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This Famous Google Exec Quit His Job To Work In China — And He's Been Totally Blown Away By What He

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For years, Hugo Barra was one of the most visible executives at Google. He was a product manager for its Android team. Every year at Google's biggest conference, Google I/O, Barra would show off Android's latest new features for the whole world. Then, in August of this year, Barra quit Google to work for a Chinese company. In December, he gave a talk in Paris about how utterly blown away he's been by that place.


This is Hugo Barra.

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YouTube/LeWeb





Barra used to be a top executive in Google's Android division.
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Google





In August he quit to go work for the "Steve Jobs of China," Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun.
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Xiaomi/YouTube





After just two months in China, Barra spoke at the Le Web tech conference in Paris in December.
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YouTube/LeWeb





Barra told his interviewer that he's totally blown away by the place. He said he had some charts to show why…
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YouTube/LeWeb





He said the Chinese are incredibly educated with 8 million college grads per year — more than the US.
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Hugo Barra



He said Chinese disposable income is growing like crazy. It tripled over the last 8 years.
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Hugo Barra



He said China has at least 122 billionaires, second only to the US.
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Hugo Barra



Barra said China has 600 million Internet users - with 50% growth in 3 years.
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Hugo Barra



Barra talked about some of the huge recent huge IPOs on the Chinese stock market.
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What The Chinese Tech Industry Is Like - Business Insider
 
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Barra talked about how Chinese Internet companies have massive user numbers. MAU stands for "monthly active users." QZone has 600 million!
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Hugo Barra





Then Barra talked some specific Chinese companies. First he mentioned Alibaba, which owns Taobao, a shopping site he said is twice the size of eBay and Amazon combined.
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Hugo Barra



Barra said that during a Chinese holiday called "Singles Day" Taobao did more than twice the sales all US e-commerce companies did on Cyber Monday.
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Hugo Barra



He talked about JD, which does 3-hour delivery.
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Hugo Barra



JD has an app you can use to see where your delivery guy is.
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Hugo Barra



Alipay is like Paypal in the US, except it's much bigger and more useful. Barra says he uses to pay for his cabs.

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Hugo Barra





Weibo is like Twitter, except bigger. Barra only ever had 6,000 Twitter followers. In two months, he has 200,000 Weibo followers.
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Hugo Barra





Barra says he runs his entire social life through an app called WeChat. He uses it instead of the phone, email, or text messaging. WeChat also has an Instagram-like feature.
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Hugo Barra





The "Uber of China" is an app called Didi. Except with it, you leave a voice message for the driver telling him where to pick you up and how much you'll pay.
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Hugo Barra





Barra said MoMo is an app you use to talk to strangers who are nearby you. It's kind of a dating app. It has 100 million users.
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There's no Google Play store in China (it's banned), so there are a bunch of third-party app stores instead.
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Hugo Barra



One is called "91." It's a desktop app like iTunes. Big Chinese search engine Baidu bought it for $1 billion last year.
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Hugo Barra



Barra says he loves China, and is trying to learn to speak the language. Here he is at his favorite dumplings place.

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Yeah I'm about to become a Chinese fanboy like him too.
 
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oh god, please don't post TOTAL numbers no more, we are a huge nation of 1.3 billion, Americans are ONLY 300 million.

in total, Pete Rose had more hits than anyone in history of the game of Baseball, but he's not even a top 20 hitter, there's Ruth, Mickey, May, and etc.

Joe Dimaggio 's not even close to Rose TOTAL numbers but he's a considerably better player, because on a per season bases, he's god.

Only percentages shows how developed we are. I'm also a programmer and let me say most of these ideas are just western ideas given a Chinese spin, sometimes not even. The only reason they succeed and Indians are not is because our government can ban western counter parts.

I am excited for China's rise, but I will only celebrate once we get there actually.
 
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Yea I guess all the bans on google youtube facebook etc made Chinese companies rise a bit easier. may be we should have done the same?
 
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Yea I guess all the bans on google youtube facebook etc made Chinese companies rise a bit easier. may be we should have done the same?

Can india do it? Its a completely westernized country and in complete control of West...
 
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China’s hi-tech emperors
From a global online 'anything store’ to high-end smartphones challenging Apple, a generation of billionaire entrepreneurs is rising in the East
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Global e-commerce is booming and Shanghai and other huge Chinese cities are alight with new ideas as the country shifts gear from assembly line to powerhouse of the technology industry. Photo: Alamy

A new generation is taking power in China. Not the grey graduates of Communist Party committees. But aggressive, entrepreneurial and often colourful internet billionaires.

As well as influencing domestic politics, several plan to break out on to the world stage in 2014.

