User profile: blobbles

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Further gokunming feedback

You could easily avoid this though with some other cleverness (as other sites do).

For example, the users that post or review on GoKunming are either real or not. Users that are always here posting or reviewing can be considered more real and therefore their ratings are given much more weight.

Conversely people that have only rated or posted once or twice can be considered less of an authority. Anyone that has rated only 1 place should be considered spam, 2 places half spam, only once someone rates 5 times or more can they be considered real. This way you can get a combination of "reviewers authenticity" multiplied by the ratings to create a difficult to influence system. This is just an example of course, you can fudge the numbers to whatever you think is appropriate.

A little maths and tracking what users do (as gokunming does) can be used to increase the functionality and reliability of ratings, so why not do it?

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Further gokunming feedback

I was just thinking after a posting by Alex, he indicated favourite Kunming eating spots which you could build into your listings section - extending it so it has more functionality.

What I am thinking is you should extend the listing pages to not only be able to refine by type of food (24 hour, American, Bakeries etc) but to include a rating ordering, so we can see the highest rated places first (you could do the tags by star value 5 stars, 4-5 stars, 3-4 stars etc). You would need to come up with a rule probably whereby a place needs to have 3 or more ratings to be able to be included, but setting the rule shouldn't be a problem.

You should also include a map on the listing page that indicates the location of each restaurant by filter.

If you included both functions the listing page for restaurants/activities would include:

Type
Location
Rating

In fact, maybe your default ordering for all listings shouldn't be alphanumeric as well - use the ratings. That way we can see the top rated places in a city just by looking!

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Forums > Food & Drink > Wasteful Business Lunches

When you look at the stats its quite sad about the west though. They estimate 25% of all food is wasted in the west (hard to know here) mostly through the food going past its expiry date (i.e. people throwing out vegetables unused, supermarkets binning old food etc).

If you read up on the subject of food wastage its rather surprising. We could probably all do a lot better than what we do, but we choose not too for a variety of reasons.

An interesting thing I was taught by food scientists (working for a food generation and security NGO) was there is actually enough calorific food value in the human food chain to feed around 12 billion people. The problem is we choose not to use or distribute it equally or wisely for a variety of reasons (political/social/greed etc etc).

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But wait, I don't think the dates add up, I think its recognised Tolui died in 1232 after sacrificing himself for his brother, yet Kublai took Dali over 30 years later...

Never wanting to sound like a bible but...

Ghenghis begat Tolui who begat Kublai Khan. Tolui was Ghenghis' youngest son (recognised anyway!). Its entirely possible Kublai took pops along considering Tolui was considered a great military general.

Unless you didn't read my comment or are just obtuse by nature Geezer, you will notice my humour was not directed at the story but at the comment prior to mine, which also was not related to the story at all other than by the possibility of ice being on roads.

Come on, at least my comments were slightly entertaining (well, I thought so!). But you guys are right, god/speeding/overloading.... amazing all these foreigners that must have been at the accident site and saw what caused it after exhaustive investigation. And it all goes to show that the "ice" story must just be some big cover up by police.

Reviews

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Wow, just wow. Possibly the best Chinese food I have had in Kunming. And in one of the nicest, traditional courtyard style restaurant I have been in. A woman dressed in traditional qi pao playing a gu zheng just adds to it.

We had okra, mushroom soup, dried beef and chou dofu. All top notch with the bill coming in at just over 250 kuai. But we could have fed 3 people for that so not too bad at about 80-90 kuai each. Not the cheapest but for the quality, it's damn good.

If you have people visiting and want to take them to a traditional Chinese style restaurant with Yunnan style food, or want a romantic night out with a gal, you can't go wrong here. Close to Green Lake (down a little alley) for a romantic walk... Just perfect.

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Pretty good place for getting all your documents translated and/or notarised. Note that there are a number of notaries in the building which you can find by going up the stairs (the elevators are impossible). But you have to find the stairs to do so... go in the door, head over to the right, go up the big wide stairs which head up a floor, turn right then right again into the elevator area and right again into the stairwells. Whew!

One point off for the elevators never being available and having to hike 7-9 flights of stairs (not good if you have to go 3-4 times a day like I often did!)

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This does not stop at the Jinanya hotel at Da Shang Hui as the flyers state (and is on the images tab here). They need to have another stop in the same area or else they are missing out on covering a big chunk of the city.

You can take another bus, the 919C, I believe, if you are nearby Da Shang Hui, which leaves from the bus station on HeHong Lu, nearby the Qianxing road intersection. This bus goes every hour and is white, found at the western end of the station. It is operated by a different company and takes about 1 hour 10 minutes to get to the airport due to a large number of stops especially near the airport.

Great bus though if you can catch it!

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Friendly people, even got to the talk to the vice consulate, who told me she had done a stint in Malaysia's Siberian Consulate!

English is spoken by some of the Chinese girls working at the desk who are pleasant to deal with. I assume they do Visa's as well but I wasn't here for a visa, this time!