Post Computex Photo gallery. Part 2 – Girls (and gawkers)

Continuing from part 1 (gear) of my Computex photo gallery/a>, here are a few sample thumbnails. Or just browse the album directly.

Anyone who has ever been to, or read about, any kind of large trade show related in any way to the computer technology field will be familiar with the show models or ‘booth babes’ hired by major presenters to lure attendees to their booth, where they can have their arms filled up with brochures and worthless branded knick-knacks. While for most attendees, the booth-babes may only be a pleasant distraction from the more serious business of checking out the new hardware, there is a serious contingent of people who are there just to check out, and photograph the dancing, scantily clad, attractive girls.

As good looking as most of the girls are, most of them are surrounded by so many excessively eager, desperate, camera-bearing men that you can’t just stand there and enjoy the show, except in some of the smaller out of the way booths. Larger, more popular booths such as Shuttle or Nvidia were just so hideously jam-packed that seeing the models up close would require about as much effort as pushing your way through a moshpit to the front row of an overcrowded rock show.

After seeing the ridiculous effort that these photographers exert to attend each little dance number and photograph the models at each company’s stall, I realized that the photographers themselves were just as amusing as the models, and decided to present a photogallery interleaving portraits of the photographers with the photographed. For the ideal presentation, start with this first model photo and view the rest sequentially within the gallery.


Click here for an obsessively complete photo gallery of models from this year’s Computex, as well as past computer trade shows..

Digital photography too easy?

New York Times June 8:

“And also, with film you had to wait hours or days to see what you had come up with,” he added. “With digital you can see instantly what you’ve missed, so it can really help you fine-tune your composition. That’s a big benefit.”

Nonetheless, when listening to Mr. Burnett talk about the evolution of photo technology, you hear a bit of the priest whose temple has been invaded by heathens.

“The change really started with autofocus,” he said. “That opened up much of what used to be a more craft-based part of the business to almost anybody. I mean, if you can hold it steady and aim it and push that button, you can get an in-focus sharp picture a great degree of the time. And digital, I mean, now anyone with a camera can shoot one, see how bad they screwed up, try and fix it, shoot another one.”

SignonSandiego.com

One of the benefits of digital photography – the fact that amateurs can take better-looking photos and doctor them using photo-editing software – is also becoming a bane. Photofinishing labs increasingly are refusing to print professional-looking photographs taken by amateurs.

The reason: Photofinishers are afraid of infringing on professional photographers’ copyrights.

Japan’s Vocabulary Power: 19% of Private University Students at Middle School Level

From Mainichi Shimbun via Yahoo News:

It was found that the vocabulary strength of Japan’s university students is decreasing in a survey of major universities and 2-year colleges. The survey, conducted by independent government-run organization Media Education Development Center (Located in Chiba City), found that 19% of private university students and 35% of 2-year college students have the vocabulary of “a middle school student’s level.” An increasing number of universities are instituting classes or supplemental courses such as “Japanese Techniques” or “Japanese Communication Practice,” but this survey underscores colleges’ unease about this issue.

Professor Hiroshi Ono and others at the Center conducted a preparatory survey of approximately 20,000 middle and high school students. Based on those results, they rated college students’ Japanese skill from “first-year of middle school” to “better than 3rd-year of high school.”

For the survey, the Center created a “Japanese Skill Diagnostic Test”, a multiple-choice format test in which takers must choose the correct meaning of 75 words, since it is possible to decipher the “speaking, writing, and reading skills” that make up “Japanese skill” based on the richness of a person’s vocabulary. 7052 freshman at 19 universities, 6 2-year colleges, and a national college of technology (a total of 26 schools) took the test, and their levels were determined by comparing them to the preparatory survey.

The results? The percentage of students at national public universities (3 schools) who were under “3rd year of middle school,” meaning they didn’t understand words like “鶴の一声” (Tsuru no hitokoe = voice of authority/ word from the top) and “露骨に” (rokotsu ni = frank/conspicuous/broad), was 6%, but at private universities (16 schools) that number jumped to 19%. 35% or more than one third of 2-year college students were at a middle school level. The number stopped at 4% for the national college of technology students.

