City Guide
Answers
Login
Home
/
Community
/
Forums
/ Post a Reply
Post a Reply
Thread: Accessing the Internet in China
Title:
(100 characters at most)
Content: ( 3,000 characters at most, please )
You can add emoticons below to your post by clicking them.
[quote=GRIZ326,242206]I promised to post my comments on Internet access on my return and have been a little slow getting around to it so here it is: Wireless access: None of the hotels/hostels I stayed in offered wireless access. The university wireless hotspots I found were secured, usually with WPA although a few used WEP. Hacking the WEP hotspots might have been possible. I did not attempt that, although I ran my protocol analyzer on a the wireless university networks. I only found two Internet Cafes and neither of them were wireless hotspots. In short, my little wireless computer never connected in China. RJ45 access: RJ45 network cable access was provided in most of the hotels/hostels I stayed in. Unfortunately, my little computer does not have an RJ45 connector...so my little computer never connected to the Internet by wire in China. Business Centers: I used my hotel business centers in Guangzhou and in Kaili. I scanned the systems with my SanDisk U3 USB drive's A/V software while accessing my email. The machines came up clean. I did delete all the cookies and temp files from the machines before signing out (although using the Windows Chinese interface is a bit tricky). NOTE: It would have been very useful to have one of the U3 browsers for the USB drive to keep the temp files and cookies on my USB drive. Hotel in-room computers: I spent several nights on separate occasions in the Tibet Hotel in Chengdu. One of the two in-room computers was infected by malcode. Hostel public computers: Malicious code, trojans and keyboard loggers were a real concern. Most of the public computers I accessed in hostels were infected by malcode. Internet Cafes: The two Internet Cafes I found were very busy and every computer was in use. They were not wireless Internet hotspots. Ordinary home and office computers: Three times I accessed the Internet using a personal computer in a friend's home or office. In each case the computers were infected by malicious code. SIM cards: My little computer can access the Cingular Wireless EDGE Network, but I did not buy a SIM card to see if that network is accessible from China. Great Firewall of China: I know some that some websites are blocked, however, the Great Firewall of China never blocked a connection that was part of my daily use. Just to see the Great Firewall work I attempted to access a pornsite that uses a United States Whitehouse URL varient. The connection was denied...so the Great Firewall really is there. In summary: Unless you really have work to do in China, don't bother with carrying a laptop or UMPC because they simply are not worth the weight and security concerns (primarily theft). A smartphone that can take a Chinese SIM card is probably the best solution. The Internet is readily available via the SIM card. However, I know nothing about mobile phones...so I will defer to the phone freaks among you for more reliable information.[/quote]
characters left
Name:
Get a new code