-会议”, 由参会者自己主导活动流程。Barcamp的模式起源于硅谷, 与传统枯燥的技术会议不同,Barcamp集合了所有参会者的兴趣议题,形式开放,交流渠道通畅。至今已经在全球350多个城市成功举办. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BarCamp 今年第一期上海Barcamp将在3月12日举行, 在此注册: http://techyizu.org



每一期Barcamp都会有活动传统的”5分钟演讲”, 在这些富有激情的5分钟里参会者与我们分享过: “中国网民之声” http://www.bloggerinsight.com/blog/barcamp-shanghai-chinese-netizen-speak “HTML5创想标签” http://www.reigndesign.com/blog/html5s-missing-tag-sarcasm/ 和创意学习汉语最佳策略. 在每次活动签到处,所有会员 (所有人!) 都能注册来分享他的5分钟, 每个演讲过后都会安排更深入的讨论, 我们的最终目标是让所有参加Barcamp的人都真正的参与进来!



今年Barcamp上海是由科技蚁族, 一个新启的非营利组织,立志创建上海极客社区,。如想赞助我们的活动,或者成为我们志愿者的一员,请在我们的官网和我们交流: http://techyizu.org



不要错过这个展现你技术天赋的机会。您还有机会成为上海极客社区推动者!

BarCamp Shanghai: Attention Techies, Entrepreneurs, and Social Innovators, Don't Miss This Event!

BarCamp is a fun, user-generated "un-conference." The BarCamp model started in the Silicon Valley as a response to formal, exclusive, and boring tech conferences and has since spread to 350+ cities worldwide. It's a can't miss event for techies, entrepreneurs, and social innovators.



The Shanghai event is set for Saturday, March 12, 2011 at the Wieden + Kennedy Offices. Sign up on the TechYizu site by creating an account.



BarCamp consists of passionate 5-minute presentations on an impromptu topic. At past BarCamps, participants have presented on Chinese Netizen Speak, HTML5s missing tag: sarcasm, Hot Social Games in China, and the best strategies for retaining Chinese vocabulary. Upon arrival, anyone (yes, anyone!) can sign up to present on anything, just let your own energy and nerdiness shine through. All presentations are followed by time for discussion–the objective is to get everybody involved!



This year Shanghai BarCamp is being led by Tech Yizu (Chinese for "Tech Ants"), a new organization that aims to organize Shanghai's lively startup and tech community.

We need Volunteers and Projectors! email barcamp@techyizu.org if you can help!



Thanks to our Platinum Sponsor

Thanks to our Gold Sponsors


Oh the irony: Shanghai Government evicts artists in order to create “creative zone”

Performance art at 696 weihai lu

Performance art at 696 weihai lu

696 Weihai road in Shanghai is a funky artists colony of bare concrete, paint spatters, and, as you’d imagine, a quirky collection of people. It’s also just around the corner from my office, and I’ve strolled around the area few times on lunch breaks. I’ve not witnessed any of the apparently great performance art (see right), but there’s some great murals and graffiti decorating the area.

Thanks to Danwei, I discovered that the artists in this ‘colony’ are not allowed to renew their leases. so the Shanghai government & developers can build a creative park. English language Arts blog Shanghai Eye has a run-down of the media coverage and opinion pieces the artists have gotten published in the media.

This is, I suppose, an inevitable southward expansion of the gentrified Nanjing West Road, though the area is generally pretty ritzy, save for this ‘colony’ and a few pockets of old rowhouses. The Four Seasons is 2 blocks from here, and 2012 will bring a line 12 station at Weihai/Nanjing west road (on land recently “reclaimed” from a neighborhood of rowhouses), just steps from this ‘colony’. I have no doubt that this new development will, as Ma Liang notes, attempt to be Jing’An district’s tianzifang.

Cities change and growth happens, and is generally preferable to the alternatives. As Ma Liang notes, he won’t be a Nail House nor is this expected to be a dramatic eviction (unlike contentious evictions around China). It is, however, a poignant juxtaposition that elucidates the Shanghai Government’s attitude toward art and creativity vs what I suppose we need to call commercial and consumer focused creativity and art.