It is necessary to have high school level Japanese in order to understand a college class. In a similar survey conducted from 1998-2000, the rates of middle school level Japanese were 0.3% at national public universities, 6.8% at private universities, and 18.7% at 2-year colleges. The decline in vocabulary skill is striking.

Professor Ono said of the survey, “On top of the relaxed education policy and the decline in reading among students, Admissions Office Policies that do not require major-specific exams and recommendation admission (practice of high schools making deals with universities to accept a certain number of students each year) are creating a situation where a diverse group of students are mixed together at private universities. At 2-year colleges as well there is a worry that students won’t be properly educated without supplemental Japanese classes.” (Yukiko Motomura Reporting)

Click below to test YOUR Japanese (I stopped at Chu-2 🙁 )! あなたの語彙力を判定しよう!下をクリックしてください。
Continue reading Japan’s Vocabulary Power: 19% of Private University Students at Middle School Level

Much madness is divinest sense

The NYT reports today:

A new study suggests that 55% of Americans will suffer from a mental disorder during their lifetime.

Well, if the majority of the population suffers from it, can it really be called a “disorder?”

Dr. Paul McHugh of Johns Hopkins University breaks it down like this:

Pretty soon we’ll have a syndrome for short, fat Irish guys with a Boston accent, and I’ll be mentally ill.

Won’t we all rue that day.

The study also reveals that 13.2% of Americans will suffer from alcohol abuse at some point in their lives. Only 13.2 %? Come on. On any given Thursday night this summer in the District the only thing measured by the number 13.2 is the percentage of interns and 20 somethings sober after 8pm.

Then finally, there’s this gem:

Mood disorders like depression typically first struck people in early adulthood, in their 20’s or early 30’s.

No kidding? Unhappiness in your 20’s? Why on earth would anyone be unhappy in their 20’s?

I mean, after busting your ass to get through college, which only after the fact do you realize to be the period of your life with the least amount of responsibilty required to survive (I don’t care what your high school teacher said to you about how tough college was. They were all lying.), you have to take a shit job making far less than your age multiplied by one thousand, and in all likelyhood having absolutely nothing to do with your undergraduate course of study. And that’s if you’re lucky. Otherwise, you wind up waiting tables or temping for even less money and no insurance to boot.

After a few miserable years of that, you realize that you’re going to need another degree to get anywhere, and so then you cram your ass off for the GRE or LSAT, go further into debt, and then work your ass off studying all over again. And for what?

Unless you went to law school, you’re still probably only making your age multiplied by one thousand. And if you did go to law school, you’re still working your ass off. (But at least you’re being fairly compensated for it for the first time in your life!)

Don’t get me wrong, I love what I do. But sometimes that’s the only consolation I’ve got. And some people don’t even have that. I’m only speaking from my experience in DC and things could be quite different elsewhere. But should we really be all that surprised that people in their 20’s and early 30’s struggle with occasional unhappiness or depression?

Where’s the Niurou?

The Asahi reported today that as of June 1st, Yoshinoya resumed sales of gyudon at all 45 of its stores in Taiwan. This is the first time Taiwanese gyudon lovers have been able to buy the bowls in one year and four months since Yoshinoya halted sales last February following the Taiwanese ban on U.S. beef imports. Taiwan reopened imports in April, but only for cattle under 30 months of age.

According to the article, the price is some 20 percent higher than before sales were halted, but this apparently hasn’t stopped large numbers of visiting Japanese businessmen from frequenting Yoshinoya outlets.

Since MFT founding contributor Roy is in Taiwan this summer, and in keeping with the challenge issued by Adamu last week, and Curzon and Joe‘s intrepid trek to consume coffee flavored ramen, perhaps Roy might be willing to visit and give an eyewitness account. Five points for every photo you get of a Japanese salaryman chowing down on gyudon! And ten for any still beating hearts you find in the bowl!

