Tuesday, July 31, 2007

51st Miss Korea , Lee Ji-sun

Design Graduate Crowned 51st Miss Korea
Lee Ji-sun (24) was crowned the 51st Miss Korea for 2007 at the beauty contest held at the Sejong Center on Friday. Lee, looking gorgeous at 170 cm and weighing 49 kg, was born in 1983 and graduated from Parsons, a reputed design school in New York City.

Lee Ji-sun, who was crowned the 51st Miss Korea for 2007, at the beauty contest in the main theater of the Sejong Center on Friday evening. /Yonhap

She vowed to prove herself worthy of the prize by performing her duties as Miss Korea diligently.


Lee Honey, Miss Korea 2006, passes the crown to Lee Ji-sun, who won the 2007 title, at the beauty contest in the main theater of the Sejong Center on Friday evening. /Yonhap

Thursday, July 26, 2007

HHI Proves Innovative Shipbuilding Method

HHI Proves Innovative Shipbuilding Method
Hyundai Heavy Industries has successfully built a large LPG cargo ship on land without using dry docks for the first time in the world.

The feat follows another first achieved three years ago when HHI built an oil carrier using the "on-ground building" method.

HHI brought out the 82,000㎥ LPG carrier built for Norway's Bergesen at Hyundai's Ulsan factory on Wednesday.

By completing an LPG vessel which has a complex cargo system, HHI demonstrated that any kind of ship can be built on land without dry docks.

HHI regards Wednesday's triumph as a defining event in the history of shipbuilding, firmly establishing the on-ground building method and doing away with dry docks.

Oh Byung-wook, senior EVP and COO of the company's Offshore & Engineering Division, said HHI plans to maximize its on-ground facility by doubling capacity from eight ships per year to 16 and stepping up efforts to advance the system.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

POSCO Builds Cold-Rolling Steel Mill in China

POSCO Builds Cold-Rolling Steel Mill in China
POSCO, the world's fourth largest steel maker, has wrapped up construction on a cold-rolling steel mill in a joint project with Benxi & Iron Steel Group, one of China's major steel makers.

Located in northeastern China, the mill has an annual capacity of 1.8 million metric tons.

Cold-rolling mills produce cold-rolled steel plate by hardening and compressing hot-rolled steel plate after processing its surface at normal temperature.

POSCO held a dedication ceremony for the new mill in the city of Benxi in Liaoning Province on Tuesday, which was attended by POSCO chairman Lee Ku-taek and the head of Liaoning Province.

The mill, 25-percent owned by POSCO, will produce around 800,000 tons of cold-rolled steel plate and 800,000 tons of galvanized steel plate. The metal will be supplied to local auto plants and home appliance factories.

"The mill will greatly contribute to the development of industry in northeastern China," POSCO chairman Lee said.

SK Telecom Looking Into IPTV Business

SK Telecom Looking Into IPTV Business
SK Telecom, Korea's leading wireless operator, is considering launching an Internet television service.

The company said on Tuesday that it set up a task force last week to review an Internet protocol television (IPTV) unit. "The team will study the feasibility of the business, set out the direction and report the results to senior company officials," SK Telecom said.

SK Telecom has until now been resistant to entering the Internet-based broadcasting sector.

IPTV allows users to watch programming over a high-speed Internet connection. If SK Telecom wants to make inroads into the IPTV market, it would need to acquire or merge with an Internet provider.

Hanaro Telecom, which operates its own Internet TV business Hana TV, and other operators equipped with cable Internet networks are possible targets for M&A.

Hana TV, which launched in July last year, has signed up 540,000 subscribers as of the end of June.

Korea Telecom earlier this month began airing HD programming on its Internet TV service Mega TV. LG Dacom plans to launch an Internet TV service in September.

Indian IT Companies Offset Strong Rupee's Impact on Earnings

Indian IT Companies Offset Strong Rupee's Impact on Earnings
Indian information technology services companies are managing to offset the impact of a strong currency, the rupee, on earnings, while Middle Eastern investors buy Asian assets. India's IT services and outsourcing companies, whose main market is the U.S., have so far managed to counter the impact of a strong rupee on their earnings.

The Indian currency rose nearly seven percent against the U.S. dollar from April to June this year.

S. Ramadorai is chief executive officer of India's largest software services company, Tata Consultancy Services or TCS. He says an increase in outsourcing orders helped offset a decline in export revenues caused by the rupee's appreciation during the quarter.

