>>> From: Andrew G. Malis
>>> To: Fred Baker
>>> Cc: Ole Jacobsen ; IETF-Discussion list
>>> Sent: Wed, January 13, 2010 8:11:15 AM
>>> Subject: Re: Visas to China
>>>
>>> If you are a US resident, also note that China has mul
etting visas.
>
> Regards,
>
> Behcet
>
>
>
> - Original Message
>> From: Andrew G. Malis
>> To: Fred Baker
>> Cc: Ole Jacobsen ; IETF-Discussion list
>> Sent: Wed, January 13, 2010 8:11:15 AM
>> Subject: Re: Visas to China
Jacobsen ; IETF-Discussion list
> Sent: Wed, January 13, 2010 8:11:15 AM
> Subject: Re: Visas to China
>
> If you are a US resident, also note that China has multiple
> consulates, and the consulate that you will use for your visa depends
> on where you live. See this map for det
If you are a US resident, also note that China has multiple
consulates, and the consulate that you will use for your visa depends
on where you live. See this map for details:
http://www.china-embassy.org/eng/hzqz/t84229.htm
Cheers,
Andy
On Tue, Jan 12, 2010 at 3:51 PM, Fred Baker wrote:
> I'll
Fred Baker [mailto://f...@cisco.com] writes:
> I'll echo Ole and Brian. In general, I find the Chinese consulate/
> embassy not very demanding. If you have a business reason for a multi-
> entry visa, get one, but in general the standard tourist visa is
> simplest to get and works fine.
>
> Not ad
I'll echo Ole and Brian. In general, I find the Chinese consulate/
embassy not very demanding. If you have a business reason for a multi-
entry visa, get one, but in general the standard tourist visa is
simplest to get and works fine.
Not advertising the service, but to give you an idea of wh
On 2010-01-13 04:26, Ole Jacobsen wrote:
> Since Andy mentioned visas I would like to give some vague and
> unhelpful advice :-)
...
> Your mileage may, no, WILL, vary, so check the wiza wizards,
That is *essential*. The rules, practical aspects, and delay
vary according to where you live and w