Man on date “kidnapped”, cash stolen using a woman from a matchmaking site as a decoy

From ZAKZAK:

At around 2am on June 6 in Ohashi 1chome, Okayama, 3 or 4 men forced a company worker (25) into their car while he was with a woman he met on an internet dating site. The men beat the man on the head while the car was moving, taking 5,000 yen and his mobile phone, and freed him an hour later on a city street 3 or 4 km from where he was kidnapped.

The man sustained a broken nose which will take 3 weeks to heal. Okayama’s East Precinct is investigating the incident as a robbery and assault.

According to reports, the men threatened the man before kidnapping him, saying, “What are you doing with my woman?!” They consider it a strong possibility that the woman was friends with the men. The men were all 18-20 years old.

Comment: Poor guy!!

Post Computex Photo gallery. Part 1 – Gear

There are a lot of candidates for the center of the world’s IT industry: Cupertino, Redmond, Palo Alto, Tokyo, Seoul, – but these days it seems to be Taipei.

The definitive expression here is DIY, widely known in English speaking countries as an acronym for Do It Yourself, but here in Taiwan adopted as a uniquely specific lexical item referring just to the homebrew computer industry. If you walk into any of the many, many, many expansive computer stores in Taipei you will be overwhelmed by a selection of parts unavaliable at all but the rarest of US computer stores, and more interesting struck by the odd lack of brand name desktop systems.

“Here in Taiwan, if you can’t make your own PC you’re not a man,” I was told earlier today by a Taiwanese guy named Kevin. This is a sentiment that I can imagine evoking a kind of cultural jealousy in hardware geeks throughout the entire planet.

This little number from Foxconn has the distinction of being one of the coolest and best looking PC case designs I have seen. They also have the fine distinction of having provided one of the exhibitor ID tags that was used to sneak me into the show.

On Sunday I had the pleasure of attending Computex, Taiwan’s trademark computer and technology expo, the largest in Asia and the second largest of its type in the world after Hannover, Germany.

Of course I took a number of photos, and here is a sample of them. I have divided photos into two parts: Gear and Girls, since as everyone knows the motivation for attendance at these tech industry shows is based almost equally on both of those things.


Some of the literally hundreds of case designs on display.


This is exactly what we’ve all wanted for all these years! Screw laptops, next time I buy a portable I want something that looks like Q cobbled it together.


This isn’t an ipod shuffle, but an unreleased prototype product of the socalled iVogue mp3 player line from Jetway. They estimated a July release date, but the website doesn’t even have a listing for these products yet, much less pricing information.


Easily the most impressive piece of actual new technology I saw at the show. This is an experimental prototype CPU cooling system, from Korean manufacturer KM Korea. The demo had a chip of some kind running at about 50 celsius, quite hot to the touch. You press the button and it activates their cooling device, and the heat instantly drains away from the chip surface, cooling it to about 15 celsius in only a couple of seconds. I have no idea how it works, and where the heat is being dissipated to. Perhaps the table concealed some kind of wormhole, through which the heat is sent into whatever dark dimension in which Cthulhu waits.

A horse is a horse of course of course

Japan may have a reputation for bizarre incidents of perversion, but they certainly have no monopoly on it.

I’m sure this has been reported all over the US political blogs that I have no interest whatsoever in following. I found the most amazing post on the blog News Hounds (slogan “We watch FOX so you don’t have to.”).

Last night, anti-abortion extremist Neal Horsley was a guest on The Alan Colmes Show, a FOX News radio program. The topic was an interesting one – whether or not an internet service provider should allow Horsley to post the names of abortion doctors on his website. Horsley does that as a way of targeting them and one doctor has been killed. In the course of the interview, however, Colmes asked Horsley about his background, including a statement that he had admitted to engaging in homosexual and bestiality sex.

At first, Horsley laughed and said, “Just because it’s printed in the media, people jump to believe it.”

