ongaku de….arigatou

Posted on May 15th, 2007 in Travel, Music, Japan 2007, Travel in Japan, Gadgetry, Geekery, Prologue, Japan

I sold nano-kun on eBay last week.

I hadn’t really touched him since I came home from Japan. My last salary from the eikaiwa was spent on buying Kyo-kun and because Kyo plays video and has 60GB of hard disk space - there just wasn’t much need for nano-kun anymore. Admittedly Kyo is too heavy to hang around my neck but I needed to raise funds for my upcoming holiday in Japan.

So off went nano-kun to his new owner.

Kinda sad. Nano-kun was awesome.

Mildly amusing factoid: The new owner asked me to keep whatever music was on nano-kun there when he was posted out. I’d already formatted him when I put him up for auction though, so it wasn’t going to happen. I think the new owner would freak out at my music tastes anyway. Foreign language, anime OST and video game music, primarily.

Anyway, he was sacrificed for a good cause! Just 5 weeks to go before I depart for Osaka.

Wait, did I mention that I’m going to Japan?

I’m going to Japan :D A six week holiday, probably the last holiday that I’ll be able to take for many years, given that my uni course has little break time from next semester onwards - and after that, I guess I’m going to be working full time with maybe 4 paid weeks of holiday a year. So! One last holiday to get my homesickness for Japan out of my system.

Tickets….check!
Spending money….check (damn the exhange rate is so awesome right now :D )
Hostel bookings….90% check
JR Rail Passes….next week
Insurance….next week

Going to have so much spending money in those 6 weeks thanks to a loan from Dad (<3 Dad). Harajuku, Akihabara and Nagano aren’t going to know what hit them :D

Upgrade: Chidade 3.1

Posted on February 7th, 2007 in Gigs, Friends, Life, Studies, Books, Melbourne, Music, Anime, Ragnarok Online, Geekery, Gadgetry, Gaming, Rants

I’ve been accepted into university. I’ll be attending Swinburne University of Technology’s Hawthorn campus for another three years of I.T. training. I’m relieved in a way, because I’ve technically been on holiday for the last two years now and my brain has been dribbling out my ears. I need to have a regular schedule again. 4 hours of evening classes 5 days a week in an eikaiwa didn’t count. They were complete no-brainers.

So, I have two weeks left before orientation. Surrounded by 17 and 18 year olds who are going to go batshit insane over the free alcohol. Vodka lost it’s novelty for me a while ago. I wonder how I’ll cope surrounded by kids?

Anyway, I digress. What I was going to say is that I have 2 weeks left to get myself organised for school and my tight budget that begins February 19th. So, while this list is probably quite boring for you, dear readers, deal with it. What follows are the system requirements to be able to install the upgrade to Chidade: version 3.1.

  • Purchase replacement Razr V3x and mod it so that it has all necessary ringtones, images and the Final Fantasy victory fanfare as the SMS alert.
  • Install the calendar syncronisation program that’ll keep my Google Calendar and keitai in sync, via Outlook.
    Note: this will require installing Office 2003 at last.
  • Deauthorise the iTunes on Akiba and convert AAC files to MP3 then backup on PC.
  • Backup Akiba and reformat, see if you can get an English OS instead. Learn how to actually operate the tablet features since that’s why you bought the bloody thing.
  • Try and get Joomla installed and running for the Aug. website eventually so they don’t hassle you for free web design work during the semester, the tightwads.
  • See if you can get a good chunk of the planning done and some psuedo-coding for the fundraising website.
  • See if any of the textbooks you spent thousands of dollars on during the first degree can be recycled for this second one.
  • Upgrade the blog to Wordpress 2.1 Ella, which looks very spiffy.
  • Get Chidade to job level 50 and bloody job change into a Blacksmith already!

Two weeks should be enough to get all of the above done, except for the fact that this weekends seems to want to rip me apart with social engagements. Good grief. I don’t think I’ve ever been so over-booked.

  • St. Kilda Festival
  • The inaugural Discworld convention and gala dinner Nullus Anxietas - the first outside the UK. Yay! I finally get to do what everyone else already seems to have done - meet Terry Pratchett!
  • Snark’s 25th birthday and party
  • Madman’s free open-air cinema again on Saturday night. This time, it’s the awesome Read or Die
  • R’s Shindig and catching up with Mi
  • An old high school friend’s birthday party
  • K’s Singstar party

The Gala Dinner, K’s party and the school friend’s birthday party have already become victims. Most of this weekend is going to be taken up by Nullus Anxietas, I guess. Hopefully St. Kilda Fest and Madman get a look in. Ross Irwin and the Soul Special are playing at the festival.

Gah! Busy!

Wii-kend

Posted on December 12th, 2006 in Nintendo Wii, PS3, Rovers, Gaming, Gadgetry, Geekery

wii-kend (noun)

A weekend devoted exclusively towards playing a Nintendo Wii.

