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      'Black Monday' as WeChat service lost

      2013-07-23 09:44 China Daily Web Editor: Wang Fan
      1
      A WeChat user sees the mobile app service freeze on the welcome screen following Monday's breakdown. DU LIANYI / CHINA DAILY

      A WeChat user sees the mobile app service freeze on the "welcome" screen following Monday's breakdown. DU LIANYI / CHINA DAILY

      Breakdown brings misery for millions of mobile app enthusiasts across nation

      For Chen Zidan, a 28-year-old insurance company worker in Shanghai, yesterday's temporary loss of service on WeChat was a "Black Monday".

      After waking up, she found herself disconnected from the popular mobile communications app's server, through which she keeps in contact daily with more than 200 friends she has not seen for months.

      Her anxiety rose when she lost track of her boyfriend in France, who had promised to post pictures taken on a trip to Italy on his personal page. WeChat is the only platform the couple uses to communicate.

      "I feel isolated and lonely. There's not much to read during my half-hour subway ride to work. I feel lost and a bit frustrated," said Chen.

      She is just one of the millions of Internet-savvy young people who have embraced social networking apps as an integral part of life.

      Tencent Holdings, China's largest Internet company by market capitalization and the developer of WeChat, confirmed that a hardware breakdown occurred at around 9:30 am.

      The incident came as it struggled to deal with hordes of users unable to send individual or group messages or update their "friend circles",a function allowing them to share photos or information among their contacts.

      Tencent's WeChat team said on its micro blog it was doing everything possible to fix the nationwide meltdown.

      A company announcement in the afternoon said investigations suggested that a cable linking to the WeChat server was destroyed by ongoing construction projects, but that most users were able to access their accounts from noon.

      The breakdown sparked an outcry from avid users. By January, the app had 30 million registered users after operating for only two years.

      Zhang Jingfei, a university graduate in Henan province, said: "I kept refreshing my friend circle page almost once every three minutes. My mind went blank when I lost my personal page."

      Zhang said she relies heavily on WeChat, as it allows users to leave voice messages, communicate with friends in real time or have video-conferencing contacts.

      Mobile messaging apps have gained in popularity over traditional telecom services.

      The country's top telecom operator, China Mobile, has signaled a clear shift from traditional voice and message business to data traffic management, company head Xi Guohua said last month.

      According to the company, in the first five months of this year its wireless data revenue rose by 61 percent year-on-year, while voice-service sales dropped by 2.4 percent.

      People become upset over any interruption in service, with many mobile phone users opting for the fast and free messaging services.

      Being hyper-connected is a point of pride for aspiring white-collar workers. However, for many it goes beyond increasing their sense of self-worth to being vital to do their jobs.

      Tao Weishuo, a university staff member responsible for student affairs in Shanghai, said he uses WeChat's group messaging functions to send notices to more than 100 students in the fastest way.

      Experts say mobile phone dependency is a growing phenomenon, if not a problem.

      A poll conducted by Tencent in October found that people compulsively check their mobiles when commuting to work, during pre-dinner drinks, in the middle of the night and even when using the bathroom.

      But Guan Herong, social media director of online advertisement-tracker AdMaster, said social networking apps may distract workers.

      "The bombardment of information from smartphones causes people to prune e-mails of important content and sacrifice time and energy that would otherwise be spent on important tasks," he said.

      Jian Fang, general manager of mobile advertisements at digital advertising company hdtMedia, said while such apps enable people to keep up with their jobs, colleagues and friends in real time, becoming addicted to the devices indicates anxiety about the future.

      "When you post something on your personal page, you keep refreshing it to see how many people have commented or forwarded it. That's the kind of influence you wish to exert on the external world," she said.

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