What just happened? PC hardware giant Gigabyte has seen its share price crash around 25% after making derogatory comments about what it described as cheap and poor-quality products being made in China.

The online retailer later removed a viral "hitpiece" it had written about internet retailer Baidu, saying it is not its decision to post these comments on its website. PCG's increasing involvement in the Chinese internet market and outsourcing its manufacture to China has also been a major cause of the company's problems, the report explained that.

PCG's day-to-day operations in China cost its Asian computer brand around $150m (£90m) a year, making it the most expensive media franchise it has. It has been buying 80% of its parts from China, paving the way for "chinese knock-offs" to do them justice.

Eharmony, based in England, had been named China's most important music retailer in a Greek Deli Magazine poll in June. It was also in fifth place in the Alkaline Online rankings of the top 100 global music retailers.

The company has already had to rebrand.

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A woman's diary is a lifelong record that speaks to her brain. It provides insight into her personality and provides the trigger for plans and activities that progress over time. It also forms the psychology of history and the context within which a woman experiences her life's choices. While many of the women's diaries written during the early 19th century contain detailed descriptions of daily life, some also highlight feelings or conversations of the day. These items document individual women's lives, as well as the lives of their friends, and reveal a level of daily life that were unheard of at that time; their ideas about relationships, food, and their surroundings gave rise to household recipes, diary-like diaries, and lessons for living. While sources differ in their quality and subject matter, some great diaries from the period include women's diaries of childhood or adolescence, celebrated at the time based on their puritanical content, The First Forty-Fifty Years, of August 1817. This diary serves to introduce readers to the poetic, literary, and intellectual personality of Sarah E. Bristol, and also states that she was a "good book lover," according to Rebecca Chambers and S.T. Knickerbocker.

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