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brett_jackson

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by brett_jackson

  1. My partner and I stayed at Shimizu, in Kyoto last month for 3 nights:

    http://www.japaneseguesthouses.com/db/kyoto/shimizu.htm

     

    It was really, really nice. The people are really friendly, and the place is nice, clean, comfortable and seemingly new. Apparently it's a 'modern' Ryokan. The only difference I noticed is there was no little maid to take us to our rooms, and our beds always stayed out (we could put them away if we wanted). But the Tatami was there, we slept on futons, wore the slippers etc. It's about 5 - 10 minutes walk north of Kyoto Station, in a little alley. They even let you 'book' the hot bath room so if you're a couple you can go in there together and lock the door, as opposed to sitting in baths different rooms.

     

    NOTE: If you're a non-smoker and hate the smell like I do, ask for one of the non-smoking rooms.

  2.  Quote:
    I'd just hate to think that we die and that is it. There is too much out there that refutes this.
    I'm just curious ... what is out there that refutes this?

    Personally, I'm half way between agnostic and atheism - that is I beleive you can't prove there is a god just as much as you can't prove there isn't ... but the scientist in me is leaning towards there not being one.

    I'm with Darwin in that we evolved via natural selection, and the only big question to me is why did the universe begin?
  3. I was in that area on Monday - got there by getting off the Chuo line at Ochanomizu station (JR ... had a rail pass) coming out the west exit, then walked south down the hill away from the river. After about 300m I got to a 5 way intersection, which marks the west end of this amazing snowsports shopping strip. About 30 or more stores to choose from.

     

    I am 186cm, 95kgs with a size US 12 - 12.5 shoe. I had a lot of trouble finding size 30 - 30.5 boots (which I was looking for). I got lots of the cross-arm "sold out' lines from staff, amidst giggles at the thought of such a big foot.

     

    I eventually found luck at a Victoria shop (one of them anyway) where a really nice sales assistant found me a pair of Burton Rulers.

     

    I'm sure if you look in each any every shop (don't forget some of the back-alley ones) you'll find the pants you're looking for. But it just may take a while and there won't be a heap to choose from if you've got really long legs.

  4. I was in Hakuba last week (Mon/Tue). Went snowboarding at Tsugaike on the Tue - they only had one of their topmost runs open.

     

    Indeed, I was expecting much more snow when I arrived but 'some snow' is better than 'no snow at all' so I made the most of it. About 5 - 10 fresh cms on top of a rock hard icy layer. My knee is still bruised from a fall, but it was still great to get some boarding in during a time of year I'm normally at home swimming in the ocean.

     

    Thanks to Dave & Monty at Evergreen in Hakuba for helping to make our time there fun despite the lack of snow \:\)

  5. I was given some for Xmas while in Japan (along with some Poifull Jellybeans and Choco Pies). I took them throuch customs yesterday upon arriving back in Australia and the customs guys thought it was hilarious ... a confectionary for men.

     

    I don't mind them, though I prefer the pretzel sticks with the chocolate on the inside more.

  6. I've been using it for about 6 months. It's awesome. As more and more people around the world get high speed internet, I imagine telecommunication company share prices falling somewhat (well, those that don't offer high speed internet anyway)

     

    For internet telephony, there's also Firelfy ( http://www.virbiage.com/firefly/index.php ) which enables you to call any phone on the planet from your PC. I was making calls to mobiles in Australia on Xmas day from Kobe and I think it was less than 30c a minute.

  7. If you can get decent internet access, then you can talk to anyone else anywhere in the world who also has decent internet access using Skype . I use it all the time - it's clearer than a phone. Even better you can run MSN with a webcam at the same time and have a video phone call. All for free (well, other than the cost of ISP).

     

    I also think there's software that lets you dial a landline from your computer. A friend in Kobe does it with all her Oz friends. It's like, 2c a minute. Not as clear as Skype, but you only need one computer with ISP.

  8. That's an interesting read Mr Wiggles. I've actually not heard of this place until reading that article and doing a quick Google to find out more.

     

    I read that yasukuni jinja is a different experience to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, which I will be visiting in a week or two when I get to Japan. Is that true? And if so in what way? Is it that one shrine focuses on war and the other on peace?

  9. Some other facts:

    - A lightning strike on average is around 8,000 degrees celcius (though some have been measured at 50,000 deg C - 4 times hotter than chronosphere of sun), and is only 5 to 8cm in diameter.

