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Comment: Re:This can happen only in Korea (Score 1) 136

by jonoid (#34111180) Attached to: A Robot In Every Korean Kindergarten By 2013?

I respect your knowledge of Korea based on your travels there and your wife, but Korea changes pretty fast. Having lived here for the past two years I can say that the "quiet and respectful" thing is going out the window. They act like that around guests of the country but around each other and around people that they are comfortable with this doesn't really exist. This is a good thing since it shows comfort.

You're partially correct about acting like a buffoon, however, if you are initially respectful and establish a certain level of respect then afterwards you can start being a bit more rowdy.

Laziness is abhorrent to Koreans. It's not tolerated. They have a strong work ethic, which may seem like anathema to the Western World, but it produces far more capable and responsible people.

If by strong work ethic you mean working longer hours but getting less done, then yes. Koreans are AT work insane hours sometimes but are not working nearly as hard as hard-working North Americans. It's the appearance of work that is important, rather than actually being productive.

Comment: Re:This can happen only in Korea (Score 1) 136

by jonoid (#34111054) Attached to: A Robot In Every Korean Kindergarten By 2013?

Have you seen a Korean child? Think of a ragdoll cat. You put it somewhere (with books and toys in hand) and you can safely come back a couple of hours later. It will be there and you will not hear a squeak in the meantime.

Have YOU seen a Korean child? Teaching in a Korean elementary school for the past couple of years, I have seen many. And they are not at all the way you describe them. In some cases they get even more wild than North American kids (though this depends on their parenting as well).

Korean kids can be just as rambunctious as any other kid in the world. It all comes down to how their parents and their teachers discipline them. This image that North Americans have of Asian kids (which I had before I came here) is totally false and ridiculous.

Comment: Re:Intrusive ads.. (Score 1) 450

by jonoid (#34088172) Attached to: Fighting Ad Blockers With Captcha Ads

I especially hate the video ads that are on failblog these days, they force you to sit through the same advertisement for every video you watch

Any time one of these videos starts playing I immediately cancel it and don't bother. Any site that has unskippable commercials is not worth it for me.

This captcha ad tech is something I simply wouldn't tolerate and would simply not visit any site that used it.

Comment: Re:Mod the post (Score 1) 179

by jonoid (#33264196) Attached to: "Dislike" Button Scam Hits Facebook Users

The thing is that this is such an easy thing to identify as a scam. I noticed on my news feed about this, clicked the link and was redirected to a "click here to enable this button" page that was pure text, no Facebook log or anything. So obviously a scam of some sort that I cant believe anyone would fall for this sort of thing.

Comment: Re:This has been an issue for quite awhile. (Score 4, Informative) 420

by jonoid (#30567326) Attached to: Consumerist Says AT&T Site Won't Sell iPhone In NYC, Citing Network

The same South Korea that took over two years to get the iPhone. And the same SK that still blocks any non-Korean approved unlocked phone from being used on their networks without paying a $300 "inspection" fee? And the same SK where the majority of domestic websites require Internet Explorer 6 (yes, 6) to function correctly?

For those of you who don't know, South Korea is not a technological paradise. We have fast broadband but that's about it.

Comment: Re:barrage of ads; been to the theater lately? (Score 1) 156

by jonoid (#30083886) Attached to: Hollywood Backs Swedish Movie Streaming Site

I currently live in South Korea. Every theatre I have been to allows for three of your four points (minus no ads, of course).

I usually buy tickets online. You can reserve your seats both online and in person at the theatre.

I figured that theatres back in Canada and the States would have implemented this stuff by now.

Comment: Re:South Korea (Score 1) 225

by jonoid (#28435681) Attached to: Watch TV On Your Satnav

I can confirm this as well. Koreans have had DMB (digital multimedia broadcasting) for years now and every Korean GPS device has this built in (a long with many cell phones and other devices). I see more people driving with it on than off.

I hear there are laws against it, but police enforcement of driving rules is extremely lax here. Speed limits are generally completely ignored as are safe following distances. I've gotten used to blowing by cops on my motorcycle with nary an indication that they care. The only time you will get in trouble for anything is if you are in an accident. Thus, you can speed, drive recklessly and watch television all you want. Just don't hit anything.

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