TIME Asia
TIME Asia Home
Current Issue
  Asia News
  Pacific News
  Technology
  Business
  Arts
  Travel
Photos
Special Features
Magazine Archive

Subscribe to TIME
Customer Service
About Us
Write to TIME Asia

TIME.com
TIME Canada
TIME Europe
TIME Pacific
Latest CNN News


Other News
TIME Digest
FORTUNE.com
FORTUNE China
MONEY.com
Bookmark TIME
TIME Media Kit

Get TIME's WorldWatch email newsletter FREE!

TIME Asia Asiaweek Asia Now TIME Asia story

FEBRUARY 28, 2000 VOL. 155 NO. 8

Anthony Yip
Myrice.com

    ALSO IN TIME
Cover: China Dot Now
The world's last big communist state is hit by a wave of Web mania, and the bureaucrats are fighting to contain it
B2B: Joseph Tong casts a Web over Chinese exporters
Chortling: Wang Zhidong should have laughed last
Crazy Man: Jack Ma goes for the shrimp, not the whales
Princeling: Antony Yip finds the right sites
Geek Chic: Shao Yibo grows up fast
Regulation: How Beijing plans to control the Net

  RELATED STORIES
ASIAWEEK
Show Me the Stock Options!
Intoxicated by dot-com fever, sane folk are taking pay cuts and defecting to start-ups with trendy names. How long will the gold rush continue?

After the Bubble
Asia's technology stocks are defying gravity. Which companies will survive - and thrive - when the mania ends?

Asiaweek/CNN Asian Internet Index
Track our 20 Asian internet stocks

Antony Yip seems too young to order food in a smart restaurant, let alone set up an Internet company that just raised $6.5 million from an American venture capital firm. But order he does--fish and chips, followed by ice cream--"two scoops of strawberry, one chocolate." Nor is his age--he's a boyish 21 and dresses in baggy trousers and sneakers--the only anomaly. Yip runs a collection of 15 Chinese-language websites assembled under his umbrella site, Myrice.com--though he can neither write nor speak Chinese properly. "It's ridiculous, really," he says, smiling disarmingly.


Greg Girard/Contact Press Images for TIME

But under the new logic of the Internet, Yip (whose father, Peter Yip, set up Chinadotcom) has become a hot new player in the China market. His strategy of buying small mainland websites and putting them together with enhanced design and backup is making people take him very seriously. Among other things, his sites offer online games, soccer results, jokes and free software. Yip may not speak much Chinese, but he identifies with the energy of China's budding Internet sector: "It's not because they have connections or went to Qinghua University. It is because they can design a Web page. And that's great."

Yip spent only one year at university, then came to work with his father at Chinadotcom for several years until he set up his own company in 1998. At first he was offering free e-mail, but as he looked for business partners in China, he began to discover "all these cool sites" and started picking them up, cheap. Soccerchina.com cost him just $7,000 last July when he bought it from two brothers living in Guangxi. Yip claims his 15 websites get 3.9 million hits a day. The kid knows a bargain when he sees one.

Write to TIME at mail@web.timeasia.com

This edition's table of contents
TIME Asia home




China's Hottest Websites

PORTALS
Sina.com The biggest, heavy on news
Netease.com E-mail provider turned portal
Sohu.com Lost early competitive advantage due to management problems

BUSINESS-TO-CONSUMER AND AUCTIONS
8848.net Online shopping with preexisting network of retail stores to deliver goods
Dangdang.com Online bookseller
Eachnet.com Leading auction site
Coolbid.com Auctions
Clubciti.com More auctions

BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS
Alibaba.com Worldwide trading of products
Meetchina.com Online registry of Chinese exporters

ENTERTAINMENT
Zhaodaola.com Lifestyle portal
Globallink.com Fun online: chess, bridge, mahjong, strategy games
Chinanow.com City listings: restaurants, clubs, events
Myrice.com Collection of sites including soccer results, games, jokes, software

FINANCE
Homeway.com.cn financial information
Stockstar.com share price lists; part of shanghai.online

JOB SEARCH
Zhaopin.com Good source for openings at foreign firms
51job.com Listings of jobs at Chinese companies

Quick Scroll: More stories from TIME, Asiaweek and CNN


   LATEST HEADLINES:

   Click Here for the latest regional analysis from TIME Asia



SEARCH FOR :  

Back to the top   Copyright © 2002 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Subscribe to TIME | FAQ | About TIME Asia | Search | Write to Us | Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Press Releases