Special Report: Spring Festival Special 2009
BEIJING, Jan. 29 (Xinhua) -- Zheng Xiaoyan and her
friends exchanged new year's greetings, games and even electronic fireworks
during the Spring Festival, or Chinese Lunar New Year, through a Beijing-based
online community they created.
"I felt distanced from my family and friends in
Hainan Province before the community was built," said 25-year-old Zheng, who is
working for Seven-Eleven and was not able to go home for the festival.
Young people gather at the virtual community to share
New Year's pictures, take lantern riddle quizzes, participate in online temple
fairs and chat.
"Another good thing about the virtual community is
that I could use it whenever I've got time. It saves me from feeling lonely,"
Zheng said.
Others, like 20-year-old Liu Jinwei, managed to send
out new year's greetings to relatives and friends while playing Internet games.
Liu said he used his mobile phone to send text
messages to wish his friends happy new year in the past, but that it took him a
lot of time. "It could be very distracting if you are trying to score on the
Internet games at the same time."
This year, the problem was solved with new programs
provided by the computer game manufacturers that allow the players to send text
messages online while playing.
Many Chinese Web sites and e-mail operators began to
support DIY electronic greeting cards. High school student Wang Lehong sent out
about 100 such cards to his teachers and classmates for the Lunar New Year, and
received about 50 cards in return.
"I like the idea because I could add some personal
tint into the greetings I am sending out," said Wang. "It is also a good way to
keep in touch with my friends who are studying overseas."
He said people did not need to be very good at
computer technology to make an electronic card, because the software was simple
and direct.
In addition to Internet, the 3G (3rd Generational)
mobile phones also provide people with a good way to send visual messages to
send new year's greetings.
"It allowed my parents to see me and talk to me on
the Lunar New Year's eve, even if I was not by their side," said 22-year-old
Yuan Jin, who is working for an IT company in Shanghai.
She said she plans to send out more such messages to
her friends to show off the new clothes she had bought for the festival.
Mobile phone service companies also increased the
novel ways of sending out messages to greet the new year.
"I surprised my husband by sending him a message
containing firework sound and my recorded voice of good wishes," said Emma, a
female netizen who ran a popular blog on www.sina.com, a major portal in China.