They will be following a trail blazed by Huawei, the telecoms equipment maker. But with products and services that have much less to do with the critical infrastructure and ownership structures more familiar in the West, China’s internet giants are unlikely to hit similar trade and national security barriers.

Leading the charge is Jack Ma, the founder of Alibaba, an online bazaar that allows a business to sell almost any item to any other business.

On Alibaba you can buy a machine for converting used car tyres into fuel oil, a kilo of “good quality” toad venom extract, or a full-size Sponge Bob bouncy castle. Jeff Bezos wanted Amazon to be “the everything store”, but Ma built it first.

Most of the suppliers are, of course, Chinese, but Alibaba is increasingly used by exporters around the world and the company is in an enviable position to profit as trade becomes ever more global and online. The company predicts that Chinese e-commerce will be worth more than that of the United States and European Union combined by 2016.

“Increasingly we’re finding markets that were only buyers are increasingly suppliers too,” says James Hardy, head of Europe for Alibaba.com.

“Some decide on a strategy and then look for data to support it. Others, like Alibaba, look at data – both internal and external - and only then make strategic decisions about growth and market opportunity.

“The decision for us to enter the Russia and Brazil markets was the product of analysing external data and combining it with extensive internal data.”

Ma’s accomplishment makes him unique among China’s internet plutocracy. While other Chinese billionaires have built online empires that closely resemble Google or Twitter, Alibaba has no equivalent in the West. Amazon and eBay target consumers.

As such, Ma has been garlanded with awards by the Western business media in the last few years. Following the flotations of Facebook and Twitter, Wall Street is hungry for new technology stocks and would love to get its hands on Alibaba.

It is easy to see the attraction. Alibaba’s third-quarter revenues were up 60pc, to $1.73bn (£1bn). In the same period its profits more than doubled, to $717m, more than twice what Facebook makes on roughly the same sales. PrivCo, an investment research firm specialising in private companies, reckons Alibaba is “conservatively” worth $110bn, which would catapult Ma to the top of China’s rich list.

The NYSE, Nasdaq and the London Stock Exchange have been among the bourses courting Ma in the hope of securing a listing since his flotation talks with the Hong Kong stock exchange broke down in September.

Authorities on the island were concerned about Alibaba’s two-tier share structure, which gives Ma and other executives more voting power than ordinary shareholders. It is a common setup for Silicon Valley giants run by their founders, however, including Facebook and Google, as the New York exchanges were happy to point out.

The kowtowing to Ma can be seen as part of a bigger power shift for the technology industry to China, a country that has been mostly known as its assembly line.

The most striking example of the trend is Xiaomi, a three-year-old smartphone maker that counts the Russian billionaire Yuri Milner among its investors. It makes high-end devices that compete with the iPhone for the attention of wealthy young Chinese, and at the last count, was beating its Californian rival.

Though its smartphones are cheaper than Apple’s, they are not cheap to make. Xiaomi sees itself as an internet company striving to capture customers for its services, in the mould of Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet business. Xiaomi is ferociously ambitious and has unusually sophisticated marketing for a Chinese consumer electronics maker.

Only last week it began its international expansion push in Singapore and its founder, Lei Jun, confidently announced that he aims to more double sales this year to 40m handsets. No Western rival would dare create such a hostage to fortune.

The prediction was delivered on Lei’s Sina Weibo account, the Chinese equivalent of Twitter. Sina, the company behind the service, is run by another of China’s technology elite, Charles Chao. Already listed on Nasdaq, Sina’s shares doubled last year on the growth of the service, which claims 600m users, not far short of Twitter.

Such is the influence of Sina Weibo in China that Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, has predicted it will play a major role in a gradual democratisation of the country.

“You simply cannot imprison enough Chinese people when they all agree to something. You won’t be able to stop it even if you don’t like it,” he said.

Sina Weibo has become the most open forum in Chinese media, yet it filled a vacuum left when censors cut off access to Twitter by agreeing to restrict certain subjects.

It is not the only one of China’s native internet powers to have benefited from a more cooperative approach to government. Baidu, China’s search engine, was helped when Google was forced out of China by a government row in 2010, and has an iron grip on the web search market.

The same cannot be said for WeChat, another internet service that Schmidt identified as a liberalising force in China. It is among a small group of smartphone apps that provide what amounts to free text messaging and is already in a fight with WhatsApp, the Western leader, and Line, a Korean-Japanese effort.

Each boasts hundreds of millions of users and is seeking more away from their home territory in the knowledge that scale usually wins online.

That battle is the sign of things to come as the globalising effect of the internet goes mobile and truly global. China’s internet powers are rising.

China’s hi-tech emperors - Telegraph
 
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