Tuesday 26 April 2011

Cross-post from Tumblr (aka. Week One)


  1. I’ve been walking around with a shirt button undone ALL DAY.
  2. My landlords just gave me a microwave! Because I mentioned that I like to pov-poach eggs in conversation once.
  3. Due to inter-lingual miscommunication mayhem, I was stood outside my first school like a dick for half an hour, before realising the person who was giving me a lift to my second school must’ve thought she’d be picking me up back at my apartment.
  4. I will be at one school 3 days a week, and two others for one day each. The 3-day school is 10 minutes from my apartment, whereas the other two have really good arcades directly en-route to my apartment. Chun-Li is going to kick some arse over the coming months. My karma is being a big bag of awesome.
  5. If anyone has a degree and wants to come over in the very near future, email me! My username on here at gmail dot com. Don’t worry too much if you don’t have much money saved up.

Does putting everything in a numbered list make it easier to read? Probably not.

Sunday 10 April 2011

The following is a repository of links to information specifically for gaijin in Japan. If you're a recent permanent arrival or just on holiday, you'll hopefully find some decent links to satisfy your ravenous appetite for knowledge. Pfft, foreigners.

Language

Mobile apps specifically are listed below

Transport

  • Inter-city/nightbuses
  • Train timetables (tells you where to change trains, prices etc. Make sure you scribble down the kanji for the station you’re going to and your train’s final destination before you leave!)

Shopping/Money

Misc.

Mobile Apps

Android Apps

  • JA Sensei (Hiragana/Katakana learning app)
  • JED (Japanese-English dictionary that saves all its data locally, so you don’t have to be online to use it)
  • Kanji Recognizer (draw kanji to figure out what it says - good for roadsigns etc. Make sure you get WWWJDIC too, as they work in conjunction)
  • Read kanji using your camera (it’s a bit of a faff to crop the image around the specific kanji you want to read, so not great when you’re on the move and trying to figure things out quickly)
  • Google Translate (type or speak, it translates and spits it out in Japanese and vice-versa, in very well synthesised voices. Requires a connection, but works well over 3G, and can even work with romaji. Some versions also have conversation mode, which basically turns real life into Star Trek)

iPhone Apps

  • Google Translate (see above)
  • Human Japanese (very well presented language learning app, more interesting than just flashcards. Full version is pricey so try the lite version first)

Friday 1 April 2011

Music GunGun 2!

Sorry they're short, blame that fact that I'm a terrible blogger.