Well…a weekend and a bit more.

I’ve been excited about the Nintendo Wii ever since I heard about the controller over a year ago. And even though I pledged never to call the Wii the Wii again, I’ve kinda been “Wiiiiiiiii”-ing a lot ever since last Wednesday night when the midnight launch was on.

Chadstone! Fashion Capital of Australia! And apparently, the biggest official launch site in Melbourne, which seems strange, as I would have expected a shop in the city to have big official festivities. Meanwhile in Sydney, at the same time, a single gamer waited alone in Bondi Junction, surely the New South Welsh equivalent of Chadstone, whilst the big launch party happened somewhere else in Sydney’s CBD…

Well, at least Matt managed to get first in line.

Anyway!

We arrived at 8.30pm since the doors to the shop were going to open at 9pm to hand out tickets. There was already a small crowd of people, including a family at the front of the line that came complete with camping chairs. Their young son was still in his school uniform, so the theory went that they picked him up from school and came straight over to line up. Apparently they had even ordered pizzas for delivery to their seats.

By 9pm, the queue was outside the doors and into the carpark.

By 9.20, the doors were finally opened and I managed to get number 29 in line.

My adopted onee-san came along with me, although I’m really not sure why. She’s not a gamer or a geek in any way. In fact, she freaks out at the idea of going into Akihabara, where she says “it stinks like otaku“. She also came along to the Melbourne eGames Expo a few weeks back. All this it seems, to take photos of Australian otaku and show them to her friends back home. The friends all seem to be amazed by the fact that there are Australian gamers and geeks. I think she regretted going to both eGames and the midnight launch of the Wii. She seemed really bored. But what could I do? I warned her plenty of times about how boring it would be for her.

Luckily, once I received my ticket and paid for everything, we were allowed to wander around. Outside the shop they had a few consoles set up to play on, but I figured I better get onee-san out of there for a break and we went to grab coffee and cake.

Mmmm, death by chocolate. And a much needed hit of caffeine. The cake arrived in a slightly unexpected way though. Maybe they were trying to tell me something at 11pm.

Some time-killing phone calls to Bondi Junction, where Matt and I were basically trying to out-geek each other, and I decide it’s time to head back to the action at 11.30pm.

There was quite a long line now. It seems that the first 100 people received blue tickets (which included me) and everyone after that had purple tickets. The queue was going to the doors even after I had picked up the console and went home. I wonder if they managed to serve everyone?

Music was booming and there were a few competitions going. A Wii Tennis tournament was well underway. Someone had dressed up as Princess Peach, complete with a papier mache turtle missile. There were plenty of fake moustaches around. A huge Link statue - which apparently they were going to give away to the best cosplayer, but since there was only one, they decided to give it to that first-in-line family. Someone will be rich from eBay now.

People were lining up for collection at last. We were handed party poppers, hehe. Then, the countdown! I was promptly hit in the back by an exploding popper. It fucking hurt. But no matter! Because I’m about to get my Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!

All up, I ordered the console which came with Wii Sports, the Wii Play pack that has an extra controller (known as Hajimete no Wii in Japan), The Legend of Zelda: Twighlight Princess (of course! The shop had about 5 times more copies of Zelda than any other game for sale on the night) and Rayman: Raving Rabbids which I knew I would buy after seeing the comical series of teaser trailers. Here was a game that brought back memories of Sam and Max, The Neverhood and other nonsensical PC games. I had high hopes for this game.

Finally picked up my goodies and got out of there at about 1am. 29th in line and I still couldn’t get my stuff for about 40 minutes! The staff were apparently on 18 hour shifts or something ridiculous. And apparently not getting paid any more for it! Stupid industrial relations laws! *shakes fists*

Anyway.

Two things I am unhappy about with the Wii - it is region locked. Utter stupidity. The Nintendo DS was region free and sold like hotcakes. While I was in Japan, there was a point where the DS had actually sold out - I’m sure this was in part due to people importing because of the larger colour choices and games. Surely Nintendo could’ve used the same approach for the Wii? Region Free = Awesome.

Second bitch: The price of games! AUD$110 is recommended retail price! What?! Are you insane?! JBHiFi, however was selling them for AUD$79 so I managed to get a price match. Honestly though, what bastardry. $110?! Unbelievable. With the console and the games, I paid AUD$740. That put a dent in my account, but not as much as the PS3 will next year, I’m sure.

Anyway, I’ve now had about 5 days to play around with it. It also seems to have the Rovers’ stamp of approval. Especially Rayman, which was as ridiculous and humorous as was expected. In fact, I played so much that I had sore arms and shoulders for days! Note to any potential Wii owners: stretch before you play. It’s really a workout.

