Friday, May 22, 2009

Hello Robo

I met a robot today.

No, seriously, I totally did!

The Starbucks near campus is in the same building as a Mitsubishi showroom, and about two months ago, they tore down the wall separating the cafe and the showroom so you can sip coffee while gazing at shiny new cars. Mel, Sarah, David and I were getting coffee when we noticed this short yellow robot gliding around the showroom!

We watched a salaryman try to speak to it briefly. It didn't seem like the robot responded, but it was so cool-looking we all wandered over to check it out. It happened to be standing near its own info panel which listed words and phrases that the robot, named Wakamaru, would respond to.

Sarah asked, "What time is it?" loudly in Japanese, and the robot responded with the correct time in a Japanese woman's voice. It was so cute! There is a panel on its chest that flashed pictures like the time, a heart, and its battery life. Sarah asked it several questions, like What are you doing, What is your name, etc, and it responded to each question with a really cute answer; to "What are you doing?", it replied, "I'm wandering around the room, smiling all the while." Chou kawaii!

But what made it really interactive was it has sensors on its head that allows it to locate whomever it is talking to it. Every time Sarah moved, Wakamaru moved its face to keep its focus on her.

Here is a link to Mitsubishi's Wakamaru website in English if you want to check it out: http://www.mhi.co.jp/kobe/wakamaru/english/

One more experience to check off on my Japan to-do list!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Goodbye Freeman-ASIA


I am deeply saddened to be sharing this news with you today: I just received an email from Freeman-ASIA , a program administered by the Institute of International Education which awards scholarships to students studying abroad in Asia, announcing that it will be closing after this spring term. You can read this announcement on their website here: http://www.iie.org/programs/Freeman-ASIA/p_announcement.shtm

Freeman-ASIA is one of the three organizations from which I received scholarships for my year in Japan, and I started this blog as part of my service project required by the Freeman-ASIA and Gilman scholarship programs. Over 4,000 American undergraduates have gone abroad with help from the Freeman-ASIA program, and I am honored to have been one of its last recipients.

Monday, May 18, 2009

いろいろなこと。。。

Though I am trying to keep my blog updated about once a week, there's actually not a lot for me to post about at the moment. Nothing big, anyway. As the title says, there are various things going on right now, such as:

Video games
This month, my boss, Marc Cellucci, is getting hitched to his long-time girlfriend in Hawaii, and they're also having their honeymoon there. He's from Texas and she's Japanese, so their parents are flying in from both countries to meet halfway in Hawaii for the wedding. おめでとう、マルクさん!

Also in the world of JVG this month: the eagerly anticipated Kingdom Hearts spin-off for the Nintendo DS, Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days, releases in Japan on May 30! That's next week, people! To help with my Japanese study *coughplaygamescough*, I have pre-ordered it from Amazon Japan. Sooooo excited! Don't worry, my fellow American KH fans: the English version is coming to the States at the end of August.

School
Interesting how I put the video game paragraphs before the school update...
My core courses in Japanese are going along swimmingly. I really like the textbook we're using, and the professors are very skilled at explaining grammar in Japanese.

My Special Focus course, Intermediate Aural Comprehension I, is boooooooorrrrrrrriiiiiiiiiinnnnngggggg. I always leave that class feeling like I downed a bottle of sleeping pills. But on the flip side, listening is my worst skill, so it's necessary. According to Mel, who took a similar class last semester, it greatly improved her listening skills, so I'm hoping that the painful hours of mind-numbing listen-and-repeat exercises will pay off in the end.

The comparative literature class I'm taking is quite interesting. I've really enjoyed the selections so far. It's so nice to have a literature class again; it makes me less homesick for CMU. And in my Buddhism class, I've joined the team focusing on gender and social discrimination in Japanese Buddhism. It's fascinating how similar, at least in my perspective, Japanese Buddhism and certain types of Christianity are in their use of particular interpretations of core teachings to discriminate against disenfranchised groups. I plead the First.

