Forums > Living in Kunming > Going home: wait for the new airport to open? I've read the new airport will open soon. I'm due to go home in July. Should I wait until the airport opens before I buy my ticket home, in the hope that there are direct connections with Europe? Or is it safer to bet on a flight over Beijing to Belgium first?
Or: when airports open, do they typically already have agreements with major flight organisations ready so I can fly the very day it opens?
Forums > Food & Drink > Vietnamese food That looks good. You have tried them, I take it? I'll give it a shot this or next week.
Forums > Food & Drink > Vietnamese food I recently heard that Kunming counts over 10,000 Vietnamese nationals. Why oh why isn't there a single Vietnamese restaurant (run by Vietnamese and true to the Vietnamese kitchen) to be found in Kunming?
I'm seriously craving some Pho, Nems, Com Rang and Ca Phe Da. There is a place near Baita Lu on Dongfeng Xiang that does good rice flour wraps but they're not what they were in VN.
Vintage Cafe has real VN coffee but they are not able to serve it iced. There seems to be more to it than just adding ice bits.
Forums > Living in Kunming > Laowai in Beijing trys to rape girl... I read somewhere the man paid for sex and was subsequently set up. There, another spoke to the rumor mill and another incentive to shut up until you know what exactly happened.
On another note: racism is innate, natural and there is nothing wrong with it as long as you do not disadvantage the other person. In the west we have become obsessed with (being against) racism, this does not seem to be such an issue in China.
Live and let live and do justice to those who deserve it.
Forums > Living in Kunming > Computer games Maybe an odd question. I used to be a devout gamer but have since had better things to do and not been in possession of a computer that can handle high-end games. However, recently my old love flared up again and I've been dying to play some of my favourites: Team Fortress 2, Civilisation, Starcraft 2 ...
I have a very portable Thinkpad X200 which is unfortunately not powerful enough to meet today's games' graphics demands.
Now I don't want to spend a couple of thousand on a laptop that can handle those games. It's way too casual to justify such expenses.
Neither do I want to go to internet cafés here because I don't feel at ease when the time and the money are ticking away. Moreover, most of those cafés don't accept foreigners, the games are in chinese, and the settings are not customised to my needs.
I've tried OnLive, a service that streams games over the internet to your PC. It means you can play any game without having special hardware. That worked fine in Belgium over a 20Mbit connection but the 4Mbit connections in China are lacking and the GFW probably puts in its share of the lag too.
Does anyone know of a service like OnLive or any other way to casually play some high-end games?
Lijiang blaze destroys old town businesses
Posted byThat was one day after I'd left. Anyway, Danmairen, I'm not sure if there really are fire engines that fit inside the old town of Lijiang. I even have trouble getting around without bumping my head. I'm in fact impressed the fire was contained with relative little damage.
They might have seen it coming though, there was some fire accident between Lijiang and Shangri-La during the time of my visit, which shrouded the entire Jade Dragon Snow Mountain in smoke.
Getting Away: Nanning
Posted byI'm a bit late, perhaps, and biased, perhaps, because I haven't seen a proper big city since I left Kunming on my bicycle trip. But I'm positively impressed by Nanning after only one night. Green streets, air quality good, weather nice and warm in winter, big food streets at night, a selection of nice bars, and everything the western heart wants in terms of coffee, restaurants and bars.
In that aspect, it's doing better than Kunming. Con: it sprawls on forever and wouldn't make a good city to start bike rides from. You'd have to conquer forty km to get out of it first.
Interview: Shopkeeper Ms Tang
Posted bygreat article this, I like it when you are digging into Kunming history. Makes up for everything that's been lost and rebuilt.
Fog shuts down Kunming airport, strands thousands
Posted byThe visibility that day was apparently 300-800, according to a local journalist for Kunming TV.
Kunming subway train derails, killing one
Posted byhaha! Do you realise the potential irony such a plan has? You'll be shooting the vid and the thing will actually collapse.