“Is it true?” Colmes asked.

“Hey, Alan, if you want to accuse me of having sex when I was a fool, I did everything that crossed my mind that looked like I…”

AC: “You had sex with animals?”

NH: “Absolutely. I was a fool. When you grow up on a farm in Georgia, your first girlfriend is a mule.”

AC: “I’m not so sure that that is so.”

NH: “You didn’t grow up on a farm in Georgia, did you?”

AC: “Are you suggesting that everybody who grows up on a farm in Georgia has a mule as a girlfriend?”

NH: It has historically been the case. You people are so far removed from the reality… Welcome to domestic life on the farm…”

Colmes said he thought there were a lot of people in the audience who grew up on farms, are living on farms now, raising kids on farms and “and I don’t think they are dating Elsie right now. You know what I’m saying?”

Horsley said, “You experiment with anything that moves when you are growing up sexually. You’re naive. You know better than that… If it’s warm and it’s damp and it vibrates you might in fact have sex with it.”

At first I wasn’t even convinced that this was a real interview- it was just too absurd, but then I heard it for myself. Thanks to Matt for extracting this audio clip from the bowels of the Fox News website.

Clicking on the link may not work, so select “save link as” or “save target as” depending on your browser.
Horsley the horse lover.

I don’t want my bandwidth allowance for the month being sucked up, so if any heavily trafficked sites want to spread this clip, please mirror it yourself instead of downloading it from this tiny blog.

A summary of Japan’s Superfree incident, now concluded with the former leader’s conviction (part 1)

Two days ago it was reported that an appeal by former Superfree leader Shinichiro Wada has been rejected, and his previously imposed 14-year sentence for gang rape will be upheld. This case first broke in 2003, while I was in Japan, and was easily one of the most significant news stories of the entire time I was in Japan. As in the media worldwide, there is a certain voyeuristic pleasure taken in reporting horrible crimes, in this case a multi-year campaign of highly organized gang rape carried out by members of a social club named Superfree under the personal direction of their leader Shinichiro Wada, but even for this case received an unusual amount of media attention. There are some interesting reasons why I think this case became such a public spectacle, but before discussing that it is important to summarize the grimly fascinating details of the entire long incident.

Superfree was a very unusual difficult to catagorize organization. In many ways it reminds us of the worst stereotypes of the American college fraternity, and in other ways of both a cult and a pyramid scheme. Its only existence as a legal organization was as a student organization at Waseda University, which was used by Wada as a front for all of his various activities. Superfree began as a Waseda organization, but eventually contained affiliate members at other prestigious universities throughout Japan. Despite this official existence as a Waseda University organization, it was really the personal domain of its leader Shinichiro Wada, who seems to me a classic egomaniac.

Wada first enrolled in Tokyo’s Chuo University in 1993, but aspiring to attend the more prestigious Waseda University, continued to study for that school’s entrance exam for a year while being a Chuo student. He was finally expelled from Waseda after his arrest in 2003. Wada, in his late 20s, was himself only just barely a student at Waseda, nominally enrolled in whatever part time non degree classes required the least amount of effort to keep his Waseda ID and continue to use the school ‘circle’ to recruit new members to the real Superfree club, which was organized outside of the school. When Wada was expelled from university, official recognition of the club was also withdrawn, but by then it had a life of its own.

Superfree’s primary activity was organizing parties in Tokyo nightclubs, particularly in the nightlife heavy Roppongi district. Wada was the primary organizer. He would distribute tickets to his trusted friends and high ranking members, who would pass the tickets on to their own network of lower level cronies and affiliate members, generally much younger university students, who looked upon the older Superfree members with a kind of stupid awe. The tickets were ultimately sold to the public, primarily other university students. With a long history of throwing such parties behind them, demand for Superfree entrance was high and they had no trouble making a significant profit on their events, the bulk of which filtered back up to Wada. He was reported to have made 10 million yen (currently the equivalent of about US$100,000) per year, easily enough to support a very comfortable single lifestyle, even in Tokyo.

