Jump to content


- - - - -

Japan is neat.


  • Please log in to reply
11 replies to this topic

#1 tony speller

tony speller

    Whistle-Stop

  • Members+
  • PipPipPip
  • 273 posts
  • Location:GR, MI and Tokyo, JP

Posted 19 June 2006 - 10:36 PM

serious guys.

post on how neat you think Japan is.

Maybe pictures...

since this forum is kind of dull right now.

i'll look for some and post away soon.

Edited by tony speller, 19 June 2006 - 10:36 PM.


 

#2 PghUSA

PghUSA

    Town

  • Members+
  • 3,144 posts
  • Location:RollingRock's WorldHeadquarters GREATER PITTSBURGH

Posted 20 June 2006 - 06:38 PM

Well I'll be glad to "paint you a picture" heard that the long time Japanese PM is a HUGE Elvis Pressley(sp) fan.  Interesting ;)

#3 jdkacz

jdkacz

    Burg

  • Members+
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • 1,429 posts
  • Location:Grand Rapids, MI

Posted 26 June 2006 - 09:38 PM

i certainly agree, japan is a very neat place, no argument here.

#4 tSlater

tSlater

    Town

  • Members+
  • 2,613 posts
  • Location:Gulf Coast, Mississippi

Posted 12 September 2006 - 10:50 PM

Japan isn't neat.  It's awesome.  The only place where you can ride a speeding EL train straight out of a huge metropolis into mountains with wooden shrines and temples which have been built and rebuilt in the same practices and techniques as they were thousands of years ago.

I used to love watching NHK News Japan on NWI on Direct TV, but they stopped carrying that channel and replaced it with China News that I'd have to pay extra for -_-

Their love for the latest and greatest in technology, whilst still keeping alive ancient traditions and practices is matched nowhere else in the world, although followed by India.

One day I would like to go to Japan, either in Tokyo or some small town around Tokyo or Kyoto.  (I'd say Osaka, but I've been learning the Tokyo dialect, not Osaka)

#5 dpbaker

dpbaker

    Hamlet

  • Members+
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 485 posts
  • Location:The Left Coast

Posted 15 October 2006 - 01:47 PM

Japan is truly unique, a clash of cultures; the old and the new, where East meets West! Far from perfect, and I believe Japan is largely forgetting its heritage and history which is a shame, but I love Japan nonetheless. The large cities are great, absolutely love Tokyo, but people need to get away from these areas and see the more rural attractions and get around. There is really a lot to see.

#6 Lance Winslow

Lance Winslow

    Unincorporated Area

  • Banned
  • PipPip
  • 72 posts

Posted 06 December 2006 - 06:01 AM

Japan's Newest Bullet Train.

The Japanese not only have perfected the automobile and captured a huge chunk of the market in the US, they really know how to move people in Japan too;

Perhaps you have not heard the Japanese now have a bullet train that exceeds 250 mph. The only problem is that takes a long time to slow down, so it doesn't reach Top Speed on every trip or stay at those Top Speed for very long. But its speed is what you need then this bullet train is best of breed.

The previous fastest bullet trains ran at 125 miles an hour in Japan between our Osaka and Tokyo. But the French with their TGV bullet train has run at a top speed of 218 mph. But this new Japanese bullet train runs consistently at 223 mph on a daily basis with a top speed of 250 mph.

Of course in Japan, you will have to slow down quick if there is an earthquake and the Japanese have already thought about that too. The bullet train has spoilers, which come out like giant Japanese fans to break the air and slow the train down as much as 10 mph per second and back down to 55 mph, when the brakes kick in hard.

The nosecone of the bullet train is over 52 feet long in order to shape the airflows so they will streamline along the body at those high rates of speed. Engineers say that the bullet train is even more stable at high speed due

#7 davidals

davidals

    Hamlet

  • Members+
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 737 posts
  • Location:Carrboro, NC

Posted 06 December 2006 - 07:30 AM

View Postdpbaker, on Oct 15 2006, 02:47 PM, said:

Japan is truly unique, a clash of cultures; the old and the new, where East meets West! Far from perfect, and I believe Japan is largely forgetting its heritage and history which is a shame, but I love Japan nonetheless. The large cities are great, absolutely love Tokyo, but people need to get away from these areas and see the more rural attractions and get around. There is really a lot to see.

Not just Japan-specific - I live in Chapel Hill NC, and have two good friends who respectively grew up in Masuda Japan and Bangalore India - all 3 of us are major film geeks (most of my friends).  I grew up in the US and gradually got really burnt out on Hollywood film, and for the last 10 years or so have turned into one of those obnoxious foreign film people - IMO Japan, India, France, Italy, Russia all have these vast film histories and tons of great stuff to discover, a lot of which is making it out onto DVD.  And those guys just laugh - they could care less about Kurosawa or Satyajit Ray or "classic" Japanese and Indian film and literature - both of them (and they're just as meticulous in their viewing of American film) comment that they grew up on a steady diet of Hollywood, and were tired of the "formulas" and "cliches" in their own national cinema.  The "forgetting of heritage" is a global condition, to varying degrees in just about any country that isn't a "failed" state...

#8 GAOnMyMind

GAOnMyMind

    Unincorporated Area

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 46 posts
  • Location:Augusta-Richmond County, GA

Posted 28 January 2007 - 09:43 AM

View PosttSlater, on Sep 12 2006, 11:50 PM, said:

I used to love watching NHK News Japan on NWI on Direct TV, but they stopped carrying that channel and replaced it with China News that I'd have to pay extra for -_-

So NHK has to be picked up by a large dish now? Or via direct vendors? Know of a local business that specializes in getting NHK (because I don't believe local Direct TV carried it at all), but not sure if they just tapped into national Direct TV outlets.

Does anyone know if it's possible to get the real NHK, not the repackaged variety served in the US and Europe?

#9 NcSc74

NcSc74

    Hamlet

  • Members+
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 941 posts
  • Location:Ex-pat of Fayetteville NC

Posted 17 February 2007 - 01:10 AM

I loved Tokyo. One of the best cities in the world. Of couse I will say NYC is number 1 but Tokyo is a very close second.
Posted Image

Posted Image

Posted Image

Posted Image

#10 zman9810

zman9810

    Burg

  • Members+
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • 1,922 posts
  • Location:Fayetteville, AR

Posted 17 February 2007 - 05:40 PM

I've been fascinated by Tokyo and Japan in general ever since I saw the movie "Lost in Translation". How accurately did that movie portray life there? I'd love to visit but it probably wouldn't be the same without Scarlett Johnasson to guide me around. ;)

#11 traal

traal

    Whistle-Stop

  • Members+
  • PipPipPip
  • 172 posts
  • Location:San Diego, CA

Posted 19 April 2007 - 04:00 PM

The characters in "Lost in Translation" were rich foreign celebrities, so the movie doesn't accurately reflect how more ordinary people might experience Japan.

I can't think of a movie that really does. Not that it would be boring. Tokyo is an exciting place, especially if you know someone who could show you around.

#12 the99

the99

    Unincorporated Area

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 20 posts
  • Location:co

Posted 04 November 2011 - 10:08 PM

Those buildings are sick, love that style!




0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users