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  • Lifestyle

    K-snacks sell nostalgia with tableware, hand warmers and storybooks

    Those were among the reactions posted on social media after Binggrae announced that its iconic Banana Flavored Milk — affectionately nicknamed "Fat Banana Milk" ("Ttungba") for its distinctive bottle shape — would be transformed into a ceramic tableware set. Since its debut in 1974, the drink has become one of Korea's best-known beverages, enjoyed across generations. More recently, it has also gained popularity among foreign visitors thanks to the trend of mixing it with coffee and other convenience-store drinks. Capitalizing on renewed interest in the brand, Binggrae recently unveiled a ceramic dining set inspired by the bottle's distinctive shape, which itself was modeled after the traditional Korean moon jar of the late Joseon Kingdom era. Developed in collaboration with premium ceramics brand Yido Onhwa, the set resembles a bottle of Banana Flavored Milk when assembled, but separates into five pieces: a rice bowl, soup bowl, side-dish bowl, plate and small sauce dish. Available in the drink's signature yellow banana flavor and pink strawberry flavor designs, the collection debute

    3 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    K-snacks sell nostalgia with tableware, hand warmers and storybooks
  • Arts & Theater

    Damien Hirst exhibition at MMCA attracts 540,000 visitors

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Damien Hirst exhibition at MMCA attracts 540,000 visitors
  • People & Events

    Daegu sets stage for global push with chicken and beer festival lineup

    2 MIN READBy Lee Kyung-min
    Daegu sets stage for global push with chicken and beer festival lineup
  • Tech & Science

    KAIST appoints Bae Choong-sik as new president

    2 MIN READBy Nam Hyun-woo
    KAIST appoints Bae Choong-sik as new president
  • Korean Heritage

    Stitching Korean spirit: Costume designer reimagines hanbok for world stage

    5 MIN READBy Park Jin-hai
    Stitching Korean spirit: Costume designer reimagines hanbok for world stage
  • Korean Heritage

    Ancient royal banquets meet augmented reality in high tech airport exhibition

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Ancient royal banquets meet augmented reality in high tech airport exhibition
  • Lifestyle

    From work to World Cup woes: 3 simple ways to ease stress

    2 MIN READBy Kormedi.com
    From work to World Cup woes: 3 simple ways to ease stress
  • Travel & Food

    Exiled Vietnamese prince sparks tourism push into rural Korea

    2 MIN READBy Lee Kyung-min
    Exiled Vietnamese prince sparks tourism push into rural Korea
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 30, 2021

Nov 29, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 30, 2021
People & Events

Louis Vuitton star designer Virgil Abloh dies after private battle with cancer

This Jan. 4, 2016 file photo shows American designer Virgil Abloh acknowledging the audience at the end of Off-White during the men's Spring/Summer 2020 collection fashion show in Paris. AFP-YonhapVirgil Abloh, the American-born son of Ghanaian immigrants who became fashion's highest profile Black designer and the creative mind behind Louis Vuitton's menswear collections, died on Sunday at age 41, following a two-year battle with a rare form of cancer.Abloh, who also worked as a DJ and visual artist, had been men's artistic director for Vuitton, the world's biggest luxury brand, since March 2018. Abloh founded the Italian luxury streetwear label Off-White, in which LVMH took a 60 percent stake earlier this year. He was a former collaborator with rapper and fashion designer Ye, formerly known as Kanye West."Virgil was not only a genius designer, a visionary, he was also a man with a beautiful soul and great wisdom," Bernard Arnault, the billionaire boss of Luis Vuitton's owner, French fashion conglomerate LVMH, said in a statement Sunday.Born in 1980 near Chicago, Abloh and his sister

Nov 29, 2021
Louis Vuitton star designer Virgil Abloh dies after private battle with cancer
Books

Korea, France to collaborate in scientific analysis of 'Jikji'