Post Expo pollution in Shanghai: an emissions analysis

The Shanghai World Expo ended on October 31st, and I, like most of my fellow Shanghai denizens, noticed an immediate and frightening deterioration in the air quality. Over night, it seemed, things went from relatively clean to crazybad.

China recently launched a site that delivers hourly pollution data for 113 cities, but for prior data, there is but one resource for Shanghai air pollution data, and I’ve decided to crunch those numbers to see if there are any demonstrable trends, and if I could validate what we all see and feel.

The aforementioned resource delivers 10 years of data, from 2000-2010, for Particulate Matter 10 microns and larger (PM10), Sulphur Dioxide (SO2) and Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2). I will let the graphs speak for themselves, and only explain any math I did or if I have a funny joke.  Click on any graph to see a much larger and more detailed graph.

10 Year Analysis

First up is a series of graphs featuring 10 years of daily readings, with a 200pt (day) moving average trendline, which sort of smooths out the peaks.  First is Particulate Matter 10microns or larger (PM10)

Graph of daily Particulate Matter (PM10) levels in Shanghai, 2000-2010

Graph of daily Particulate Matter (PM10) levels in Shanghai, 2000-2010

The highest recorded PM10 levels were 500, on April 2nd, 2007, and March 21st, 2010. I think that, at least in Shanghai, ‘Crazybad’ is not a value on the scale.

Sulphur Dioxide (SO2) is next:

Graph of daily Sulphur Dioxide (SO2) levels in Shanghai, 2000-2010

Graph of daily Sulphur Dioxide (SO2) levels in Shanghai, 2000-2010

The highest recorded S02 levels were 113, on December 15th, 2007, and 112, the day before, December 14th, 2007.

Note that for the NO2 graph below, the data available from 1/1/2000 to 6/1/2000 was for NOx, which is the combination of NO and NO2, which was a much higher number and skewed the graphs.

Graph of daily Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) levels in Shanghai, 2000-2010

Graph of daily Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) levels in Shanghai, 2000-2010

The highest recorded NO2 levels were December 24th, 2003, at 160, and November 22nd, 2003, at 157.  This is certainly the most seasonal pollutant.

Year on Year Analysis

Those trendlines help a little bit, but how about we compare years against years? This series stacks all 10 years of readings together.  The bright yellow line represents 2010. As before, click any graph to biggify.

Year on Year comparison graph of PM10 emissions in Shanghai, China, from 2000-2010

Year on Year comparison graph of PM10 emissions in Shanghai, China, from 2000-2010

Year on Year comparison graph of S02 emissions in Shanghai, China, from 2000-2010

Year on Year comparison graph of SO2 emissions in Shanghai, China, from 2000-2010

Year on Year comparison graph of NO2 emissions in Shanghai, China, from 2000-2010

Year on Year comparison graph of N02 emissions in Shanghai, China, from 2000-2010

I suggest you click on a few of these graphs and notice that the Y value scales are much different (PM10 by far the largest). In these graphs it is easier to see the 2010 performance vs previous years: if you can see color above the yellow line, 2010 was better than at least some other year, if there’s color below, worse.  But these graphs still look like Jackson Pollack paintings with all those squiggles. Basic Statistics ho!

Year on Year 30 day trendlines

In this series, I’ve graphed the 30day moving average trendlines for all 1- years.  I’ve not wrapped the data, each year is calculated from 1/1 to 12/31 (note the X axis starts at 1/31).

Year on Year 30 day moving average comparison graph of PM10 emissions in Shanghai, China

Year on Year 30 day moving average comparison graph of PM10 emissions in Shanghai, China

I see a pretty hefty spike in emissions starting in november 2010, don’t you?

Year on Year 30 day moving average comparison graph of S02 emissions in Shanghai, China

Year on Year 30 day moving average comparison graph of S02 emissions in Shanghai, China

2010 was still a pretty good year for SO2 emissions.

Reminder for the next graph:  NO2 data is unavailable from 1/1/2000 to 6/1/2000, hence the flatline.