Haven’t really had a chance to get into Zelda yet, but I will this week.

One great thing about this console is that it’s great for parties. I’ve already taken it to two and people had heaps of fun with it. Even the non-gamers, which is exactly what Nintendo were aiming for in the design on this console.

Mission Accomplished, Miyamoto-san.

Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!

Wii

Posted on May 10th, 2006 in PS3, YouTube, Nintendo Wii, Intarweb, Gadgetry, Gaming, Geekery

I waited until after E3 to write about Wii because there was a rumour going around that it was all a huge viral marketing hoax, and not the real name of Nintendo’s next-gen console, codenamed Revolution.

But, alas, no big joke was unveiled at E3 and Kotaku posted that the Wii trademark was found. So it seems that we’re stuck with the worst game console name known to mankind. No really, it can’t be any worse than Wii. Even ‘Rotted Warts’ sounds better than the name ‘Wii’.

So, on that note, I will hereby always call Nintendo’s next-gen console ‘Revolution’ and now let’s never speak of it again.

It is looking sweet as, though. The last few days I’ve been glued to YouTube and the gaming sites for E3 goodness and while the PS3 will also be a must-buy for me, it didn’t quite give the warm-in-the-pants feeling that this video did:

iPod Nano

Posted on January 13th, 2006 in Gadgetry

I wrote well over three months ago that I had bought an iPod Nano, officially making me an Apple Bitch. But I don’t regret it. I love the thing. I’ve scratched it to hell too, like the stories say, but then again, anything I own tends to look shabby after a while. I’m not going to bother trying to get it replaced. I’ll just get one of these, once their goddamn checkout facility accepts my credit card.

Anyway…

It’s the 4GB black variant. And I swear it knows what I’m thinking. Could we put it past Steve Jobs to put mind-reading technology into his products? It would explain why I randomly crave cola beverages. Aah, I don’t care. It’s uncanny ability to pick the best song to play at that moment, or it’s ability to guess which band I want to hear next is all part of why I adore my iPod (named “nano-kun”, by the way) so much.

I do have a small gripe and that’s with iTunes. The design could have been so much better. Especially if it wants to be your computer’s default media player. Like, for starters, where the hell is the ’stop’ button? But it’s only a minor gripe.

I jumped on the bandwagon quite late, I know. And all the jokes and social commentary about people not being able to “live without my iPod” have died long ago, I know. No need to resurrect them here. But I’d forgotten just how much better it was to listen to music through a pair of headphones. Plastic, bud earphones, yes, but even so, I’m hearing parts of songs that I never noticed in my car stereo or radio. Then there’s the ultimate euphoria you feel when a song plays that just seems to fit your life completely. A soundtrack of you. You are in a movie, this is the song that makes viewers’ souls soar.

Not only that, but it makes the 40 minute walk to work more interesting, and when the facist totalitarian fuckers at work get on my nerves, I can stick it in my ears to make the urge to kill go away. I have a special playlist for just such an occasion.

Also, thanks to nano-kun, I’ve rediscovered Oasis and Paul Kelly. I can get an Aussie music fix easily, when even the pillows gets too much. I can practice what I’m going to sing next at karaoke too.

So, basically, nano-kun for teh win.

あのう。。。

Posted on October 16th, 2005 in Work in Japan, Life, Gadgetry, Geekery, Rants, Life in Japan, Japan

2 weeks to 50Mbps goodness and counting…

It’s been a while since I posted, and really, I haven’t posted anything meaningful. Maybe it’s this crap keyboard I’m forced to use. Or maybe I’m just lazy.

The company that’s employing me (henceforth known as the eikaiwa) likes to talk about life in Japan, and how to adapt, and what to do when such and such happens.

I was asked, in training, to put a list of abilities in order from most important to least important. I put ‘Adapting to Life in Japan’ last.

“Oh? Why?” they ask, full of genkiness, “it’s very important to be able to adapt to Japan. It’s so you’re happy inside the workplace because you’re happy outside!”

To which I responded: “Sure, I understand that adapting and overcoming culture shock is important for other people, but for me it’s not an issue”.

I feel so comfortable here, it’s somewhat scary. No, I don’t speak the language well. I can barely read katakana. No, I haven’t been brought up in the same, somewhat militaristic way that the Japanese have (which strikes me as odd, given the pacifism clause in their constitution). No, I’m not even a smoker. But I feel like I fit in here. It must be because I’m insane, because I know Japan sure is.

Well, maybe ‘fitting in’ isn’t the best way to describe it. I am a gaijin, after all. An evil barbarian. And, on top of that, I’m and opinionated and domineering woman! Can’t say that fits in with mainstream Japan!

I generalise, of course. There are many independently-minded women in Japan. But many more admit that they just lower their heads and deal with it when some fucker gropes inside their panties on a crowded train! Honestly! Hit the fucker! It’ll make you feel better!

