| Sites and apps in Chinese: Baidu Wangpan (百度网盘): file-sync service like Dropbox, but gives you 2TB (terrabytes!) of free storage Tengxun Ketang (腾讯课堂): similar to edX/coursera, they have a lot of free courses on programming, machine learning, and technical topics Wanmen Daxue (万门大学): similar to edX/coursera, they have a lot of free foreign language classes and lectures on economics/social sciences HKGolden (香港高登): Hong Kong forum on tech and software, similar to reddit Huxiu (虎嗅): tech news site Toutiao Xinwen (头条新闻): news aggregator site, has categories and comments Zhihu (知乎): QA platform, similar to Quora Zhihu Zhuanlan (知乎专栏): blogging platform, similar to Medium Ximalaya FM (喜马拉雅 FM): podcasts app Duokan (多看): ebooks app similar to Kindle Douyin (抖音): Chinese version of Tiktok iQiyi (爱奇艺): video site with tons of movies and dramas JD (京东): amazon-like marketplace with same-day delivery Taobao (淘宝): ebay-like peer-to-peer marketplace Weibo (新浪微博): microblogging site like Twitter Zhifubao (支付宝): peer-to-peer payments app that works by scanning QR codes, very widely accepted in China Wechat (微信): messaging app that also has tons of micro-apps and payment functionality built in |
A few things to add about some of the items:
- Baidu Wangpan's sharing model is more like the file locker sites of the early 00s: when you share a file or folder, the recipient gets a 'copy'. It's not like Dropbox where you collaborate and sync changes with each other.
- Baidu wangpan can download torrents server-side.
- Toutiao is by Bytedance, which readers here will know for their popular Tiktok product.
- Readers here may know Tengxun by its international name Tencent
- Zhifubao's English name is Alipay.
- Taobao is more than a peer-to-peer marketplace. I'd guess that over 50% of e-commerce goods purchases in China (by volume, not value) are via Taobao/Tmall. There are many 'mom and pop' stores, but also many with 10s of employees.
- Tingting FM is another good one for audio content. e.g. it has Peppa Pig episodes in Mandarin, and each episode has some commentary at the end explaining the key lessons from the story. (You can watch Peppa Pig in Mandarin on YouTube for free, but there's no commentary at the end.)