The cover of the second volume of “Jikji,” currently kept at the National Library of France / Courtesy of Cheongju Jikji Korea OrganizationBy Park Han-solCheongju city government in North Chungcheong Province and two of France's national institutions will launch a joint scientific project to analyze “Jikji Simche Yojeol,” better known as “Jikji” ― the world's oldest surviving book printed with movable metal type.The city signed a memorandum of understanding, Friday, with the National Library of France, where the only extant original copy of “Jikji” is kept, and the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS).The analysis of the book's materials and its state of preservation will be carried out by the Cheongju Early Printing Museum, Chungbuk National University's paper-based artifacts preservation center and CNRS's conservation and analysis center. The research findings will be announced via international academic journals and conferences.Through this collaborative research, Cheongju will push ahead with its project to produce

Nov 28, 2021By Park Han-sol
Korea, France to collaborate in scientific analysis of 'Jikji'
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 29, 2021

Nov 28, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 29, 2021
Books

Book predicts AI-powered future based on SF movies, dramas

By Kang Hyun-kyung “The Portrait of Posthuman' by MIDAS BOOKS “The Portrait of Posthuman,” published in October by MIDAS BOOKS, offers a sneak peek into a dystopian future powered by artificial intelligence (AI) and questions whether ceaseless human endeavors to create highly-intelligent entities will turn out to be a blessing or a curse. Author Kim Sae-won starts the discussion with her self-raised question of whether the evolution of modern humans will end with homo sapiens, by reviewing the history of robot technology and examining 16 science fiction movies and dramas portraying future societies based on the creators' imaginations. In part 1 of the book, Kim addresses automata, which is believed to be the earliest form of robot, cyborg and AI technology before looking into various discourses about trans-humanism and post-humanism. In part 2, the author revisits futuristic movies and dramas from Stanley Kubrick's 1968 epic science fiction film “2001: A Space Odyssey

Nov 28, 2021By Kang Hyun-kyung
Book predicts AI-powered future based on SF movies, dramas
People & Events

The Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest awards 6 students

The Korea Times President-Publisher Oh Young-jin, left, Asia-Pacific Leadership Network for Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament (APLN) Vice Chairman and Executive Director Moon Chung-in, third from right, and Deputy Minister for Multilateral and Global Affairs Ham Sang-wook, second from right, applaud two of the winners of The Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest, Lee Sang-ou and Lee Yoon-ki, second and third from left, respectively, during an award ceremony at the newspaper's office in central Seoul, Friday (KST). At right is The Korea Times Managing Editor Kim Jae-kyoung. Korea Times photo by Choi Won-sukBy Jung Da-min The Korea Times and the Asia-Pacific Leadership Network for Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament (APLN) awarded the winners of their essay contest for young people on issues of nuclear non-proliferation and disarmament, Friday (KST). The contest was held for the second straight year after last year's inaugural one.Supported by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, The Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest was open to graduate and undergraduate students under the theme, &ldq

Nov 26, 2021
The Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest awards 6 students
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Arms race on Korean Peninsula is increasing risk of South Korean proliferation
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 New framework for cooperative threat reduction with North Korea
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Communicating peace - how reengagement with Cold War's first confidence building measure can pave way for denuclearized Asia-Pacific
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Data-driven disarmament: Considering the relationship between emerging technology, the Korean Peninsula, and the next generation
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Ethical dilemma of nuclear weapons: hegemony, security dilemma and continued stalemate
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 AUKUS nuclear submarine deal: evident harms and future-proof solutions
People & Events

Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Arms race on Korean Peninsula is increasing risk of South Korean proliferation

By Dustin Edward Hinkley North Korea recently proclaimed that Australia's new agreement with the United Kingdom and the United States to develop nuclear-powered submarines will lead to a nuclear arms race, but the true risk of that lies much closer to home. This emerging trend of intensification of the arms race on the Korean Peninsula is destabilizing in a way that puts South Korea on the path towards proliferation, but there are still opportunities to pursue threat reduction and prevent this outcome. In the months since the United States lifted restrictions on South Korean missile development in May, the arms race has taken several new steps forward as North Korea continues to develop its nuclear program and South Korea continues its military buildup. In late August the Yongbyon nuclear plant in North Korea resumed operation, sparking concerns that North Korea is creating new fissile material to build new nuclear warheads. After that,

