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Against the backdrop of KMT's non-stopping sabotage
(焦土政策),
Taiwanese make great strides moving forward. Taiwan is
competing with the rest of the world with her hands and legs
tied by KMT, yet she has done so well under such adverse
circumstances. All Taiwanese must be proud.
台灣窮人人口的比例世界最小
2008-03-19
Love 4 Taiwan

Also available in pdf
台灣人越來越富裕,個人福利年年增加
2008-03-19
Love 4 Taiwan
Also available in PDF
近年來台灣物價非常穩定 既無通貨膨脹 也無通貨緊縮
2008-03-19
Love 4 Taiwan
Also available in PDF

台灣的失業率,與歐美六個主要先進國家比較,僅次於英國,成績甚優
2008-03-19
Love 4 Taiwan
Also available in PDF

A decade ago, aboriginals dared not to admitted to their indigenous roots; now they are proud
2008-03-14
Reuters - USA
By Ralph Jennings
TAIPEI (Reuters) – A decade ago, Taiwan’s aboriginals seldom dared to wear native costumes in public or admitted to their indigenous roots on an island dominated by an ethnic Chinese majority.
But these days indigenous people such as Kolas Yotaka wear their heritage as a badge of honor. In Yotaka’s case, she dons native attire to read the news on government-run Taiwan Indigenous TV, which was launched in 2005.
“Viewers around the age of 70 will still say ‘don’t put that costume on’,” said Yotaka, 36. ”(But) Taiwan is coming around bit by bit.” ...
Taiwan Firms Pose Biggest Threat to Korean Chipmakers
2008-03-13
Korea Times - South Korea
While South Korean chip giants such as Samsung Electronics and Hynix Semiconductor have recently clashed over the issue of a “technology transfer’’ to overseas rivals, Taiwan-based computer chipmakers are forming a united front to inject massive amounts of cash into new next-generation plants. ...
Saxophones from Taiwan Aiming for the Pros
2008-02-25
NPR Music
Morning Edition, February 25, 2008 – Taiwan has etched out a reputation as high-tech hardware store to the world. Its economy has boomed as companies churn out components for famous global electronics brands. But this country of 23 million has quietly garnered a chunk of the world market in a very different product: saxophones.
Virginia music store owner Kevin Landes plays a saxophone that dates back to 19th-century Paris. French saxophones are still the gold standard today. But the horn Landes is cooking on next wasn’t made in France.
“You would never have thought of Taiwanese instruments trying to inch into the pro territory. But they are. And they are making some really nice horns.”
They’re making them at a gritty workshop in the town of Houli, in central Taiwan. Ten men and women huddle at their workbenches, silently adding hundreds of parts to perforated tubes of brass — the skeletons of alto saxophones.
Their progress is glacial. One worker dabs dots of glue to fingernail-sized pads of lambskin. Then he packs cushioning into round brass keys. Another worker attaches these keys to the tubes, positioning and then re-positioning them. A third worker thrusts a fluorescent light inside the brass tube, to scrutinize the handiwork. He depresses the keys and watches for telltale rays of light. If light escapes, the keys must be realigned.
While the work is slow and methodical, the owner of this company, Lien Cheng Saxophones, feels a sense of urgency. Chang Tsung Yao says, “Our quality is improving but if Taiwanese companies don’t move quick, they will be left behind.”
There are a dozen assembly lines — small, family operations like this one — throughout Houli. The town has a population of 50,000, but it produces about 40,000 saxophones a year.
Just how Houli became the world’s unsung center of saxophone making is largely an accident of history. The story dates back to just after World War II. It stars a larger-than-life character named Chang Lien-cheng. He was a farmer’s son who abandoned the family land to become a painter and jazz musician, says a spokeswoman for his company: “No one during that time was actually playing any kinds of Western instruments. But he was fascinated by this instrument called saxophone.”
Taiwan is No 1 in E-Government rating
2008-01-28
NationMaster
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SOURCE report presents the second annual
update on global e-government, i.e., the delivery of public sector
information and online services through the Internet. This report
studies the features that are available online at national
government websites. Using a detailed analysis of 1.197 government
websites in 198 different nations, it measures the information and
services that are online, chart the variations that exist across
countries, and discuss how e-government sites vary by region of the
world. In order to see how the 198 nations ranked overall, the
E-Government Ranking 2002 created a 0 to 100 point index and applied
it to each nation's websites based on the availability of contact
information, publications, databases, portals, and number of online
services. (2002)
DEFINITION Darrell M. West, Center for Public
Policy, Brown University
Media
Statistics > E-Government rating (most recent) by country
Showing latest available data.
