
David Guttenfelder / AP
Executive Chairman of Google, Eric Schmidt, right, tries on 3-D glasses as he looks at North Korean-developed computer technology during a tour of the Korean Computer Center in Pyongyang, North Korea on Jan. 9. At left is Kun "Tony" Namkung, a North Korea's expert and member of the traveling delegation.

David Guttenfelder / AP
Eric Schmidt, back row left, and former Governor of New Mexico Bill Richardson, back row right, look at North Korean soldiers working on computers at the Grand Peoples Study House in Pyongyang, North Korea on Jan. 9.
By Jean H. Lee, The Associated Press

David Guttenfelder / AP
Eric Schmidt stands on a balcony at the Grand Peoples Study House overlooking Juche Tower in Pyongyang on Jan. 9.
A private delegation including Google's Eric Schmidt is urging North Korea to allow more open Internet access and cellphones to benefit its citizens, the mission's leader said Wednesday in the country with some of the world's tightest controls on information.
Schmidt, the executive chairman of the U.S.-based Internet giant Google, is the highest-profile American business executive to visit North Korea since leader Kim Jong Un took power a year ago.
On Wednesday, Schmidt toured the frigid quarters of the brick building in central Pyongyang that is the heart of North Korea's own computer industry. He asked pointed questions about North Korea's new tablet computers as well as its Red Star operating system, and he briefly donned a pair of 3-D goggles during a tour of the Korea Computer Center.
Schmidt has not said publicly what he hopes to get out of his visit to North Korea. However, he has been a vocal proponent of Internet freedom and openness, and is publishing a book in April with Google Ideas think tank director Jared Cohen about the power of global connectivity in transforming people's lives, policies and politics. Continue reading.

David Guttenfelder / AP
Eric Schmidt, second from left, and former Governor of New Mexico Bill Richardson, second from right, look through an information technology text book at the Grand People's Study House in Pyongyang, on Jan. 9. At left is director of Google Ideas think tank, Jared Cohen. The textbook is titled "Aries Net Certified Technician First Edition Version 3.0."
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Schmidt, the pink sweater, seriously. Did they force you? Or is that a volunteered pacifist tactic?
I didn't know this was a fashion run. I wear pink just so I can knock people like you on their butts. Schmidt is a businessman sweet and simple with a wide belief in the open "uncensored" internet.
So do I.
Ah, ah. Well that won't knock me on my butt. You can wear salmon too, doesn't bother me the least bit. But don't you think the contrast with the drab NK clothing colors (or lack of) is a bit much. Why not fluorescent then? It's not about fashion to me, it's about blending in a bit more. Colorful, being from a "happy" country, yes he should. But looking like a flaming poison arrow frog as a warning sign seems odd to me. Maybe he's got an angle, maybe even a cultural one I'm not aware of. Time might tell. I do wish they make progress on the relation between NK and us, so I pay attention even to the colors.
Lol
True that...
The kid wearing the NK hat had me back in the days when I worked in the MDF. Server rooms get chilly after a couple of hours.