kyang-old
Kyang
kyang-old

This sounds very cool. I would have liked it if there was something similar for your desktop background though.

@kitsuneconundrum: I'm a little relieved that I wasn't the only one that thought of this.

@ReticulatedJig: I was just thinking the same thing. Like yours, in our family, left-over rice is usually just fried up.

Seems like Data was right all along...

I always figured these were just sort of a generic Asian fan. But now I'm wondering if there's a different between these or any other fan of this sort. For instance, I've seen these used by the Chinese. Nothing different aside from the name I guess?

I love the random "Chinese" aesthetic flourishes. These sorts of touches used to have a pretty specific reason and order behind their use, but now they're just sort of tacked on to make it look, "Chinese", or Asian in general. Kind of sad really. I've yet to see a truly modern take on traditional Chinese

@yummygluestick: Being first doesn't always mean you win in the long run. Just ask the Soviet Union. :P .

In America, kids kill you!

No, I'm pretty sure with the Enterprise around, it's actually buxom green women, and little blue men.

Ungodly?

I'm not even motivated enough to do these chorse, now I have to study them too?

@Mark Vincent N. Cocjin: That's sort of what happens when a nation has its entire culture and world view crushed before its eyes in the face of overwhelming western imperial might, with nothing but civil war, foreign invasion and anarchy for over a century after. They kinda have try to restore themselves by any

No one?

@ImSpartacus: It's probably not like that by default because most users still expect an area on the window for the mouse to grab, and move the window around by. I feel Chrome handles this the best by showing the title bar when the window is normal, then hiding it when the window is maximized.

@Moonflower: Would you elaborate on these great tricks a bit? :) .

Oh, it's in Shenzhen, China. Didn't figure that out until the Foxconn reference, and after I clicked the link.