The company's profit rose 37 percent to $293 million over the same period last year.

"All and all that was in a great performance by TCS in a challenging time," he said. "And we hopefully will continue the performance in the quarters and years ahead."

Another Indian IT services company, Wipro, reported a 16 percent increase in profit to $175 million, for the quarter ending in June.

"The results for the quarter are satisfying considering the strong headwinds faced by us in the form of an appreciating rupee," said Azim Premji, Wipro's chairman.

Middle Eastern companies expanded their investments in the region. Saudi-owned Kingdom Hotel Investments bought two Cambodian hotels for about $35 million from Singapore's Raffles Holdings. The two hotels, the Raffles Hotel Le Royal Phnom Penh and the Raffles Grand Hotel d'Angkor Siem Reap, will continue to be managed by Raffles.

Kingdom Hotel Investments, which is controlled by the Saudi Prince Al Waleed Bin Talal, says it plans to increase investments in Asia, particularly in China.

Orascom Construction Industries of Egypt says it will acquire a 50 percent stake in North Korea's Sangwon Cement for $115 million. Orascom wants to raise the plant's capacity to three million tons a year.

Toyota became the world's top selling carmaker in the first half of the year, overtaking U.S. rival General Motors. The Japanese company says it sold 4.71 million units worldwide, compared with the 4.67 million sold by G.M. in the same period.

Another Japanese car company, Honda, says it is increasing production capacity worldwide to match growing demand. Honda says it will open a second manufacturing plant in Thailand and a research and development center in China to design a new vehicle for the fast growing Chinese market.

Seoul Ranked Among Most 'Honest' Cities

Seoul Ranked Among Most 'Honest' Cities
Seoul scored high marks in an informal test to measure just how honest people are around the world.

For its annual "Global Courtesy Test", monthly magazine Reader's Digest left 30 mid-priced mobile phones in busy public places. Reporters observed the phones from a distance, called them and waited to see if anyone would answer. Would the finders return the phones?

Not in Kuala Lumpur or Hong Kong. Those cities ranked in the bottom of the survey with just 13 phones of 30 returned in each city.

Seoul did much better with 27 phones returned, ranking it third on the list of 32 cities. Ljubljana in Slovenia ranked first with 29 phones returned and Toronto came in second with 28 phones returned.

Several cities known their citizens' civility ranked lower than expected -- Amsterdam placed 29th with 14 phones returned, Lisbon ranked 28th with 15 phones back, and Sydney and London tied at 21st with 19 phones returned each.

The Seoul test was executed on busy streets in the metropolitan area, including the underground square in 63 Building in the Yeouido financial district. Details of the test will be published in the August issue of Reader's Digest.

A member of the magazine's editorial staff said, "It seems that Seoul citizens have a high level of honesty. Of course, in Seoul where high-end cellphones are common, it could be assumed that people thought the cellphones weren't attractive enough to keep."

The staffer added, "The most important thing is global honesty was found to be higher than expected. We guessed that most phones wouldn't be returned, but the results showed that 654 of 960 phones came back."

Source: http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200707/200707240023.html

Monday, July 16, 2007

Chinese Economy Grows Even More Than Expected

Chinese Economy Grows Even More Than Expected

China’s growth is outstripping earlier estimates. The National Bureau of Statistics of China on Wednesday reported GDP grew 11.1 percent last year, topping its estimate of 10.7 percent early this year. It was the first time in 12 years that growth has topped 11 percent after 1994, when it recorded 11.8 percent. This year’s growth rate from January to June has also tentatively been estimated at 11.1 percent.


The stellar figure is due to a virtuous cycle of an enormous trade surplus thanks to increased exports leading to investment in production facilities, which in turn boost exports. Another factor is investment worth more than US$60 billion a year by foreigners who bet on continued high growth spurred by the Beijing Olympics next year. China's trade surplus has kept up a stunning pace this year. During the first half, the trade surplus rose $112.5 billion, up a whopping 83.1 percent from the corresponding period last year. If the trend continues, China will overtake Germany at the end of this year to enjoy the world's largest trade surplus and become the world's second largest exporter after Germany. Wang Xinpei, a spokesman for the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, predicted a sustained increase in exports. "No matter how tough our trade balance policy, the world market wants Chinese goods,” he said.

