Sunday, April 22, 2007

It's been quite a while since I last blogged. Many things have happened that have kept me on my toes and sleeping late at night only to wake up at 6.30 the next morning so yes I am actually just having enough rest to tide me through the days' events.

The weather has been acting up. It was really warm the Saturday before during the cherry blossoms viewing cum picnic event that the SSAJ (singapore students association in japan) organised at a really huge park at GyoenMae (Shinjuku). The park is just gargantuan in size, at one point of time we lost one of our friends and not having any handphones yet we were prepared to throw in the bucket and leave her to her own means of entertaining herself. But amazingly, somehow she managed to find us in the end. Weird. Okay anyway, it was a nice surprise to see all the cherry blossom trees in full bloom since the start of the blooming period was much earlier this year and we weren't expecting to see such healthy clusters of flowers. The sun was shining very strongly, you could even feel HOT and we had to take off our jackets. Hard to believe especially when just the same morning at Sagamiohno it was still rather chilly, but still not all that bad. The temperature was rather bearable then.

And like a display of its tantrums, it started raining abruptly the next two or three days, the temperature, of course, dropping to some very cold temperatures, the kind that leaves you scurrying from place to place as quickly as possible. The tricky part about this weather, was that in the morning when we set off on our bikes to the train station it was cold and windy but it was always clear and bright, but after classes ended till when we got back to the train station, it would always be raining. It took me a few days to get used to riding a bike through narrow pavements sandwiched by the kerb and building or some other obstacle, sometimes another cyclist coming from the opposite side which is definitely scary since you don't want to crash into the other person but at the same time, the both of you would be barely touching each other. I think the Japanese are really a kind of get-up-and-go type of people. Whatever happens, life goes on. They just take the matter in stride and get on with their lives. As such, you see some pretty amazing feats of life, such as, Japanese people riding bikes whilst carrying umbrellas. How they do that so well is very much a mystery to me. Thinking that I might just simply need some practice at it, I proceeded to try doing so... ... with much unglam.

Firstly, with only one hand on the bike, that would mean braking becomes more inefficient. Turning corners requires ultra slow speed in order for you not to roll off your bike and onto the street. And okay that might not have been so bad... until you realise that there are other road users besides yourself, such as cars for example, that absolutely insist on driving through those narrow alleys, other cyclists or pedestrians where the path becomes very narrow, or even without such external factors a seemingly innocent lamp post or one of those short poles sticking out of the ground would be bound to leave you frantically steering to avoid hitting them at best. Of course the worse instant would be if you fall down. Anyway, I had my umbrella flying off to where it pleased on my first try, then I decided to be a man and take the rain as it was, later on deciding it wasn't very pleasant to ride even in a drizzle. So the next day, I had another go at it, practice makes perfect doesn't it?

Even on streets without obstacles, my one hand bike riding has wobbling tendencies, at which if I'm not paying attention, I might even find myself on the road the next second with a painful behind. I think the ultimatum comes near the end of the journey back to the hostel, where past the traffic lights of the main road and entering the maze of houses, we confront this thing of a mini hill where you have to peddle hard and quickly to ride up it, followed by the slope down thereafter which makes the bike go very fast downward. It was quite dark already, and somehow I had managed to ride up quite haphazardly, but still managing to ride up the mini hill with just one hand to properly steer and the other trying to decide between shading my head from the rain or holding onto the other handle. So I suppose this other guy decided it was a good idea to pop out riding in the opposite direction and without his light on so that we sense this looming shadow. Haphazard bike riding takes up as much space as it wants, cares not for other things around and goes wherever it wants, so there I was wobbling up the hill, wobbling toward the other cyclist, I tell you you can't insist on going another way when your bike decides to go the way it wants to. So it seemed to want to make friends with this other bike, hobbling ever steadily toward it, taking me, the innocent spectator along with its fancies. But just at the last moment, when it decided it had had enough of saying hello and when the other cyclist sensed the inherent danger of crashing into each other and thus became wobbly himself, my bike just narrowly scraped through, neither of us touching each other. But I bet that must've been a rather strange way of saying hi to someone you don't even know, as though I thought it was a good idea to cycle INTO people.

Anyway, the weather forecast has been rather accurate. I checked it on my phone (haha yes I have gotten my paws on one!) and it said the weather would get slightly warmer and why yes, it did today, much to my delight. The handphone I got was from Softbank, that offered an attractive sounding plan which allowed you to call or sms other Softbank users for free. I had a friend who convinced me that everybody was changing to Softbank and now that I use Softbank, he became the only person I knew who used Softbank.

This phone is rather amazing in itself, imo. I was enticed by the built-in TV, which apparently is absolutely free for you to watch. No subscriptions whatsoever to watch TV on your phone. The screen flip-flips nicely horizontally and the picture is clear. The programs you watch even come with subtitles (in Japanese of course) specially for phone users. You don't even get to see subtitles on your TV sets. This is useful if you haven't got your earphones on and you're watching TV on the train where silent mode is necessary, or if you're like me, learning Japanese and can't catch everything you hear. The only dumb thing that is pissing me off now is that outside Tokyo, I can't seem to receive any tv signals so that would mean outside Tokyo, which is at home, I can't even watch tv on my phone, which isn't supposed to be the case. Still, you can check the tv programs for the day on your phone which gives me the opportunity of running down at such and such a time to catch a program in the common room.