My Imminent Return
With only two-and-a-half months left, I spend a lot of my time considering all I need to do before I return to the US. I bought a plane ticket for July 29, two days after the last day of finals, which will give me approximately three weeks home with my family before going back to Pittsburgh. Apparently, while I've been abroad the airline companies have decided that financially raping customers is O.K., so I have to keep my two suitcases under 50lbs. or pay $150 extra. Why hasn't someone at CMU invented a teleportation device yet?

Packing aside, I also have a few lists of things I need to accomplish before leaving. There are still at least half-a-dozen places in Tokyo I haven't been to, such as the Tokyo Fish Market. I have a lengthy list of omiyage (souvenirs) to buy for people back home. And, since I just received IRB approval for my thesis interviews, I need to start contacting Japanese video game developers to find willing subjects. So much to do, so little time.

I'm also nearly done with my second of two video game books (in English) that I found at Keio's library. I don't think I've ever been so enthralled in non-fiction before. Did you know that Sega was started by an American in Japan? Yeah, it's true, look it up. And Miyamoto, the genius behind Nintendo's Super Mario Bros, plays blue grass guitar and banjo! These tidbits may seem insignificant to you, but already I am finding that Japanese and American video games have a more intimate history with each other than I suspected.

Seriously: best thesis topic EVER.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Golden Week

Howdy, everyone! How's everybody doing? I'm doing just fine myself, thank you. Now, on to business:

Last week was Golden Week, a period of four holidays in a row during which many Japanese leave their homes and go on a short vacation. Tokyo pretty much empties of people as everyone flocks to the countryside to enjoy spring, the south to party at the beach, or to Tokyo Disney, which is notoriously crowded during Golden Week.


Since I still have a long list of places to visit in Tokyo (and little cash left), I stayed in the city. Mina also happened to be in town at the time for a club of hers. She had all of Monday completely free, so we decided to go to the zoo.






As did the rest of Tokyo.

Monday was May 4, which happens to be Midori no Hi, or Greenery Day, and on this day all the zoos are free of charge. So the Ueno zoo, the largest and oldest zoo in Tokyo, was PACKED with grandparents, parents, and small children. Mina and I were probably the only people between the ages of 10 and 30 in the whole park. Normally, I'm not that fond of children, but Japanese kids are about as cute as kids can get, especially when they chase ducks around, as they did near the zoo's pagoda.

I don't really know why, but they had this giant string of fish kites/flags strung up near the entrance, and I thought it was cool.















We were really surprised to see this guy: an American Buffalo. A lot of people were looking at him and taking his picture. Mina and I couldn't believe how massive his head was! It's a bit difficult to get a sense of scale in this photo, but there were some wild pigs in the enclosure with him, and they weren't as big as his head.

I was excited to get to see an aardvark, or ant eater. I had never seen one before. He just kept pacing in front of the grate of his enclosure, giving everyone a good look. Mina and I noticed that he seemed to be walking on his knuckles, kind of like an ape.

We were at the zoo for maybe an hour and a half before wading through the throng just became too tiresome, so we missed some of the big cats and arctic animals. But all in all, it was a nice zoo. For some reason, they had the kangaroo situated in the Africa area, but I'll forgive them.

If you ever decide to visit Ueno Zoo, take this advice: pony up the $6 and go on any day BUT Greenery Day. And don't be shy about taking a picture with the super cute panda statue- Mina wasn't!

Monday, April 27, 2009

Green is the New Pink

I think I’ve become an environmentalist.

Lately I find myself asking questions like, How can I persuade my mother to recycle, How can my sorority become more earth-friendly, and How practical is a commuter bike for transportation in Pittsburgh?

The realization that I’ve begun to think green came quite suddenly last week. I spent almost an entire day off researching green energy solutions in America, green commuting, green home improvements, and discovered the Amazon Green page on Amazon.com (which I definitely recommend).