    - This temperature can also be attributed to the 'exploding clothes' phenomenon, since any water on the human will instantly turn to steam and expand away from the body rapidly (doesn't sounds as cool as tsondaboy's explanation though)

    - The sudden heating and ionizing of the air around a strike causes an explosive expansion: thunder.

    - Before being struck, and sometimes without being struck, a person can feel a large amount of static electricity in the air around them. I think I read once that it can make your hair stand on end (wouldn't affect me .... shaved & balding head). These are apparently 'feelers' looking for a good path to ground.

    - A person's breathing mechanism can be affected by lightning strike due to the contraction & spasming of the muscles in the chest. After even 30 minutes of this, with someone breathing for them they can recover remarkably.

    - Finally, with such heat, voltage and power, lightning can pretty much travel through anything. Indeed, my house was once struck by lightning - it went through a tree and the roof tiles like butter, and hit an old carbon graphite based fishing rod, which was sitting right above a power junction under the house. We weren't home, but man it would've looked cool!

  10. If you hate TV advertisements, you can quite easily build your own PVR (Personal Video Recorder), which is essentially a computer that captures incoming Digital/Analogue TV signals and records them on a hard-disk for playback.

     

    The really cool part is you can configure it to completely ignore commercials when recording, or even stop them from appearing on your TV while watching in normal time.

     

    It's similar to 'Tivo' in the US, only you don't pay a subscription fee, and you can hack it to do whatever you want (whereas Tivo are in bed with the advertising companies).

     

    Very cool concept:

    Build your own PVR

  11. How to reduce beer belly:

     

    Desist consumption of beer, along with saturated fats & sugary food/drinks (which usually go along with beer consumption).

     

    Increase consumtpion of fruits, vegetables & legumes.

     

    Reduce Dairy intake.

     

    Excercise lots.

     

    Do this for the rest of your life.

     

    (Perhaps if you do everything else, beer might be do-able)

  12. As far as I'm aware, the only way you'd be able to tell the difference is if you took the 'money shot' and placed it under a microscope. Instead of lots of wriggling tails in goo, there'd be nothing but goo.

     

    This really has de-generated. Perhaps we should revert back to the actual topic?

     

     

    How's Telleboy's dog doing I wonder?

  13. There's no 'party pooper-ing' to it badmigraine - you hit the nail dead on the head. Law violations that have the potential to cause harm to others, especially involving motor vehicles, should be taken very seriously.

     

    I probably should have made myself clearer when I mentioned police/state governments being interested in revenue collection more than safety - I was thinking more of the petty offences like parking fines, being in posession of enough drugs to get yourself and nobody else high, or doing 5km/h over a 100km/h speed limit in the middle of nowhere, at 4 in the morning, on a dead, straight road in a car safer than the cop car, with not another car in sight, driving by yourself (my one and only speeding offence).

     

    Drink-driving on the other hand, I definitely don't have a problem with people being fined/losing their licence over that. I also have lost friends in these sorts of road accidents, as well as people being stoned off their nuts.

     

    Drinking (many) fine beers (like the Nth American microbrews you mentioned badmigraine) is best done when you don't even plan to drive the morning after, let alone that night. In a pub or at someone's house with friends, or in the alps in an onsen/hot tub (depending on location) .... not a car in sight. That's the way it should be.

     

    P.S. Best micro-brewery beer on the planet: Mountain Goat Hightail Ale, made here in Melbourne. Of course ... i haven't tried EVERY beer on the planet so there may be some exaggerated assumptions in that statement.

  14. Indosnm - you're right about the cops, though the state governments are also the ones pushing revenue collection in my opinion.

     

    Regardless, if I were to be living in SA right now, I'd probably try and live somewhere near the Coopers Brewery, perhaps see if they can run a line of Pale Ale directly to my house instead of the water mains.

     

    They can do that ... right? \:\)

  15. > Geez, things have got tight in Oz.

     

    I guess the growing road toll might have something to do with that, and the fact that a large percentage of those deaths can in some way be attributed to alcohol (the rest is probably made up by speeding 'P' platers and bloody urban 4WD's A.K.A. Toorak Tractors)

     

    Did you know they're bringing out substance testing soon? I have a freind who is involved in testing the various machines they're going to use. I don't know the threshold, or whether it's going to be zero tolerance. But needless to say, all my dope smoking friends who think they're much safer driving stoned are about to get a rude shock.

     

    Indosnm - have you lived in SA previously?

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