People here don't key in friends' details on their phones, they beam their details over through infrared or if more convenient, bluetooth though I haven't really tried out how that works. But yes, this infrared is very convenient indeed, especially since here in Japan they don't call it sms but email, where to send messages you have to specify a handphone email address to send your message to. In your details page, fill in all the important information like address, email add for phone and web, handphone number, landline number, you can even add a picture of yourself. And watch all this information transfer with a snap of your fingers to your friend's phone.

This phone also allows extra storage capacity in the form of a micro SD card to a maximum of 2GB, which you insert into it. The phone itself comes with about 17MB free memory. Expect to store in hoards of music, videos or episodes which you can watch as and when you like and when the tv doesn't work. Or simply fill them with tonnes of pictures you take using the phone which has a 2.0 megapixel camera, not to mention the kind of options it comes with such as altering exposure and turning on a light if it's too dark.

I thought today I had better prepare for when I receive the micro SD card in the mail which my mom will send to me because the price of one here is absolutely ridiculous (at least 5,000yen for a 1GB card, at least 8,000yen for a 2GB card), and buy the proper usb cable to connect my phone to my laptop for data transfer when I realise when I got home, that although my laptop isn't rigged with bluetooth (what some of the other people use for convenient data transfer without physically connecting their phones to their coms), it comes with an infrared port which meant I didn't need to buy a 1,000+ yen cable.

The silly thing again is that somehow, the phone only accepts .3GP, .MP4 and .M4A file formats for music. And I thought mp3 was so universal, why in the world these weird formats. Which left me no choice but to search online for some freeware that allows format conversion of music files. I learnt that .M4A is a type of music file for Apple users, termed a type of 'lossless' format which supposedly means no loss of sound quality. Anyway, just a technical issue, I test trialed some songs and they finally reached my phone safely through the infrared and into my music folder, if which not, I would still not be able to listen to them even though they're in. Oh my and the sound quality is just unbelievable. Such clarity. Ladies and Gentlemen, you need not carry your boom boxes around anymore. This phone packs all the punch despite its size. Like an mp3 player (well mp4 more accurately speaking), it has all the stuff it needs, like options to create playlists and tinkle with sound effects (Bass/surround/karoake/rock/hall/hiphop...). Other impressive but not so important functions at this point of time include, tv recording and voice recording. The phone comes with this very thick handbook that supposedly tells you what you can do with your phone. And with some rather complicated illustrations of the phone being connected to a power outlet and either your PC or discman, I suppose it even allows you to record music playing on another portable audio player. Wow. That's all a little bit too much, but I think it will be rather fun exploring all the different things I can do with my phone. Anyway, ohmygoodness the excitement!

Okay besides the sakura viewing picnic, the Singapore Embassy held a reception at its HQ located in Roppongi, the hip and happening place with all the clubs and designer boutiques (I saw the stores for Louis Vuitton and Yohji Yamamoto's collection for adidas, Y-3) and we got to eat lunch for free! And a very good lunch at that too. CHICKEN RICE!!! IN JAPAN! Oh my goodness, I couldn't have asked for more. Roti prata and those chinese noodles that you eat in restaurants. And we got to see a lot more other students as well as talk briefly to the embassy people even though we really had nothing to do with them. But the ambience was very nice, the place was furnished very nicely even the garden and pond outside exuded a calm Zen-ish sort of atmosphere. And somehow it was nice just talking to the other students especially hearing from those who live in obscure areas about how different things were. It was just nice to hear about various experiences each person had. Coping with the cold, sickness, living far from schools, mugging for entrance exams (not us, the undergraduate students), inefficient heating systems (haha! Hot air rises and the heaters are at the ceilings). Also located in Roppongi was my senpai's school, Hollywood Beauty School or something like that that looked like a very seriously cool shopping centre with glass walls. Roppongi just gives one a kind of relaxed, laid back, where-the-rich-dwell kind of feeling. Maybe because it was a Saturday.

Then I've been hanging out with the Africans from my hostel. They really just crack me up. No actually one was from Uganda, one from Benin and the other from Brazil and ohmygoodness they are more auntie than me in the supermarket talking between themselves about meat and taking quite some time to decide what exactly they wanted to buy!! I found myself just laughing out loud at everything the Ugandan said (he has a name and his name is Ronald) because he is in all seriousness putting forth and opinion which just sounds quite preposterous, you can't help but laugh very loudly.

Alright this is a very long post indeed, since its a sunday tomorrow I can afford to sleep late for once this week so there, I hope that was entertaining enough and I didn't put you to sleep halfway.

6 Comments:

Blogger fernzie said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

2:52 PM  
Blogger fernzie said...

chua! post a pic of ur phone! it sounds so cool can! i alw wanted to get a jap phone after i saw it in those jap mags! (:

2:53 PM  
Blogger Chua said...

hahaha.. here are some pics I found on the net:

http://ameblo.jp/user_images/dd/f4/10012225653.jpg

http://www.sharp.co.jp/corporate/news/images/061120-c.gif

When I saw it at the shop I instantly wanted it.

7:42 PM  
Blogger faitaccompli said...

hahaha! u sound like youre advertising for your phone! but it sounds really good!!! yay! i hope youre doing fineeee. (:

-cherie

2:11 AM  
Blogger faitaccompli said...

hey chua! update update! wanna read about how you're doing in japan! :)

5:13 AM  
Blogger m. said...

eh chua. update leh

6:18 PM  

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