Liu Yu has felt like a "fish out of water" for the past few
days.
This 26-year-old clerk from Beijing is just one of millions of
netizens coping with life without access to the MSN instant
messaging service since the severing of undersea cables as a result
of two earthquakes that rocked Taiwan on Tuesday.
"The breakdown of the MSN service since Tuesday has brought a
sudden end to my familiar cyber world, making my life dull and
boring," said Liu.
An online survey by Sina.com, the country's leading news portal,
discovered that around half of the country's 15 million MSN users
have been affected by the Internet breakdown and have flirted with
new methods of online communication.
The syndrome has become so extensive that a blog essay
competition on the theme of "days without MSN" held by sohu.com, a
leading popular website in China, attracted hundreds of netizens
within a few hours on Friday.
"Days without MSN are simply so unbearable," wrote the majority
of netizens, many of whom sought for ideas online to kill time.
They also said that a symptom of the syndrome was clicking on
MSN every 10 minutes to see if it had been restored not allowing
them to concentrate on their work.
In addition to a dull life, office workers also complain that
the Internet breakdown has made their work less efficient,
rendering online communication with their overseas business
partners impossible.
"The breakdown clearly shows that the world is so closely linked
together that a cable breakdown in Taiwan can impact many parts of
the world," said Zhou Jia, a businessman in Shanghai.
According to experts, the fundamental reason for the syndrome is
that many people's lives have become dependent on the Internet.
"For many people, frustrated interpersonal relationships in
reality have led them to choose the virtual world for consolation,"
said Xia Xueluan, a sociology professor at Peking University.
"When one channel is cut off, they will feel greatly uneasy and
try to find alternatives," said Xia.
In fact, millions of netizens have turned to La-Va and QQ, two
major domestic online chatting tools, to communicate since Tuesday,
reported Chinese-language newspapers.
Experts also called for emergency measures to combat the sudden
Internet collapse and minimize its negative influences on Internet
users.
(China Daily December 30, 2006)