Nov 26, 2021By Kim Rahn
[Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021] Arms race on Korean Peninsula is increasing risk of South Korean proliferation
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Communicating peace - how reengagement with Cold War's first confidence building measure can pave way for denuclearized Asia-Pacific
  • The Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest awards 6 students
People & Events

Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 New framework for cooperative threat reduction with North Korea

By Lee Yoon-ki Nuclear negotiations between the United States and North Korea are at a stalemate and despite numerous high-stakes summits and diplomatic engagement in recent years, there has been no substantive breakthrough. Earlier this month, North Korea fired another round of short-range missiles into the sea in a recent streak of weapons tests accusing the U.S. of maintaining a “hostile policy” towards Pyongyang. Hitherto U.S.-North Korean negotiations have typically revolved around debates over sanctions relief, denuclearization, and security guarantees. While these talks will inevitably continue in the future, it is now time to bring something new to the equation and provide a framework that will revitalize diplomacy through a cooperative approach to denuclearization. Although the introduction of a cooperative threat reduction (CTR) approach alone will not address all of these issues, it could still serve as an effective mechanism

Nov 26, 2021By Kim Rahn
[Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021] New framework for cooperative threat reduction with North Korea
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Communicating peace - how reengagement with Cold War's first confidence building measure can pave way for denuclearized Asia-Pacific
  • The Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest awards 6 students
People & Events

Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Communicating peace - how reengagement with Cold War's first confidence building measure can pave way for denuclearized Asia-Pacific

The Korea Times and the Asia-Pacific Leadership Network confirm that the co-hosts have selected the essays, and as such, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs neither approves nor disapproves any of the views presented. ― ED.By Philip ChenneryIn June 1963 a teleprinter known as the red hotline was set up to enable direct communication between the leaders of the U.S. and USSR. After the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, during which official diplomatic messages took around six hours to be delivered, it was believed that having better means for direct communication was key to averting nuclear catastrophe. It was from this hotline that the concept of confidence-building measures (CBMs) originated. CBMs are actions aimed at decreasing misunderstanding, tension, fear, anxiety, and conflict escalation between parties by emphasizing trust, goodwill towards the other and a willingness to exchange information with an adversary. Prominently connected with the development and management of nuclear weapons, CBMs fall roughly into four main types: communication, transparency, verification and constraint.From

Nov 26, 2021By Kim Rahn
[Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021] Communicating peace - how reengagement with Cold War's first confidence building measure can pave way for denuclearized Asia-Pacific
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Arms race on Korean Peninsula is increasing risk of South Korean proliferation
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 New framework for cooperative threat reduction with North Korea
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Data-driven disarmament: Considering the relationship between emerging technology, the Korean Peninsula, and the next generation
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Ethical dilemma of nuclear weapons: hegemony, security dilemma and continued stalemate
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 AUKUS nuclear submarine deal: evident harms and future-proof solutions
  • The Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest awards 6 students
People & Events

Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Data-driven disarmament: Considering the relationship between emerging technology, the Korean Peninsula, and the next generation

By Jamie Withorne Across the nuclear policy community, there has been a recent pivot to emerging technology. That is to say, the community has increasingly found itself concerned about the potential for emerging technology to drive competition between states, thereby exacerbating the potential risk for escalation and subsequent nuclear use. Many of these existing conversations have focused on specific lethal technologies, providing morose warnings of “data-driven destruction” ― namely, arguments that new technology will make the world more vulnerable to nuclear destruction. However, these arguments often fail to consider that advances in emerging technology (specifically software-oriented improvements, like information processing), paired with new voices of the next generation, can begin to make the world safer from nuclear use. By specifically considering the case of the Korean Peninsula, this piece will show how emerging technologies c

Nov 26, 2021By Kim Rahn
[Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021] Data-driven disarmament: Considering the relationship between emerging technology, the Korean Peninsula, and the next generation
  • Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest 2021 Communicating peace - how reengagement with Cold War's first confidence building measure can pave way for denuclearized Asia-Pacific
  • The Korea Times-APLN Essay Contest awards 6 students
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