| Rank |
Countries
|
Amount
(top to bottom) |
| #1 |
Taiwan: |
72.5 |
|
| #2 |
Korea,
South: |
64 |
|
| #3 |
Canada: |
61.1 |
|
| #4 |
United
States: |
60.1 |
|
| #5 |
Chile: |
60 |
|
| #6 |
Australia: |
58.3 |
|
| #7 |
China: |
56.3 |
|
| #8 |
Switzerland: |
55.4 |
|
| #9 |
United
Kingdom: |
54.8 |
|
| #10 |
Singapore: |
53.5 |
|
| #11 |
Germany: |
52.6 |
|
| #12 |
Fiji: |
52 |
|
| #13 |
Japan: |
52 |
|
| #14 |
Togo: |
52 |
|
| #15 |
Zambia: |
52 |
|
| #16 |
Bahrain: |
52 |
|
| #17 |
Mexico: |
52 |
|
| #18 |
Vanuatu: |
52 |
|
| #19 |
Qatar: |
52 |
|
| #20 |
Holy See
(Vatican City): |
52 |
|
| #21 |
Malaysia: |
51.5 |
|
| #22 |
Hong
Kong: |
51.3 |
|
| #23 |
Israel: |
50.9 |
|
| #24 |
France: |
50.9 |
|
| #25 |
Yemen: |
50 |
|
| #26 |
Iceland: |
49.8 |
|
| #27 |
Sweden: |
49.1 |
|
| #28 |
Finland: |
48.8 |
|
| #29 |
Lithuania: |
48.4 |
|
| #30 |
Italy: |
48.3 |
|
| #31 |
Estonia: |
48 |
|
| #32 |
Venezuela: |
48 |
|
| #33 |
Maldives: |
48 |
|
| #34 |
Belize: |
48 |
|
| #35 |
Liechtenstein: |
48 |
|
| #36 |
Botswana: |
48 |
|
| #37 |
Colombia: |
48 |
|
| #38 |
Cuba: |
48 |
|
| #39 |
Ireland: |
48 |
|
| #40 |
Norway: |
47.7 |
|
| #41 |
Austria: |
47.4 |
|
| #42 |
Saint
Lucia: |
47.3 |
|
| #43 |
Malta: |
47.2 |
|
| #44 |
Uganda: |
47.2 |
|
| #45 |
Denmark: |
47 |
|
| #46 |
El
Salvador: |
47 |
|
| #47 |
Ecuador: |
47 |
|
| #48 |
Senegal: |
47 |
|
| #49 |
Latvia: |
46.9 |
|
| #50 |
Jordan: |
46.3 |
|
| #51 |
Swaziland: |
46.2 |
|
| #52 |
Turkey: |
46 |
|
| #53 |
Malawi: |
45.3 |
|
| #54 |
Belgium: |
45.3 |
|
| #55 |
Kyrgyzstan: |
45.3 |
|
| #56 |
Macedonia,
The Former Yugoslav Republic of: |
45.1 |
|
| #57 |
India: |
45.1 |
|
| #58 |
Poland: |
45.1 |
|
| #59 |
Lebanon: |
45 |
|
| #60 |
Spain: |
44.9 |
|
| #61 |
Czech
Republic: |
44.6 |
|
| #62 |
Luxembourg: |
44.6 |
|
| #63 |
Mozambique: |
44 |
|
| #64 |
Haiti: |
44 |
|
| #65 |
Nepal: |
44 |
|
| #66 |
Kenya: |
44 |
|
| #67 |
Angola: |
44 |
|
| #68 |
Sudan: |
44 |
|
| #69 |
Grenada: |
44 |
|
| #70 |
Netherlands: |
44 |
|
| #71 |
Iran: |
44 |
|
| #72 |
Thailand: |
44 |
|
| #73 |
Tunisia: |
44 |
|
| #74 |
Croatia: |
43.4 |
|
| #75 |
Armenia: |
43.3 |
|
| #76 |
Guyana: |
42.7 |
|
| #77 |
Philippines: |
42.4 |
|
| #78 |
Hungary: |
42.3 |
|
| #79 |
New
Zealand: |
42.3 |
|
| #80 |
South
Africa: |
42 |
|
| #81 |
Romania: |
42 |
|
| #82 |
Cape
Verde: |
42 |
|
| #83 |
Brazil: |
41.8 |
|
| #84 |
Argentina: |
41.8 |
|
| #85 |
Slovenia: |
41.7 |
|
| #86 |
Greece: |
41.5 |
|
| #87 |
Azerbaijan: |
41.3 |
|
| #88 |
Bulgaria: |
41.1 |
|
| #89 |
Egypt: |
41 |
|
| #90 |
Morocco: |
40.9 |
|
| #91 |
Indonesia: |
40.8 |
|
| #92 |
Cambodia: |
