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Forums > Living in Kunming > Involountary redirecting websites

change your DNS to Google DNS (8.8.8.8 or 8.8.4.4) or OpenDNS instead of your ISP's default DNS. This almost always solves any weird redirection problems and will also unblock websites that are DNS-blocked. (It will not unblock Facebook because its IP addresses are blocked.)

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Good Movies for 2015

it just testifies of a lack of imagination if you have to dish out superpowers to your protagonists. Can't solve a problem? SUPERPOWERS. Boom, win. Done.

It's like typing the cheat-code "win" in Monkey Island. You just won and went straight to the final credits.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Good Movies for 2015

nothing wrong with the theme of violence. It is gripping and therefore the theme of many a good story. Glorifying it, or making it seem easy, light, or indeed something worth pursuing, is a worrying development.

You don't have to be European to see that. And it's not that there are no good American movies, but what Hollywood is churning out in the past decade, the movies with the biggest budgets that make it to China, is just bombarding us with desensitizing things that minimize thought and maximize sensation. Since there's so much money involved, it makes you wonder whether it's done on purpose.

A movie doesn't have to be deep to be better than that. Remember the first Die Hard? That's a very violent movie, but nowhere glorifying violence and no-one has those stupid superpowers.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Good Movies for 2015

Kingsman? Total joke of a movie. I know it's a Tarantino-style movie that likes to take the revenge motif to the max, but it's getting old, just like never-ending military rhetoric that seems to be in every American movie these days.

Tarantino movies did the very same, but they had edge. This one is too slick, lacks humanness. Why does everyone always need superpowers? Is it so hard to portray real people? This is just a celebration of violence for no real reason, trying to make it look cool.

Also, the sheer nonsensical tech mumbo-jumbo. Oh yes, I'll just hack into the system, peep peep, fancy 3D screens, done, shut everyone down. Now walk in and kill them all.

The only thing that was sort of fun about the movie, was the scores of heads exploding to classical music.

It's been a long time since anything good's come out in Chinese cinemas. They seem to screen only the dumbest, most desensitizing American movies with the highest budget and the lowest contingency of imagination.

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With regards to the roads, I have some first-hand experience, riding a bike in February 2012. Luang Prabang to Phou Khoun and Vang Vieng on highway 13 is pretty smooth sailing, until the last 15-20k before VV, where you suddenly get intermittent road-wide gravel gaps (at least one every 500m) until, well over 100km past VV, you reach the junction to Thalat, where you can opt for the much better maintained highway 10 to Vientiane.

Here is "highway 13", on one of its longer street-wide gravel gaps (imagine the dust):

www.crazyguyonabike.com/[...]

It was also a great place to spend some time. Especially the Middle-Eastern section, where bearded patriarchs in expensive-looking garments showed their tapestries and jewels. Yes, it's all in a sterile modern building now, but I almost felt like in an Indian bazaar: with a little fantasy, the walls melt away, the scent of incense fills the air, camels lazily circle above the white roofs and fakirs test their arses.

A lot of the goods sold there were also fake (not real Jade, a different kind of Eaglewood). But the owners were mostly honest about it (though not everywhere, I learned from someone who worked there as a translator).

I went home with a couple of coins from Bhutan and an invitation to the country and a set of funny photos.

The fair moves on to Chengdu and Beijing after that. There it'll be free, because business with the locals is generally better, according to some salesman whose Chinese translator was surprised that I bought the 30 RMB ticket "just to look around".

Ah okay :) I must've been lucky or the guards must've remembered me after exiting first.

I understand that you haven't made it to the top? I did this last year: getting to 5396m was a pretty sweet experience, but it would probably be unwise to do this without a guide. Especially if you've never been hypoxic on a mountain before (I hadn't).

Photos and story on www.crazyguyonabike.com/[...]

If by bike, coming in from the East side of TLG will probably cost you nothing. I haven't ever been checked on that end despite my multiple entries and exits.

评论

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First and last experience. Absolutely horrible. I came in late with a big flesh wound. The doctor sewed it up and told me to come back in the morning "perhaps to redo it, and to change the bandage". When I did come back the next morning, they just changed the bandage and sent me off.

When I peeked at my own wound, I noticed it was horribly done. "Like a vet did the stitches," as someone commented. I then had to stay a night in a different hospital in order to do it right, with a 40% chance of getting infections. This cost me a lot more, thanks to Richland fucking up in the beginning.

Whatever X-rays were taken were not printed out and given to me so I couldn't go to another hospital for a second opinion or treatment.

The nurses didn't seem to know where half the things were and the doctors had to repeat orders to get basic things like scissors.

In the next hospital, it was noticed that I had fractured my jaw in two places. On the five X-Rays taken at Richland, they did not notice the fractures.

Pretty sure these people are not actual doctors and are therefore criminal.

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Super place. Really cool interior, lots of good beers and drinks, fun toilet inside the telephone booth, and an interesting clientele.

Cons: pretty hard to find, no matching glasses for the imported beers, and home brews need some work.

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Teaching and support lamentable.

Four people signed up for the highest-level class and got a teacher who does all the talking, refers to herself as 老师 and makes classes absolutely uninteresting. As of this moment, only 1 person is still going on a regular basis.

While staff is friendly, they are absolutely incapable to help out with visa matters in an adequate way. Lack of information beforehand, lack of support and lack of information during the visa process meant that I am waiting forever for my residence permit to be processed, without any information about why it's taking so long, why they can't get started ... I'd say this school is a good option if all you wanted is a visa, but they can't even handle this properly.

Anyone giving this school a 5-star rating hasn't been to any decently-run schools in Kunming, such as Keats'. The only redeeming quality is facilities and space, those are indeed excellent.

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Have been studying at Keats for almost four semesters now and I'm very enthusiastic about the quality of the teachers and the commitment of the school's staff.

One point of criticism is that I think they could put in some effort to group people of the same level together, rather than base it on who was together in last semester's class.

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I stayed here in the early days of March 2013. Dave and his wife are swell owners, the staff attentive, the food good, rooms in perfect order, WiFi fast enough... Much like the old hump, the entire place is an excellent place to relax and make friends. And that is what you come to do in Dali, after all. The location is a bit isolated from the old town, but nothing is really far away in Dali. Besides, it makes for a better starting point to walk up Cangshan.