Snow festival and more…
This is a little bit late, the Sapporo Snow festival finished last Wednesday… But here are some photos from it!
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| Sapporo Snow Festival 2009 |
You can see some pretty awesome snow sculptures at the festival! I got to go twice, once during the daytime on Saturday, then again on Tuesday evening with Alex, but a mix up in meeting and communications meant I didn’t meet Alex in the end, but still got to see a few of the sculptures all lit up… The ice ones look much better by night!
Last Wednesday, a Public Holiday here in Japan, a Singaporean student at the language centre (Wan Jee) arranged for us to go to a Singaporean buffet-banquet at a hotel in Otaru. It was delicious and we all ate far too much! I had to leave slightly earlier than the others to prepare to give a speech on Friday morning. The others went to the Otaru candle light festival in the evening. My speech went well on Friday, it was all about electrocuting myself when I was little. We have to do speeches each time we finish a section of the course in front of all of the students and teachers at the centre!
Then just the other day my internet began working! The NTT (Japanese equivalent of BT) came and put in the line a couple of weeks ago, but it took Biglobe (my provider) a little longer to get it up and running. The line is an optic fibre link to the exchange which promises a maximum ability of 100Mbps, but in reality it is giving 12-15Mbps downstream and almost as much upstream at the moment… Which isn’t the 100Mbps, but still isn’t bad for a consistent connection speed.
The final bit of news is I am on Twitter! If you are on twitter you can follow me at flat3d, I’d love to follow you too… I’m building up my links (it’s all about the links…)
For those who aren’t or don’t know what it is, it is a bit like facebook’s status updates, but made viable. In reality it seems to be a bit more like one huge chatroom, with a whole lot of conversations going on at once, the nice thing is it sort of tunes in your friends and tunes out everyone else, so you can follow conversations. It’s also possible to use it to simply let people know what you are upto, which might sound pretty dull or dim, but I like the idea that I can communicate daily life to folk and friends at home.
The big surprise for me is that it is actually pretty big in Japan. It seems to be filling (bridging?) a gap between the all out geekiness of IRC (internet chat) and the more mainstream social users of Mixi (sort of Japan’s answer to myspace or facebook…) At the moment I am much to illiterate to make much use of it in Japanese, but as I learn more hopefully it will be a valuable resource in learning about the tech world/culture in Japan and even help me with studying the language!
I will sometime link it into the site here, a twitter updates jobby or something, but I am not sure the best way to do it yet, or even if it is actually worthwhile… Some more thought required I guess…