40.8 |
|
| #93 |
Costa
Rica: |
40.7 |
|
| #94 |
Mauritius: |
40.6 |
|
| #95 |
Slovakia: |
40.5 |
|
| #96 |
Liberia: |
40 |
|
| #97 |
Tuvalu: |
40 |
|
| #98 |
Moldova: |
40 |
|
| #99 |
Tonga: |
40 |
|
| #100 |
Djibouti: |
40 |
|
| #101 |
Bahamas,
The: |
40 |
|
| #102 |
Paraguay: |
40 |
|
| #103 |
Jamaica: |
40 |
|
| #104 |
Syria: |
40 |
|
| #105 |
Tajikistan: |
40 |
|
| #106 |
Laos: |
40 |
|
| #107 |
Micronesia,
Federated States of: |
40 |
|
| #108 |
Ethiopia: |
40 |
|
| #109 |
Panama: |
39.5 |
|
| #110 |
Seychelles: |
39 |
|
| #111 |
Andorra: |
39 |
|
| #112 |
Georgia: |
38.7 |
|
| #113 |
Sri
Lanka: |
38.7 |
|
| #114 |
Cook
Islands: |
38.7 |
|
| #115 |
Guatemala: |
38.7 |
|
| #116 |
Burkina
Faso: |
38.4 |
|
| #117 |
Saudi
Arabia: |
38 |
|
| #118 |
Barbados: |
38 |
|
| #119 |
Vietnam: |
38 |
|
| #120 |
Guinea: |
37.3 |
|
| #121 |
Mauritania: |
37.3 |
|
| #122 |
Pakistan: |
37.3 |
|
| #123 |
Mongolia: |
37.1 |
|
| #124 |
Russia: |
36.8 |
|
| #125 |
Portugal: |
36.4 |
|
| #126 |
Antigua
and Barbuda: |
36 |
|
| #127 |
Korea,
North: |
36 |
|
| #128 |
Kiribati: |
36 |
|
| #129 |
Zimbabwe: |
36 |
|
| #130 |
Lesotho: |
36 |
|
| #131 |
Chad: |
36 |
|
| #132 |
Rwanda: |
36 |
|
| #133 |
Oman: |
36 |
|
| #134 |
Palau: |
36 |
|
| #135 |
Peru: |
36 |
|
| #136 |
Honduras: |
36 |
|
| #137 |
San
Marino: |
36 |
|
| #138 |
Kazakhstan: |
36 |
|
| #139 |
Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines: |
36 |
|
| #140 |
Madagascar: |
36 |
|
| #141 |
Samoa: |
36 |
|
| #142 |
Eritrea: |
36 |
|
| #143 |
Brunei: |
35.5 |
|
| #144 |
Algeria: |
35.2 |
|
| #145 |
Cameroon: |
34.9 |
|
| #146 |
Burma: |
34.9 |
|
| #147 |
Albania: |
34 |
|
| #148 |
Mali: |
34 |
|
| #149 |
Comoros: |
34 |
|
| #150 |
Tanzania: |
33.8 |
|
| #151 |
Iraq: |
33.6 |
|
| #152 |
Belarus: |
33.2 |
|
| #153 |
Niger: |
32 |
|
| #154 |
Nigeria: |
32 |
|
| #155 |
Ukraine: |
32 |
|
| #156 |
Sierra
Leone: |
32 |
|
| #157 |
Bolivia: |
32 |
|
| #158 |
Libya: |
32 |
|
| #159 |
Gambia,
The: |
32 |
|
| #160 |
Uruguay: |
32 |
|
| #161 |
Gabon: |
32 |
|
| #162 |
Monaco: |
32 |
|
| #163 |
Nicaragua: |
32 |
|
| #164 |
Kuwait: |
32 |
|
| #165 |
Afghanistan: |
32 |
|
| #166 |
Somalia: |
32 |
|
| #167 |
Central
African Republic: |
32 |
|
| #168 |
Suriname: |
32 |
|
| #169 |
Ghana: |
32 |
|
| #170 |
Niue: |
30 |
|
| #171 |
Bangladesh: |
29.3 |
|
| #172 |
Turkmenistan: |
28 |
|
| #173 |
Bhutan: |
28 |
|
| #174 |
Cote
d'Ivoire: |
28 |
|
| #175 |
Namibia: |
28 |
|
| #176 |
Uzbekistan: |
27.3 |
|
| #177 |
Benin: |
26 |
|
| #178 |
East
Timor: |
24 |
|
| #179 |
Burundi: |
24 |
|
| #180 |
Nauru: |
24 |
|
| #181 |
Guinea-B | | |