DCCI Reports: Average 80 Millions Chinese Users Tracking Olympics Online Daily

The exceptional Beijing Olympic Games have drawn to a close with a glittering closing ceremony. The Data Center of the China Internet (DCCI), a third party providing the uniform market monitor and audience measurement on China Internet has been tracking the online Beijing Olympics for 2 weeks. The traffic to Beijing Olympics authorized online broadcaster, including the leading Chinese portal Sina, Sohu, Netease, Tencent and video-sharing site Ku6, p2p video streaming software PPS, PPlive etc, has been monitored and 16 daily reports have been released  by DCCI. The following are the highlights (details can be found on the official DCCI website in Chinese):

According to the report released on 8th, August, around 32 millions Chinese Internet users were browsing/watching the news/broadcast of the opening ceremony. From 9th to 23rd, around 24.7 billions page views have been generated, the daily average page views per user has reached the highest 30.7 and 80 millions users in average are tracking the games through Internet in the 15 days.

Three figures below show the Page Views, Average Page Views per User and Daily Users monitored from 9th to 23th by DCCI.

Total Page Views Generated on Authorized Olympics Online Broadcasters From 9th to 23rd August

- Total Page Views Generated on Authorized Olympics Online Broadcasters From 9th to 23rd August -

Average Page Views per User Generated on Authorized Olympics Online Broadcastors From 9th to 23rd, August

- Average Page Views per User Generated on Authorized Olympics Online Broadcastors From 9th to 23rd, August -

Daily Users Tracking Olympics Online From 9th to 23rd, August

- Daily Users Tracking Olympics Online From 9th to 23rd From 9th to 23rd, August -

Share Your Olympics Moments From Your Mobile Phone

ReadWriteWeb has wrote an excellent post introducing the online video coverage of Olympics 2008. It is about mainstream video broadcasting. If you are interested in seeing what is happening in China from the perspective of those who are there on real time, what can you do?

Qik, the Silicon Valley based company which has not got Chinese version of web site yet, provides the solution. Using Qik, you can share moments of your life with your friends, family and the world directly from your cell phone!

Audrey from Qik sent me a message saying:

Journalists and spectators are at the Games, broadcasting live video from their cell phones using Qik. Everything from the opening ceremonies to behind the scenes moments will be captured over the duration of the Games, and to make it easy, we’re putting all of the Olympics videos in one place: http://qik.com/event/105/olympics-2008/

The idea is absolutely brilliant. Just point your mobile phone when you are at the games and stream video live to your your friends on Twitter, Facebook, Blogs, etc. without worrying about the storage of your mobile phone.  If the cellular networks in China is good enough or you get wifi connection, why not try it out to share your moments in Olympics with the world?

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