Of course, my new attitude is by no means an overnight development. Early on in my sophomore year, I bought an organic cotton grocery bag I saw advertized in my favorite magazine, Shape, and I use it every week in Pittsburgh. Though Shape is a health and fitness magazine, over time it has become a great source for information on eco-friendly products, and every year they devote an entire issue to green living. So of course, the magazine has had an influence on me.

And even before then, I was no stranger to the environment. In high school, I was the vice president of Grable’s Grasshoppers, my school’s environmental community service club. It was my favorite extracurricular, in spite of the heat, blisters, and proximity to garbage. It felt good to do something with my spare time that had a positive impact on my city.

But in college, I became so busy with school work and my sorority, I forgot about my passion for eco-service. But about a week ago, I realized that over the last few months, my concern for living green has returned, and I believe that this is due in large part to living in Japan.

In my neck of Texas, very few people recycle. We should, but no one does and since there are no city campaigns showing people how easy it is, no one bothers. Even my sorority house at CMU doesn’t have a recycling bin inside, though I think we did before I moved in. And as far as I know, no sisters have really tried to reinstate it.

In Japan, recycling is mandatory. There are no “anything goes” garbage cans. In fact, garbage receptacles of any kind are few and far between; I have never seen a public trashcan or recycling station here. You have to be in a restaurant/café or in a train station. And instead of giant black trashcans, there are three-to-five receptacle recycling centers, with separate bins for plastic bottles, cans, combustibles and noncombustibles, and sometimes for mixed paper.

For your home, each of these categories has its own day for trash pickup, and if you don’t put out the right refuse on the right day, you can get fined. You can also get in trouble with the managers of your apartment building, if you live in one.

When I first learned that we had to separate our trash, I was not happy. Digging through my trashcan and trying to figure what all is combustible and what isn’t is not my idea of a good time. But eventually, the managers simplified our system to separating out cans, bottles, and cardboard from everything else, so it wasn’t much trouble at all. Now I’m totally used to it; it’s a habit, and a good one to have.

In America, recycling centers are even less picky than that- all your recyclable materials can go into one bag and your mixed trash into another. It makes you wonder why more Americans don’t recycle. Let’s face it: we’re just lazy. It’s the cause of many of our problems, but it doesn’t have to be.

Another green practice that is popular in Japan, as well as many parts of Europe, is cycling. In Japan, having a car is an important status symbol and many families own them, but they’re not very practical for everyday use. Tokyo commute traffic is terrible, which is why a great many car owners opt to take the train (which is also painfully crowded), but many others bike to work, if they don’t live too far. But more commonly, people ride their bikes to do grocery shopping and other errands in their section of Tokyo. Almost everywhere I go, somewhere in view is an extensive line of commuter bicycles standing in an orderly line with baskets and child seats attached.

Of course, commuting by bike is becoming an increasingly popular practice in certain metropolitan areas of the US, not only because it’s eco-conscious, but because it’s waaaay cheaper and less stressful than being stuck in bumper to bumper traffic. But we’ve still got a long way to go before it can be called “common” in the States.

Simple changes like recycling and biking to work are easy ways that Americans can help combat our environmental crisis, save money, and live healthier lives. I’m not saying compulsory recycling is just around the corner (though with the current administration’s groundbreaking environmental policies, it’s not an impossibility), but maybe we should take a look at Japan’s greener lifestyle and copy an idea or two. As the Land of the Rising Sun demonstrates, urban living doesn’t have to mean living in opposition to the environment. A few tweaks here and there, and America will be on track toward a greener future.

So whether you buy a reusable grocery bag, start tossing your water bottles into a recycling bin, or dust off your bicycle, make one small change this week and take the first step towards a green lifestyle and a greener planet.

Monday, April 20, 2009

The real reason I came to Japan:

Instant access to all things Square Enix!

As most of you probably are not aware (nor care), last week marked the release date of Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children Complete DVD, the Director's Cut of the CG FFVII sequel. If, like me, you purchased the Blu-ray set, you also got the Final Fantasy XIII demo disc, which contains the first half hour of the game. I pre-ordered the demo set from Amazon.co.jp months ago, and on Friday, it finally arrived!


Now, now, I know what you're thinking: but Katherine, you have neither a PlayStation 3 nor a TV! And you're absolutely right. But I do have a friend who was bent on writing a blog review of the movie and demo, and he had a friend with a PS3 and access to a large TV. Problem solved.

So Saturday night, my friends and I basked in the glory of FFVII:AC Complete, which even without an HD TV was truly breathtaking in both art and music. The new DVD has half an hour of extra footage. Many fans speculated that this would probably be nearly all fight scenes, with which the original is already quite saturated. But I'm happy to report that most of the new material is exposition explaining the true nature of geostigma, which is now as scary as the Black Death, and also the appearance of Denzel, an orphan who was completely absent from the game but now inexplicably lives with Cloud, Tifa, and Marlene. The new scenes show how he came to live at 7th Heaven, and it's quite a touching story.

If you already own the original cut and are on the fence about buying the new version, I assure you it's entirely worth the money: in addition to superior backstory, the end of the fight scene between Cloud and Sephiroth is totally different and positively wicked!

After having our minds nearly blown by the movie (we suspect that HD would finish the job), we popped in the FFXIII demo and, since I bought it, I got to play the new game for the first time. Of course, the demo was entirely in Japanese, but with four exchange students of varying levels watching, we were able to understand most of the dialogue. Also, I have been keeping well up to date on all available info on the game, so I knew the battle system well enough to skip the Japanese explanation screens and just dive right in.


I could sit here and type up all my thoughts about the game, but to be honest, I was so busy kicking butt and trying not to die that I wasn't paying much attention to the game as a whole. Instead, I suggest you pop on over to David's blog to read his review of the game- he watched me play, asked lots of questions, and took notes. You can find the link to his blog, Bored of Pixels, to the right under "May I Suggest". If you're interested in learning more about Final Fantasy XIII and the Fabula Nova Crystallis series, click on the FinalFantasy-XIII.net link.

Of course, the most important reason for my studying abroad was to improve my Japanese, which I am certainly doing. But my main reason for learning Japanese in the first place is Square Enix. Their games are not only entertaining, but they embody incredible artwork, original music, and the finest computer graphics and programming in the interactive entertainment industry. And playing their games in the original Japanese is a great way to improve my reading and listening abilities.

So remember kids: enjoy video games responsibly, and you may end up with a great career opportunity.




Saturday, April 18, 2009

BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP

That is the sound that is currently blaring from a truck outside my window as it backs up. This and other incredibly annoying noises associated with construction sites have been plaguing me for weeks now.

My dorm is situated in the middle of a very short street that connects two main streets (think of an H). My window opens up to give a perfect view of one of these three-way intersections, and since it's getting quite warm out (and my AC seems to be broken), I have to keep said window open at all times or my room turns into a sauna.

But about three weeks ago, the large apartment building that stood on the other side of the main street in view of my window was demolished, and ever since then, swarms of construction workers have inhabited the area with beeping trucks and massive yellow construction vehicles that also beep and grind lumps of concrete.

They start working at 7 IN THE MORNING. ON SATURDAY.

Oddly enough, this is not the most annoying sound that's been grating on my nerves.

About a week ago, I was reading one of my video game history books when I began to hear this mangled yell being repeated over and over. It sounded like a person screaming/crying something, maybe a name or phrase, but assuming it was in Japanese, I couldn't understand and therefore tried to ignore it.

But it went on for FIFTEEN MINUTES at the same volume.

I have no idea how anyone can yell that loud for that long, but by god they did. So heat be damned, I closed my window and continued reading. But I could STILL hear it!

After about half an hour, whoever was yelling finally stopped, and I forgot about it.

But then it happened again the next day. And two days after that. And last night.

I whomever is yelling seems to be deranged or senile, it's probably one of the residents at the retirement home across the street. Hopefully one of the nurses will give the old codger some heavy meds so they shut up. Or kick the bucket. Whichever is quicker, I don't care, so long as my reading goes uninterrupted.

Heartless? Yes. Wrong? No.