But I digress.

I may not “fit in” here, but I am very comfortable where I am in this quiet Yokohaman suburb. The centre of Tokyo is a 40-minute train ride that way while 40 minutes that way is the amazing Kamakura, former capital of Japan and home of a great big statue of Buddha. Oh, and a colony of squirrels.

The wildlife in Japan surprised me. Admittedly, I knew nothing about the animals here until I arrived. Then I was told by my students that they have bears here! Maybe finally, I will meet one, instead of all those near-misses in the past. They also have monkeys here! And SQUIRRELS! But, and this is even more surprising, they are not an urban animal like in North America or Europe. Many of my students didn’t even know that there were squirrels in their home country. You really need to go into the forests to see them.

There is quite a lot of urban wildlife though, to make up for where the squirrels fall behind. The river near my home is home to some bloody huge carp, herons and even a turtle. The pollution I expected in Japan isn’t that bad after all. I also had a small lizard run across the wall of my apartment block, much like he geckos would in Bali or northern Australia. High humidity, I guess.

Finally, there are the insects. Oh gods, the insects. My nemesis at the moment is this praying mantis the size of my foot, with whom I have constant battles over whether I can open my front door or not. It’s intimidating (read: highly amusing) because it turns it’s head to look at me each time I get near. I can’t threaten to feed him to Errol though. It wouldn’t work. The mantis’d bite Errol back.

More surprising than the animals in Japan are the other foreigners. I’m trying to figure out why these people came to Japan. So far, my theory is that there are 4…maybe 5 types of people that come to Japan:

1. The otaku. That would be me. But it isn’t just restricted to anime and manga like me. These otaku could have an obsession with the language, or the history, or the culture, or the design and architecture (quite a big movement). We otaku came to Japan because it’s Japan and this is where we want to be. Teaching English is just how we survive and feed our obsessions.

2. The people drawn here because of family or significant others. That’s a reason that’s true all around the world. Funnily enough though, some people only stay in Japan because their Japanese girlfriends became pregnant. They grumble that the girls conspired to do it, and they claim they are now forced to marry them and stay here. This revelation made me laugh long and hard, when I heard it.

3. The people that have no other career prospects. These people have career-repelling degrees, like History, which they didn’t have the common sense to at least couple together with Education. Hence, they graduated, couldn’t find so much as a government position, and ended up teaching English in Japan where it doesn’t matter what degree you have, so long as it’s a Bachelors one. These people, from personal experience, are bitter and cynical fuckers whose only enjoyment is yelling at their paying students because the poor ignorant bastards believe that the Rape of Nanking was a story made up by the Chinese. I try to avoid these people.

4. The arseholes. People who weren’t liked much at home, couldn’t get a girlfriend/boyfriend, people who generally treat others like shit. So they run away to Japan where even the most vicious bastard can get a Japanese girlfriend. The women here are lining up to marry a white man. Another reason I cry for them a little, and plead for them to stand up for themselves. I know several of these arseholes unfortunately. I also know a few potential Move-To-Japan-Arseholes back home, which makes me want to laugh with scorn and bitterness.

5. The people who think “Why not?”. There is no real logic here. They usually are just bored with what they do, even if it’s quite successful, and want a change. This group of people is why the range of foreigners living in Japan is so broad. There are 60 year old gentlemen and 18 year old high school graduates. There are former lawyers and even former recording artists. Japan is usually the complete opposite of whatever life you may have lead at home, so it is a refuge for many.

I would write more, but my time is running out. I’m sorry I have no photos to post yet. Matt requested “crazazazazazazy photos” which may mean that he wants some example of bad English, I’m not sure :P

Nevertheless, I promise I will post some soon, “crazazazazy” and otherwise.

p.s. I bought an iPod Nano, a Nintendo DS, a Kenwood stereo system and an electronic dictionary since I last posted.

p.p.s. It’s my birthday today.

Can You Say Vodcast?

Posted on September 28th, 2005 in Gadgetry, Geekery, Japan

I have acquired a Sanyo Xacti C5 (in bronze, for those playing at home).

It’s taken me a while to find a video/digital camera hybrid that I can operate left-handed. There aren’t many ultra compact models out, even in Japan.

The Xacti, which only won over the JVC Everio because of it’s ability to take 5MP digital stills, is so small, I could probably operate it with my toes.

It’s pretty damn sexy.

I also got a 2GB SD card to go in there which almost cost as much as the camera….

Oh, and in other gadgetry news, I have acquired a Nokia 6630 mobile phone, which is a 3G phone so I’ll be able to operate it back home in Australia. Not really sure what I should do with my 7610 now. Anyone want to buy?

For anyone who wants to email me on my phone (or heck, even CALL it) then msg me and I’ll give you details.