Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 12, 2017

‘Uri’ isn’t a mere grammar point, it’s a cultural canon that captures the very essence of a nation.

“Our husband is also a teacher,” my co-worker told me as she noisily slurped her soup. She was seated beside another colleague, who was slurping hers, too.
I was confused. Had I misheard her? Were these women married to the same person?
Uri wasn’t a mere grammar point, it was a cultural canon
“She’s talking about her husband,” the second co-worker clarified, perhaps noticing my blank stare. “In Korea, we often say ‘our’ or ‘we’ instead of ‘my’ or ‘I’.”
The three of us were in the cramped staff lunchroom of my new workplace, Mae-hyang Girls’ Middle School, getting to know each other between the fourth and fifth periods. Fumbling to take a bite of kimchi, I was struggling to get a grip on my slippery metal chopsticks – and, it seemed, on the Korean language.
The author worked as an English language teacher in Suwon, South Korea (Credit: Credit: Michael Runkel/Getty Images)
The author worked as an English language teacher in Suwon, South Korea (Credit: Michael Runkel/Getty Images)
It was my first week in Suwon, South Korea, working as an English language teacher. I was fresh out of university from the US state of Wisconsin, on my first international job contract and impossibly excited. I didn’t know it at the time, but South Korea would be my home for the next four years.
Throughout those years, this curious ‘our’ or ‘we’ – in Korean, ‘uri’ – cropped up again and again. Out of all the words explained to me, it was the one to make the biggest impression and leave the deepest, most enduring mark. Because, as it turned out, uri wasn’t a mere grammar point, it was a cultural canon. It captured the very essence of a nation.
“Korean people use ‘uri’ when something is shared by a group or community, or when many members in a group or community possess the same or similar kind of thing,” Beom Lee, a Korean language professor at Columbia University, told me in an interview. “[It’s] based on our collectivist culture.”
Beom Lee: Korean people use ‘uri’ when something is shared by a group or community (Credit: Credit: Alain Evrard/robertharding/Getty Images)
Beom Lee: Korean people use ‘uri’ when something is shared by a group or community (Credit: Alain Evrard/robertharding/Getty Images)
South Korea’s communal values are tied to its compact size, ethnically homogenous population and ardent nationalism. Here, a house – even one you pay for – is not yours; it’s ours. Likewise, my company is our company, my school is our school and my family is our family. Just because I might own or belong to something individually doesn’t mean others do not have a similar experience of ownership or belonging. To say ‘my’ is almost egocentric.
To say ‘my’ is almost egocentric
“Korean people always use uri nara(our country) instead of nae nara(my country). 'Nae nara' sounds weird. It sounds like they own the country,” Lee said. “Nae anae (my wife) sounds like he is the only person who has a wife in Korea.”
Above all, the country’s cultural collectivism is a testament to its long history of Confucianism. While South Korea has outgrown its dynasty-era, class-based hierarchy, it holds onto its Confucian ethics that dictate individuals should approach social contexts – from ordering food and drinks with friends to riding public transport with strangers – with the group in mind. In group networks, the ‘we’ is the collective Korean self, according to Boston University cultural studies professor Hee-an Choi, and it’s indispensable to the ‘I’.
South Korea’s communal values are tied to its compact size, ethnically homogenous population and ardent nationalism (Credit: Credit: Bloomberg/Getty Images)
South Korea’s communal values are tied to its compact size, ethnically homogenous population and ardent nationalism (Credit: Bloomberg/Getty Images)
“There is no clear boundary between the word ‘I’ and the word ‘we’,” Choi writes in her book A Postcolonial Self. “As the usage of the words ‘we’ and ‘I’ are often interchangeable, so too is the identity of the ‘we’ often interchangeable with the identity of the ‘I.’ The meanings of ‘we’ and ‘I’ are negotiable not only in colloquial Korean usage but also in the consciousness and unconsciousness of Korean minds.”
Not long after I joined Mae-hyang as its only native English language teacher, I also became its only non-native Korean language student. My instructors, a giggly gaggle of teenaged girls in red plaid uniforms, would meet me in my classroom after school, notebooks, flashcards and dictionaries in hand and grins spread wide across their faces. “You are a student, just like us!” they said. “Yes, I am!” I smiled.