Year on Year 30 day moving average comparison graph of N02 emissions in Shanghai, China

Year on Year 30 day moving average comparison graph of N02 emissions in Shanghai, China

these numbers clearly show that 2010 was a pretty good year, in comparison to the previous 9, until the post expo trash-burnarama. But let’s smooth those graphs out even more.

Year on Year 90 day trendlines

90 day moving average  trendlines really smooth out the peaks, but still offer an accurate visual comparison.

Year on Year 90 day moving average comparison graph of PM10 emissions in Shanghai, China

Year on Year 90 day moving average comparison graph of PM10 emissions in Shanghai, China

Now this looks pretty demonstrative. By this data & the graph, the PM10 emissions during the last quarter of 2010 was worse than 7 or 8 out of the last 10 years, depending on when you look. Also, the Expo effect is pretty clear to see.  Don’t see it? Here, I’ll point it out for you.  Here’s the same graph again, with some cheeky notes:

Year on Year 90 day moving average comparison graph of PM10 emissions in Shanghai, China, with pithy arrows!

Year on Year 90 day moving average comparison graph of PM10 emissions in Shanghai, China, with pithy arrows!

Does the SO2 graph look similar?

Year on Year 90 day moving average comparison graph of SO2 emissions in Shanghai, China

Year on Year 90 day moving average comparison graph of SO2 emissions in Shanghai, China

I don’t see the same clear drop/increase from the expo influence, but it is the most parabolic line on the graph.  Also it shows what we expected based on the daily and 30 day graphs, that at least for this time period, 2010 is one of the best, if not the best year for SO2 emissions.

The last reminder, I promise: There is no NO2 data for the first 1/2 of 2000, hence the flatline in the next graph.

Year on Year 90 day moving average comparison graph of NO2 emissions in Shanghai, China

Year on Year 90 day moving average comparison graph of NO2 emissions in Shanghai, China

2010 started well for our NO2 numbers, but as we can see, starting around the end of the Expo, the air quality climbed well into the middle territory, comparatively.

Conclusions

First, the obvious caveats:

  1. I don’t know how/when/where this data was gathered, so we can’t make any claims to the veracity or accuracy of the data itself. we must simply run with what they publish (until we convince the US Consulate to mount some equipment on their roof as the embassy does in Beijing).
  2. This data source does not perform particularly stringent or useful tests: they don’t measure PM2.5, which measures much smaller (and more harmful) particulate matter. They also only measure SO2 and NO2, instead of coupling them with their equally damaging cousins, NO and SO (the combinations are typically called NOx and SOx).

Because of these clear issues, I don’t want to draw any huge sweeping conclusions about much of anything, but nonetheless, I think the data shows a few key things:

  1. Year over year, all emissions trend down, with a few bumps and bruises, including the current walloping we’re all taking in the Post- Expo air.
  2. Post-Expo air quality has been very bad, and the curve of the change suggests that the various moratoria on industrial activities during the Expo were successful in the short run, but we’re sure paying for it now.

All of these things we knew, or at least intuited, before I crunched these numbers, but at least now we have some pretty pictures.  If you’d like the full data set, email me.

Siddhartha Obama: mind blowing Environmental Art in Shanghai

Siddhartha Obama Street Art

This post has been updated. Click to hear from the artist!

Spotted and snapped by @ShanghaiTattoo

It’s a mind-blowing billboard, spotted in Huangpu district of Shanghai, near a hip new restaurant complex. It’s nearly psychedelic, and the confusing mashup of imagery is mostly environmental. I won’t try to interpret, but let’s list off the basic images:
(more…)

CRASH: how to handle a Shanghai fender bender

I didn’t really earn it, but somehow last night I ended up overbooked with awesome people. First was a delightful encounter with two eminent professors from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Rich. Girlie joined the party toward the end and tugged me toward Jing and a pile of super awesome Girls in Tech China organizers, supporters, well wishers and chums.

That was all super fun, until I forgot my bag, which held my Chinese homework and my laptop (amongst other things) at the GIT party. I realized it not too long after we left, and after 60 seconds of panic while I dug up Jing’s new phone number, I found out they hadn’t left, they’d spotted my backpack, and they were happy to wait for me to come get it.

Did I mention they were awesome? It’s worth saying again. (more…)