China's foreign currency reserves have increased this year at a rate of $1.02 million per minute. Foreign currency holdings increased by $266.3 billion during the first half of the year, more than South Korea's total reserves of $250.7 billion. China has also overtaken advanced countries in terms of GDP. In 2005, China overtook the U.K., ranking fourth after the U.S., Japan and Germany and is poised to claim Germany’s third rank next year.

But behind the facade of high-speed growth, China suffers from soaring consumer and real estate prices. Commodity prices will likely increase 4 percent in June, higher than the 3 percent target figure set by the government. Housing prices in large cities like Shenzhen have risen by as much as 50 percent this year alone. The Beijing has raised the interest rates twice in a bid to prevent the economy from overheating. But it is inevitable for China to tighten its monetary policy, including scrapping taxes on interest income and hiking interest rates further.

Korean Researchers Build Cheaper, Better Solar Cell

Korean Researchers Build Cheaper, Better Solar Cell
A team of Korean researchers has developed a cutting-edge solar cell that might help reduce our dependence on fossil fuels.

The discovery could make Korea a leader in the alternative energy industry as the research team plans to double the cell's efficiency and commercialize the technology by 2012.

The team's leader, Lee Kwang-hee of the Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, said on Thursday, "Together with Prof. Alan Heeger at the University of California Santa Barbara, we have developed a plastic solar cell with 6.5 percent efficiency. That level of efficiency is sufficiently high for commercial products."


The discovery was explained in the July 13 issue of Science, one of the world's most prestigious academic journals.

Existing solar cells that use silicon semiconductors cost US$2.30 to generate one watt of electricity, which is three to 10 times higher than the production cost of thermal or hydro power. The new plastic solar cell costs just ten cents per watt.

"The efficiency of converting solar power to electricity should be at least seven percent for commercialization. Many foreign researchers even failed to develop solar cells with more than five percent efficiency," Prof. Lee said.

"We're going to improve the efficiency up to 15 percent, and we're in talks to join hands with domestic electronics companies to market the solar cell by 2012," he said.

Thursday, July 05, 2007

Overcoming Excessive Shyness

Overcoming Excessive Shyness
Are You Shy?? by N?ria Roca and illustrated by Marta Fabrega.
Office worker Kim Tae-sik (40) does not let a day pass without washing his hair. If he didn’t, he couldn’t concentrate on work. “It seems to me everybody is looking at my hair. I’d be too worried if people around me could smell bad odor from my hair.”

Lee Jeong-min (28) works for a publishing company. Every Monday morning is an ordeal, because of her apprehension about the regular meeting. It’s not because she lacks ideas to share with her colleagues. “I’m scared of a situation where everybody pays attention to me when I say something. My voice starts shaking and I blush. I forget everything, even what I’m saying. It’s like a disease,” she says.

◆ Social Anxiety

If you feel heat all over your body, your face turns red and heart pounds when you’re speaking in front of others, you might suffer from excessive shyness, which can develop into full-blown social anxiety. These days, aggressive self-expression and argument are regarded as a yardstick of success, so shy people often feel a growing sense of isolation.

However, experts say shyness itself is nothing to worry about. Choi Yoon-sik, a behaviorist from Yonsei University, says, “Every human being has an innate shyness that stems from fear and anxiety.” He adds excessive shyness “gradually disappears when people make efforts to get rid of the spotlight effect or the mistaken belief that others are staring at them.” According to psychiatrist Kim Jong-woo, this obsession is strong in Confucian cultures like Japan and Korea, where the group may sacrifice and humiliate an individual to achieve a group goal.

◆ Shy celebrities

Many celebrities, including U.S. politician Al Gore, talk show queen Barbara Walters, pop singer Sting, actress Jennifer Jason Lee and Princess Diana, used to be shy. So how to conquer excessive shyness? Psychiatrist Kim Jong-woo says, “People don’t need to be ashamed of feeling shy. Shyness works as a social safety device.”

According to Choi Yoon-sik, people who aren’t shy have a high chance to become criminals. “A strong will to overcome it, repeated training by trial and error, careful preparation and information collection will help people overcome excessive shyness.” Choi adds, “There is a so-called 10-year law in social cognition psychology. That means you should accumulate effort and experience for more than 10 years if you want to develop expertise in any sector. Likewise, it takes a long time to overcome shyness.”

People who suffer from excessive shyness need to be objective and take a cool attitude to themselves and others, he advises “Others don’t feel your mistakes and stammering as keenly as you do. Recognize the gap between your reality and the ideal, and make realistic efforts to reduce the gap.”