It wasn’t only my students who were eager to be my teachers.
It was also my co-workers, bosses, neighbours, landlords and even the occasional taxi driver or shop assistant or bartender. They all took the opportunity to teach me a thing or two about this tongue that once belonged to me, but then suddenly did not when I was adopted to the US from South Korea as a child. “You are Korean,” they would tell me, “so it’s important for you to speak the language that Koreans speak.”
Hee-an Choi: "There is no clear boundary between the word ‘I’ and the word ‘we’" (Credit: Credit: EschCollection/Getty Images)
Hee-an Choi: "There is no clear boundary between the word ‘I’ and the word ‘we’" (Credit: EschCollection/Getty Images)
Being Korean meant knowing Korean. To understand myself was to make sense of the country. Such notions were blurry to me then, but would eventually come into focus as one and the same, at least based on traditional attitudes of Korean togetherness.
The 1400s in Korea was the golden age of its Joseon Dynasty, which reigned for five centuries and counts the Korean alphabet among its numerous scientific and cultural legacies. Before then, the kingdom, lacking a script of its own, borrowed Chinese characters to write Korean speech. But the classical Chinese system was too difficult to be democratic, its logographic nature ill-suited to Korean’s complex grammar. Seeing that large sectors of society were unable to adequately express themselves, King Sejong commissioned the invention of Hangeul in 1443.
One of the few scripts in the world to be deliberately designed, not organically evolved, Hangeul was intended to be easy for everyone, from the richest royalty to the poorest peasant, to learn how to read and write.
Hangeul was intended to be easy for everyone (Credit: Credit: Dylan Goldby at WelkinLight Photography/Getty Images)
Hangeul was intended to be easy for everyone (Credit: Dylan Goldby at WelkinLight Photography/Getty Images)
Today in South Korea, Hangeul is celebrated with a national holiday every 9 October. (In North Korea, the observance is 15 January.) South Korean President Jae-in Moon commemorated Hangeul Day 2017 in a Facebook post. “The greatest thing about Hangeul is that it’s for the people and it thinks about people,” he wrote. “King Sejong’s intent for Hangeul is in line with today’s democracy.”
With Hangeul, Moon said, it was possible for Koreans from all backgrounds to be united as one, with a culture and identity of their own. “Hangeul is a great community asset that connects our people.”
For Eun-kyoung Choi, a librarian who lives in Seoul, English always struck her as strange. She remembers thinking the foreign tongue sounded cold, even selfish, when she studied it as a young girl. If the Korean language, from its letters to its words, was built to be communal, then the English language seemed excessively individualistic. Everything was “my, my, my” and “me, me, me,” she said.
In American culture, the ‘my’, ‘me’ and ‘I’ exist as an autonomous entity, according to University of Hawaii professor of Korean language and linguistics Ho-min Sohn. But in Korean culture, they do not.
Koreans approach everyday events like ordering food to riding public transport with the group in mind (Credit: Credit: Atlantide Phototravel/Getty Images)
Koreans approach everyday events like ordering food to riding public transport with the group in mind (Credit: Atlantide Phototravel/Getty Images)
“While Americans generally have an egalitarian and individualistic consciousness, highly valuing personal autonomy, Korean interpersonal relations are, in general, still strongly tied to social hierarchism and collectivist ideals, highly valuing interpersonal dependency,” Sohn wrote in his book Korean Language in Culture and Society.
When Choi, the librarian, met her American husband, Julio Moreno, in South Korea, the contrasts between their two cultural communications became all the more apparent. Moreno, too, noted misunderstandings. An English language teacher and blogger, he recalls overhearing his students chatting about “their mother” and wondering how so many of them could be siblings. “It was very confusing,” Moreno laughed.
When you learn a different language, you have to think differently
Grasping singular and plural possessive pronouns, professional translator and interpreter Kyung-hwa Martin can attest, is one of the greatest challenges for Koreans studying English and vice versa. Ultimately, learning another language necessitates learning another perspective. “Language and culture are embedded in each other. Language reflects culture and culture reflects language,” said Martin, who moved from Seoul to Virginia. “When you learn a different language, you have to think differently.”
