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...lifeline-style Outback trivia game to hand out the week's reward - which was neither food nor shelter but a half-hour "private chat" for Tina and her family. (And a $500 shopping spree, courtesy of the good folks at - well, I'm not telling. Take that, capitalist pigs.) Nothing like Internet-homesickness - set of course to a tinkling piano score - to make rugged survivalism cuter than a well-worn teddy bear. This is what we get for tuning in every week like Pavlovian dogs? Grown men crying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 'Survivor': Farewell, My Old Kentucky Joe | 4/19/2001 | See Source »

...sees as dangerous millennarian cults. Accessing the World Trade Organization and integrating itself more completely into the international economy demands that Beijing accelerate rather than ease the pain of economic liberalization - a prospect that horrifies its more security-oriented hard-liners. To have come even this far down the capitalist road, Jiang's party has abandoned much of its communist ideology, but not its often brutally authoritarian monopoly on power. That leaves sharp differences over the country's future to be played out in fierce internecine party struggles, with Jiang acting as ringmaster...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jiang Zemin | 4/5/2001 | See Source »

...Russia develop itself as a technology hub? Israeli venture capitalist Eliezer Manor, a keynote speaker at the Russian Technology Investment Forum in Moscow this month, urged companies to start by partnering with more established counterparts in India and Israel. Thomas Nastas, the forum's organizer, said European companies should be considered too: "Partnering is the name of the game." At the Russian Internet Forum, also in March, Andrei Zotov, chief executive of V6 (www.v6.ru), which helps corporations set up business processes on the Web, described how it was expanding its operations with P2P, its French partner. "I don't believe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: High Tech, Hard Sell | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

...Daniel Mao, chief operating officer of Sina, sits in a Japanese restaurant in Beijing jabbing at his sushi and coolly dissecting the fate of the industry. "Some will get bought, some will go broke," he predicts. "It will all be happening in the next nine months." A former venture capitalist, Mao engineered Sina's creation by arranging a merger between a U.S. Internet start-up and a Chinese software company. Soon he may preside over its resale. Mao contemplates the latest street buzz: AOL is rumored to be trying to acquire community portal Netease, while Microsoft is said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Net Worthless? | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

...potential. "It's almost impossible to find a man of his size who runs the court so well," says Terry Rhoads, marketing director for Nike in China. "I could see him ending up as the No. 1 draft pick this June." But Yao's bid is caught up in capitalist wrangling?and Chinese political calculations. His team, the Shanghai Sharks, is holding out for a hefty deal to compensate giving up its showcase player. And in a weird twist of realpolitik, Yao's chances of playing in the States could depend on his national rival Wang's hoop success...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: China's Hot Shot | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

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