All in a bike ride

If there’s ever a post-apocalyptic world, I think it’ll look like the outskirts of Shanghai’s Pudong district. On my ride, I see fishers, goats, highrises, and empty playgrounds. One access road to the river bank is barricaded, another is under construction. Buildings are rusting away or are slowly being taken back by nature.

The area here feels like the opposite of the office, even though that is part of it. I recently started a new job at a Chinese tech company in Pudong, and it’s fantastic as well as chaotic. The company consists of departments filled with extremely smart colleagues — all Chinese, mostly with overseas study experience. And the devices we produce are a compromise of different aspects; the battery, the performance, the PC requirements, weight, heat transfer, portability, and so on. And the departments are much like that as well, each with different priorities. This’ll be a learning journey for me as well, and I hope I can write more about it (I may need to ask HR).

It’s not just what we make, but how we make it. There’s a high working pressure, but there’s also a warm side to this. There are always people in the office. And because for me it’s only a three minutes walk from my apartment, I can choose to be surrounded by people immediately. Even if everybody is minding their own screen, it feels like a living room, or at least a library where everybody is studying.

The outskirts of Shanghai’s outskirts are the place of golf courses, where rich and poor live next door to each other, but never together. (Actually, if you want to read more about the phenomena, which is not unique to China, I suggest you read Folding Beijing (北京折叠) from Hao Jingfang (郝景芳), in Uncanny Magazine. This is where crops grow on tiny plots, where trucks park, where driving lessons take place, and where I get a flat tire.

Well, those are the thoughts now — all in a ride.

Latest

Kunshan Diorama

Kunshan Diorama

Today, I’m visiting Zhengyi Old Street (正仪老街) in Kunshan — a city wedged in between Suzhou and Shanghai. This old street is a leftover slice in between other parts properly planned by the city. On the horizon, I can see construction cranes, as if they are threatening the area; ‘we are coming to you next’. […]
January 17, 2026
Hyperreality

Hyperreality

It’s 06:30 in the morning and I’m driving to the San Gabriel Mountains, north of Los Angeles. I’ve been trying to sleep after an exhausting week at CES, but I’m too excited for this hike and can’t wait to depart the Airbnb we’re in. Every visit to the United States is an adventure. The most […]
January 15, 2026
In Praise Of Writing (And the Case Against AI)

In Praise Of Writing (And the Case Against AI)

If George Orwell, one of the best essayists, were alive today, he’d be firmly against AI. Not because of 1984 or ‘Big Brother’, but because in ‘Why I Write’, he listed four motives for writing; Historical impulse Political purpose Aesthetic enthusiasm Egoism   Neither of these motives survives if you let AI do the writing […]
January 14, 2026
Secret Listening #6

Secret Listening #6

This series is called ‘Secret Listening’, from the Chinese word 偷听Tōutīng. I know this can be — and should probably be — translated as ‘eavesdropping’, but secret listening captures it better and adds a bit of jest. These little stories or remarks stood out to me, and show a more personal side of China away […]
December 27, 2025