For me, thinking differently didn’t come easy.
If one half of my most idealised identity was supposed to be American independence and exceptionalism, then the other half was Korean collectivism. It was a dichotomy I didn’t know how to reconcile. And the consequences weighed heavily. But the disappointment I so routinely sensed from my peers, I came to realise, wasn’t the condemnation I mistook it for, but an innate yearning for unity. It’s a lesson I still sometimes forget, but I know I can rely on uri to remind me.
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The cleverest advances in air travel are sometimes the small touches – changes within the cabin that you might not have even noticed, says William Cook.

When someone mentions advances in aviation, what sort of images spring to mind? The latest futuristic jumbo jet concept? Flying taxis? Jet powered backpacks?
These are the inventions that grab the headlines of course, yet some of them remain fantasies. Sure, you see the odd prototype on television, but that’s about as close as you ever get to one. The likes of Richard Branson may get to use one, one day – but regular travellers like you and me won’t be using one anytime soon.
(Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
The Crystal Cabin Awards is an annual prizegiving for inventors and designers who’ve created systems to improve daily life inside aircraft cabins (Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
For most of us, the innovations that are transforming plane travel are a lot more discreet. Indeed, we hardly notice them – but they’re happening all the time. Flying is changing fast, in ways that often escape the eye, and a lot of the biggest changes are happening inside the cabin.
As more and more of us are flying and competition between airlines is becoming increasingly intense, the most important innovations are rarely the most glamorous. Rather, they’re usually behind-the-scenes improvements that increase comfort and efficiency, giving the airlines that adopt them a crucial cutting edge.
(Credit: Crystal Cabin Awards)
It's often the small details on board that make the most different to passengers and crew alike (Credit: Crystal Cabin Awards)
The Crystal Cabin Awards is an annual prizegiving, with awards given to inventors and designers who’ve come up with bright ideas to improve daily life inside the cabin – for passengers and flight crew, and for the moneymen (and women) who look after the bottom line.
The gizmos that win awards this year could be on board next time you travel. So, what sort of devices should we be looking out for? And how will they change the way we fly?
One of my favourite innovations didn’t actually win a prize this year, but I feel sure it’ll soon be standard on every major airline. As frequent flyers know too well, carry-on luggage is a major headache. On crowded flights, getting everyone’s hand baggage stowed in the overhead bins takes ages, and this is an industry where every minute on the ground is dead money.
(Credit: Crystal Cabin Awards)
Simple but effective: monitors use a traffic light system to let passengers and crew know if there is space in an overhead compartment (Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
To help alleviate this growing problem, a company called Zodiac Aerospace have come up with something called the ECOS Baggage System (ECOS stands for Efficient Cabin, Open Space). Like all the best ideas, it’s relatively basic. A green light above each locker door lights up when there’s still space inside, and only goes out when it’s full. Cabin crew have an even smarter handheld device, which shows red, yellow and green logos for each locker, depending on whether it’s full, half-full or empty. Remarkably, this simple system increases capacity by nearly 40% - and it speeds up boarding, too.
Another sort of sensor has been pioneered by European manufacturer Airbus, this time to eliminate a common and costly mistake. Apparently, when cabin crew open the aircraft doors, due to fatigue or stress they sometimes activate the emergency escape slides by mistake. Incredibly, this human error costs the aviation industry an estimated $38m (£28m) per annum, worldwide. The Watchdog sensor warns crew members whenever there’s movement near the handle – an ingenuous add-on which stands to save airlines precious millions of dollars every year.
(Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
The ReTrolley reinvents the clunky cabin trolley, making it smaller and more effective: it can compress waste as it moves (Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
Waste disposal is another big nuisance on board. The Airbus ReTrolley is half the size of a regular trolley, yet it recycles passengers’ rubbish as cabin crew push it through the cabin. There’s a foot pump for compressing larger items, and separate compartments for organic and liquid waste.
Likewise, going to the lavatory isn’t something we like to dwell on when we’re travelling, but it’s an essential issue on every flight. Zodiac Aviation’s Revolution Toilet is made of recyclable materials, making it 30% lighter than older toilet bowls – that’s a weight saving of about 3kg per toilet. Its 360-degree flush uses a third less water, and it’s more hygienic too.
(Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
Making air travel more inclusive, researchers at Hamburg University of Applied Sciences developed a wheelchair that can fit together with a toilet (Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
Unless you’re disabled, or caring for a fellow passenger who isn’t able bodied, the challenges of using an aeroplane toilet if you’re a wheelchair user probably isn’t something you’ve even thought about. Thankfully, researchers at Hamburg University of Applied Sciences have developed a customised wheelchair with a special seat that slots straight over the toilet, turning an awkward ordeal into a straightforward routine.
(Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
Any creation that seeks to maximise space is likely to be popular (Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
There are all sorts of other innovations in the pipeline. Diehl Aerospace, in collaboration with Lucerne University of Applied Sciences & Arts, has found a way of combining power and data cables, turning two sets of ‘cable spaghetti’ into one. The result is a considerable reduction in wiring, weight and volume, reducing fuel consumption and cutting back on CO2 emissions.
Meanwhile, Delft University of Technology has come up with a Bluetooth device called Myseat which guides passengers from check-in to plane.
(Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
Myseat serves as a personal guide for travellers (Credit: Crystal Cabin Award)
Yet it’s the most prosaic development which may well prove to be the most practical and enduring. Airbus and Recaro have mounted airline seats on rails, so that seating configuration can be easily adjusted by the cabin crew, depending on the load in different classes on different flights. And best of all, this new seating comes with fold-up seats. It’s such an obvious idea, you wonder why no-one ever thought of it before. But then again, they probably said the same thing about whoever invented the wheel.
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AI bots on the internet make it harder for you to buy stuff, and to filter out fake news. But can bots be used for good?

We’re smack in the middle of the festive season. Millions are combing online shopping sites for last-minute gifts, but some things are selling out in the blink of an eye.
Increasingly though, it’s not always other people scrambling to nab the vanishing merchandise. The culprits may be computer programs that perform specific, repetitive tasks at breakneck speed, like buying things online en masse to be resold elsewhere at inflated prices.
From online shopping, to ticket sales for concerts and events – and even fake identities that troll social media – these bots have made headlines in 2017. They’ll continue to seep into our lives in myriad ways next year, too. They can be a scourge. But can they also be a force for good?
Shopper nightmare
One way bots have disrupted our lives – and wallets – has been in online shopping.
Fingerlings” – tiny, brightly-coloured plastic baby monkeys that wrap around your finger – are one of the most sought-after toys of 2017. They usually cost $15 each. But US retailers have been selling out quickly, and those must-have mini monkeys end up on auction sites like eBay at large mark-ups – most going for around $20 to $60, but the New York Times reported one case of $5,000.
(Credit: Getty Images)
Scalpers are often thought of as shady types hanging around the gate at events, but the vast majority are online (Credit: Getty Images)
While there’s no sure-fire way to say with absolute certainty that a bot’s to blame for your go-to gift selling out, you can usually tell when a non-human ne’er-do-well is the culprit.
Pull: In a mere second, a bot can scan retail sites hundreds of times, find a product and completely drain a retailer of its entire stock
That’s because how bots work: in a mere second, a bot can scan retail sites hundreds of times, find a product, instantly enter information like size and payment details, and completely drain a retailer of its entire stock. There is human involvement, though: a human programmer is required to predict URLs and product codes for sought-after sales items, so that the bot will have a head start over a human as soon the product goes live. Bots are constantly scanning for products to be relisted online, so the cycle can continue once stock is replenished.
It’s not all products, though. Bots only really target highly anticipated or popular products that their creators know have a very limited supply, that can be re-sold for much more, straight away, on third-party or auction sites. Certain brands of streetwear such as Supreme or Kanye West’s Yeezy trainers are prime targets, since they “drop” – are released – only on certain dates, to outsized global demand.
Bots
Bots target hot holiday items - especially toys, like the Barbie Hello Dreamhouse (Credit: Alamy Images)
This holiday season, other products besides Fingerlings that bots may be collecting and reselling at high prices include Nintendo’s SNES Classic Edition and the Barbie Hello Dreamhouse.
