The story appears on

Page A3

February 15, 2016

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Nation

Soldiers get connected as army rings the changes

JIANG Qichang, born in a village in Shandong Province, did not even know what a telephone looked like before he enlisted in the military 26 years ago.

Communication with home was done by letter, which could take weeks to arrive.

Ten years ago talking to his father meant waiting in line for at least two hours to use the barracks’ public telephone.

A few years ago he managed to equip himself and his father with mobile phones, and last year the military allowed use of smartphones and the mobile Internet in barracks, and video chatting became a possibility.

Though it was always exciting to receive a letter from afar, Jiang marveled at the convenience of smartphones.

“It brings unparallel convenience and speed,” he said.

The ban on smartphones was born out of a standard military need to maintain security, but was inconvenient for troops and occasionally embarrassing.

When Sergeant Jin Chao, 27, went for a blind date during his vacation last year, before the ban was lifted, his date was shocked when trying to add him as a friend on WeChat and discovering that Jin’s mobile phone could only make calls and send text messages.

“The barrier between servicemen, the society and their families is gradually vanishing,” Qi Yong, political commissar of an artillery regiment, told the People’s Liberation Army Daily.

“Mobile devices will bring about more changes in military life in the future,” he said.

For years soldiers have accessed news through what was nicknamed the “three half-hours,” namely, half an hour of radio listening in the morning, half an hour of newspaper reading at noon, and half an hour of CCTV nightly news watching in the evening.

“Now we can get the news as it happens through apps,” said Li Zhonghua, who is stationed in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

Zhang Wenbin, political commissar of an artillery regiment in Xinjiang, described information from the “three half-hours” as a news dinner, while information from smartphones more like fast food: there is plenty of it, but news from the cyberspace can be patchy and may result in “poor health,” he said.

“My daughter is 7, I haven’t spent a single New Year’s Eve with her,” said Sergeant Major Cai Zhifei, referring to the lunar new year, which is a time for reunions for most Chinese families.

“Although I cannot go home this year, we have agreed to count down to the new year together on WeChat.”




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend