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badmigraine

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by badmigraine

  1. Don't you love seeing a headline about an earthquake striking here or there, and you just know that somewhere in the first or second paragraph of the story, they will refer to it as a "temblor"?

     

    "...the temblor struck Japan's northernmost island..."

     

    "...the last temblor recorded in the region was in 1966..."

     

    "TEMBLOR"

     

    I just love that word.

     

    Nobody ever gets to say it, except maybe newscasters.

     

    Temblor...temblor...temblor...

     

    What a great word!

     

    \:\)

  2. Kambei, in addition to medical treatment, it looks like he needs counseling or some kind of intervention.

     

    I'm stoked about laid-out carves up on the mountain, but doing them 20 meters in front of the lodge entrance reminds me of a scene from the movie Jackass... I'm not sure if the guy is completing a turn, or waiting to be sledded off to the trauma unit.

     

    I did just watch the Quicktime vid myself and wow, it really does look like fun. I wish they'd mix it up a bit with other onslope moves, but I guess they are trying to make a point with their manifesto and all that.

  3. Kambei, I couldn't tell whether you are saying it's silly, or just not real...

     

    Let me offer the following photo to illustrate that it is probably both:

     

    p07_03.jpg

     

     

    My theory is that the riders in the pics were photographed just before they fell down or washed out their edges.

     

    But then, I haven't watched the videos on the site.

     

    Maybe they swallow a lot of helium and wear rubber bands on their knees.

     

    \:D

  4. They claim their prototype board allows this kind of turns in various snow conditions, as opposed to the freshly groomed corduroy that regular carving boards require to do this kind of thing.

     

    I imagine it feels like a cross between carving hard on a single waterski, and being a cricket riding inside a frisbee thrown by Mogski after a few gin and tonics at Aux Bacchanales in Harajuku.

  5. Just to clarify: it's untrue that Arnold can "never be president" of the US.

     

    He CAN be.

     

    Here's how:

     

    1.

    Arnold gets elected as vice-president of the US (no requirement of native-born US citizenship for this job).

     

    2.

    Next, the president becomes incapacitated (gets too sick, dies, resigns, etc.).

     

    3.

    Arnold is now president of the US.

     

     

    See how it works? Only native-born US citizens can be elected as President. But a vice-president having US citizenship can become president without being elected as such...regardless of birth nationality.

     

    Now, who would be Arnold's presidential running mate?

     

    It has to be either Jaimie Lee Curtis from True Lies, Stallone (the Judge Dredd one), or Danny DeVito from that twins movie he did with Arnold.

     

    \:D

  6. Ocean, I haven't yet ridden one. I would love to try some of their boards...

     

    Last spring I bought an '02/'03 Salomon Fastback so I don't need another soft-boot all-mountain board... I'm ready to try hard boots, plate bindings and the Axis. Doesn't that thing look like a weapon?

     

    I think you can demo Donek boards at some places in Colorado (that's where they're located).

     

    In addition to a 2-year warranty, they have a 30-day money-back guarantee. So if you buy one and just don't like it, you can return it and get of your money back.

     

    Burton, Salomon, Forum, Ride, etc. can't beat that!

  7. sandman-

     

    If you're interested in a mass-market board from a famous maker, online shopping isn't a bad option, when you think about the limited selection of longer boards in Tokyo. I was always looking for something around 160-164, and was constantly frustrated.

     

    If you're OK with race/custom board makers that also make non-race, all-mountain boards, then you might check out the Donek Snowboards website. They offer international shipping by FedEx for only $25. Their all-mountain board only costs about $350. Donek is cheaper because there's no advertising and middleman/dealer costs. The boards aren't for teenage park posers, they are meant to be ridden hard by fanatics. You won't find a bad review of their product on the Net. Worth a look.

     

    You can read more about Donek, Coiler and Prior boards in the Carving Community BBS at the Bomber Online site.

     

    Heaps of customer/rider reviews of every imaginable board make and type can be seen at Snowboard Reviews

     

    Get out your coffee, start clicking, then get out your wallet.

     

    Luck to you!

     

    \:D

  8. I learned it just by being in Japan for so long, hanging out at bars and with women and with bilingual Japanese and foreigners, and by picking up a textbook or taking a few lessons here or there.

     

    A completely ramshackle approach that gave me a kind of pidgin-talk way of communicating with scant kanji literacy or grammar knowledge to prop up my small but functional vocabulary.

     

    I sure would like to do a complete, formal course, but I am a hopeless misfit now, with odd skills, bad habits and yawning gaps in my Japanese.

     

    I'm sorry to hear you can't find better J conversation in Madison, but maybe you can take comfort in future payoff that the oft-neglected nerdy textbook study will surely give you.

     

    There's never been anything in your SJG posts to suggest to me that you can be kept down for long! I'm more inclined to feel sorry for your wormy classmates, who, it seems, don't have the glittering mountain of future conversational opportunities lying in wait that you do.

     

    How about getting into Japanese chat rooms and message boards on the Net?

     

    There's a universe of them, from powder to perverts, and it might make a nice synergy of conversational urges and textbook/kanji skills.

     

    By the way: Wisconsin...SHEESH! Where will you be riding this winter? It's probably as flat as Michigan.

     

    eek.gif

  9. Yes, as much as I respect academic pursuits, I'd advise my kids to learn another living language before studying Latin.

     

    I've spent some time studying Latin, French, Italian and law myself, and I know what I am talking about.

     

    Studying Latin is a fine thing and it sure does give you some insights into the grammar of Romance languages like French, Italian and Portuguese, and even helps you understand many points of Germanic and Slavic grammar and vocabulary.

     

    It also helps you understand the components of the half of English that is Romance-derived.

     

    And yes, some law school classes have a few Latin phrases in them.

     

    But in all cases you're better off just studying the real article at hand (French, Italian, German, law, etc.) than you are trying to derive it from whatever may have been its Latin "first principles" and how they changed through time and accident over thousands of years.

     

    One thing that has always annoyed me is the smug way some pedantic drones say "...that word comes from the Latin XYZ, of course..." then expect to be crowned as geniuses.

     

    "Oh well yes then you can go back to the original Greek..." Oh, please, the same fallacy all over again. Don't confuse the study of "Classics" with etymology. The former shines a light on a particular historical era. The latter follows lines of linguistic continuity back until they are lost in the mists of time.

     

    Why stop with Latin? Where did the word come from before Latin? The Romans sure as heck didn't make most of these words up out of thin air. These words came to Latin from other languages and dialects pre-dating classical or silver-age or medieval Latin or whatever age of Latin is denoted. What makes a particular era's Latin iteration of this or that word the "original" or the "root"?

     

    It's purely arbitrary. It's a suspect type of conversational one-upmanship. It's the specter of a snobby, exclusive, dead-white-men's club foisted off as "Classical Education".

     

    This used to mean the kind of schooling that only rich, idle people could give themselves and their kids...and its patina of virtuous erudition has persisted to corrupt and distort the educational palette of too many generations of students who might have been better off studying something more relevant to their own present and onrushing future.

     

    Knowledge of dead languages will always have an academic and historical utility, but its atrophied function as a class-defining asset used to distinguish Proper People from the great unwashed masses (who were too busy plowing muddy fields and mangling their hands in machinery to drill Latin conjugations) is repugnant and obsolete.

     

    The general study of Latin in schools appears irrelevant, vexatious and even ill-advised to me today. Only people interested in history, linguistics and classical studies are excused from this curmudgeonly judgment.

     

    Latin. What a load of nonsense. It does not belong in the curriculum of subjects that kids are forced to learn in schools. Make it an elective course.

     

    If I could go back in time and revise the list of languages I studied over my life so far, it would be: English, Spanish, Chinese and Arabic.

     

    These would allow me to understand the fiction, news and thoughts of, and to speak and understand the words of, the greatest number of people alive today. And far better than Latin: after learning these, adding other languages I love, like Italian (practically the same as Spanish) and Japanese (far less trouble with kanji after Chinese) would be easy icing on the cake.

     

    \:D

  10. I can believe the IR headphones may produce better sound quality than the RF ones, but wouldn't they be limited to a kind of line-of-sight zone of use?

     

    Where does one usually put the IR transmitter? I guess it depends on the size of your desk, but if you put your coffee cup or a pile of books in front of it, does it stop working?

  11. Ocean, my eyes are brown...sadly, I don't have the anime-eyes thing going for me...

     

    A slightly different topic, but one of the things that has always bugged me about learning Japanese is seeing white Americans on TV who appear to have a perfect command of Japanese grammar, vocabulary, culture, etc., but whose pronunciation is absolutely atrocious...their speaking sounds like some first-timer reading a romanized version of Japanese using an American-English accent.

     

    How in the world can this be? How can one get so good at Japanese without even approaching the native sound of it?

     

    Maybe they are the academic egghead types who learned it all from textbooks before even meeting a native speaker... I'm OK with this. Good for them!

     

    And maybe Japanese TV prefers to put this kind of speaker on TV to reassure Japan that foreigners will always be different. This bugs me a bit, but it's not going to change.

     

    My accent isn't that great either, but I just can't stand the sound of perfect Japanese being spoken with a blaring white American accent! Like nails on a blackboard.

     

    Anybody else notice this?

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