The new scalping
Bots also targeted the sale of concert and event tickets – the purchase of which is already a competitive and cutthroat process. In the UK, fans have seen tickets to shows like Ed Sheeran and Adele, as well as the theatre production of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, sell out in minutes and reappear for thousands of pounds on resale websites like StubHub and Viagogo.
That’s why some of the biggest acts in the business are paying attention. Bruce Springsteen and Taylor Swift – two artists who boast some of the largest and most loyal fan bases – have taken action to fight scalpers and ticket bots. They know it’s become harder for real people to actually buy tickets, so they’ve turned to software that attempts to verify and vet actual human fans.
(Credit: Getty Images)
Tickets to Ed Sheeran shows often sell out in minutes and appear soon after for resale, driving up prices (Credit: Getty Images)
Governments are trying to keep up with the technology and protect consumers. In the UK and US, there have been efforts to crack down on ticket-grabbing bots, seeking to make illegal this type of use of AI.
But bots don’t just interfere with your spending habits. You’ve likely encountered them elsewhere on the internet, too.
Social media takeover
Bots have also been blamed for their negative role in politics. Posing as real humans on Facebook or Twitter, bots are programmed to rapidly retweet political hashtags, for example, or to constantly post fake news stories that push certain agendas and propaganda. Most notably, it has been widely reported that social media bots were used to meddle with the 2016 US presidential election.
Political bots have snuck their way into our social media habits steadily since around 2012, says Lisa-Maria Neudert, a researcher at the University of Oxford’s Internet Institute. Neudert studies the social science of the internet, and how digital media intersects with politics and communication. She says that while existing bots have basic functions – simply liking or retweeting or commenting on posts – they’re getting much savvier.
There could soon be “a bot that can be programmed to convince a person of a specific political opinion, behaving exactly like a human over social media,” she says. It could “give you specific arguments or basically present you with a counter argument – it could hold conversations with you potentially without you realising [you’re talking to a bot].”
(Credit: Getty Images)
As AI grows more sophisticated, the likelihood of having a drawn-out argument with a bot over social media gets higher (Credit: Getty Images)
A force for good?
The AI used by bots to sway political opinions and trick dating hopefuls can cause much damage. But the technology can be a help as well as a hindrance.
More people are welcoming voice-activated assistants like Amazon’s Alexa Microsoft’s Cortana into their homes, and the AI underlying these products is quickly advancing: large tech companies have invited third-party developers to fuelinnovation for these bots to make them more human-like.
“I think the number one use for Alexa is like, ‘play some kind of music’ or ‘Alexa, turn the light on,’” says Neudert. But researchers and developers are currently trying to advance the tech so it can “hold conversations and just become smarter and smarter”.
As bots get faster at completing tasks and better at making decisions, they could help us with our finances, too.
The advantage that comes from the AI is not just speed, but primarily better decision-making than any human can accomplish – Tuomas Sandholm
“In my own work, I have always made it a high priority that the AI programs – sophisticated bots – that we build make the world a better place, not worse,” says Tuomas Sandholm via email, a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University.
Earlier this year, an AI bot that Sandholm worked on pulled off a historic victory in a 20-day poker marathon against four of the world’s best poker players. Sandholm predicts that AI that can strategise and think critically could eventually lead to smart, helpful bots that could even negotiate the price of a new car.
(Credit: Getty Images)
As more shopping is done online (like on Singles Day, China's record-breaking online shopping event) more bots are used to mass purchase popular items (Credit: Getty Images)
“The advantage that comes from the AI is not just speed, but primarily better decision-making than any human can accomplish,” Sandholm says.
Neudert agrees it’s not all bad. Bots could help you change the way you spend money – they could be linked to a messaging app on your phone and engage in a conversation with you about your finances. They could track your spending over several months, advise you on ways to improve, and answer questions.
As for now, though, it’s a case of buyer beware this holiday season. Bots are here to stay, and while it’s up to lawmakers to crack down on just how much they’re allowed to infiltrate our lives… they’ve already been through Santa’s sleigh.
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