Profit was not the only goal however; while money was key, the other goal was to attract as many attractive, young, and most importantly impressionable and naive, women as possible to the parties. This was hardly a difficult feat. Many young women in Japan, particularly those who were only able to attend lesser quality universities, are easily impressed by the name of a a top-rank university such as Waseda. The tenuous, yet official connection to Waseda was key to their ability to recruit vulnerable girls.

A Japan Times article from April of last year explained the Super Free system in these words.

Judge Sugiyama said that when Wada, a Waseda University student, became Super Free leader in 1995, a hierarchy was established that classified members as “first string,” “reserves” or “boys.” Each level was allotted quotas for selling tickets to parties organized by the group.

Wada is believed to have made more than 10 million yen a year from ticket sales. The parties sometimes drew more than 1,000 people.

Judge Sugiyama said it was under this power structure that group members began to routinely gang-rape young women attending their parties. The judge alleged that Wada encouraged members to rape with comments such as “gang rape creates solidarity among members” and “those who do not participate in gang rapes are not members.”

At the Superfree events the club members would scout out likely targets, and invite them to more private after-parties, usually held at a kind of Japanese pub known as an izakaya. As the organizers of the event, they were able to easily find someone willing to join them later on. At the afterparty they would give the girls alcoholic drinks until they “were no longer able to resist” and then have sex with them, sometimes individually, sometimes in a group. There were reports of Superfree gangrapes taking place inside izakaya, outdoors on stairwells or alleys, in hotels, and in the home of the group’s leader, Wada-and possibly the homes of other members as well. There were also reports that in some cases where alcohol was not enough, drugs were used to render the girls unconcious.

That’s enough for tonight. Tomorrow or the day after I will write the second half of this piece, summarizing the criminal cases brought against specific members of Superfree, culminating in last week’s final appeal by Shinichiro Wada himself.

Pagishikinda! Pagishikinda!

Outpost Gallifrey reports:

“Pagishikinda! Pagishikinda! Now the Daleks take on Doctor Who in Korea. In the first deal of its kind, BBC Worldwide, the commercial arm of the BBC, has concluded a contract with Korea’s biggest public television station, KBS, for the smash hit BBC One series, Doctor Who.

This is the first time a UK drama series has been sold to a Korean public station, and KBS will launch Doctor Who on KBS 2 in a primetime, two-hour slot on Sunday 5 June. Viewers will be introduced to ‘Dacter Who’ (Doctor Who), his companion Rose, and enemy, the Daleks, who blast, ‘Pagishikinda!’ (‘Exterminate!’). KBS will broadcast two episodes per week, and the series will be dubbed for the Korean audience.

Russell T. Davies, writer and executive producer of Doctor Who said, ‘The Doctor has travelled far and wide and knows no boundary and now the programme is doing much the same! We are delighted that Korea has embraced this wonderful adventure.’

Jungwon Lee, Executive Director, KBS Media, said: ‘We are very excited to launch Doctor Who on our network. For the first time in a primetime weekend slot, we are bringing the latest hit BBC drama to our Korean audience and anticipate a great reaction from all age groups.’

Linfield Ng, Korea and Taiwan Territory Manager, BBC Worldwide (Asia) added: ‘We are delighted that one of Asia’s largest public broadcasters, KBS, is supporting one of the most recognised BBC brands. We thank KBS for being so ambitious in launching Doctor Who in such a great time slot.'”

Doctor Who has been my favorite television program since I was about eight years old, and I can’t wait to hear what Daleks sound like dubbed into Korean. Still though, I find it infuriating that the Doctor will be shown on Korean TV while no American station has yet decided to purchase airing rights to the series. It was reported that Scifi channel turned it down before the premiere of the new Doctor Who series, which after having seen the ten episodes so far I find utterly unfathomable. The show is fantastic, and has had some of the highest viewer ratings and media reviews in UK television history, and they had better be kicking themselves hard for having passed it up.