2007-12-11, 13:00 | Link #461 | |
Moving in circles
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Singapore
Age: 49
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Pink nurse uniforms exist for real? Hmm...I've always thought it was only a figment of anime fantasy. |
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2007-12-11, 13:16 | Link #462 |
Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
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yeah pink nurse uniforms are actually common over my country too. almost every other private clinics and certain department of big hospitals(children wards etc. . .) have nurses dressed in light pink. however, i have yet to spot one with mini skirt
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2007-12-11, 17:39 | Link #463 | ||
神聖カルル帝国の 皇帝
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Korea
Age: 37
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Yet, it looks decent. |
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2007-12-12, 14:39 | Link #464 |
Obey the Darkly Cute ...
Author
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: On the whole, I'd rather be in Kyoto ...
Age: 66
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Is there any uniqueness to how Japan university students get post-grad jobs or is it the usual nepotism-goodoleboy-networking-chance routines that most countries work with?
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Last edited by Vexx; 2007-12-12 at 18:25. |
2007-12-12, 17:35 | Link #466 | |
神聖カルル帝国の 皇帝
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Korea
Age: 37
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Getting a job is all the same everywhere (unless you're continuing the family business) |
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2007-12-13, 11:52 | Link #468 |
Obey the Darkly Cute ...
Author
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: On the whole, I'd rather be in Kyoto ...
Age: 66
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Most of the year is spent prepping for entrance exams (the series Lucky*Star and Lovely*Complex addressed this somewhat as did Love Hina).
You can apply to any college or university. Your hopes of getting in are directly tied to your scores on the university entrance exams and which high school you attended. Getting into Todai is a bit like getting into Harvard/Yale with a dash of Stanford/MIT (though there are science and engineering schools equally difficult to get into ... Todai is where a lot of future power brokers come from: lawyers, government, politicians). Which high school you attended was based on your high school entrance exam and scoring the levels that high school required (different high schools have different scoring minimums). You apply to high schools just as you do for college. Early mistakes in academic life directly impact your later range of choices -- hence the uber-pressure that extends all the way down to pre-school. It isn't really unique to Japan but they, like most asian countries, take it up a notch.
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2007-12-13, 11:55 | Link #469 | |
Senior Member
Author
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Virginia Tech
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(Also, thanks. ^_^)
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2007-12-13, 12:26 | Link #470 |
Obey the Darkly Cute ...
Author
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: On the whole, I'd rather be in Kyoto ...
Age: 66
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Ah... since the K-12 school year is April to April.... admissions tests take place in January a few weeks after New Years (so you can get that last prayer in at the shrine ). When you graduate from high school, you've already gotten notice of who has accepted you. If no one accepts you, you're a "ronin" (clan-less) and will probably spend the next year in cram courses and study to prep for entrance exams again.
You have to select what colleges to apply to before that so your scores can be sent there. I'm not sure how early you can *start* an application file with a college but I imagine in it is in the fall beforehand.
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2007-12-20, 11:40 | Link #472 | |
Inactive Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
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The cafeteria in the school seems funny too. (IF there is one) We dont have that here. :P The biggest thing of japanese schools i probably wont like is the amount of homework and the pressure of getting good grades. |
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2007-12-20, 13:22 | Link #473 |
少年愛
Join Date: Dec 2007
Age: 35
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hey guys, im not too sure if this question shoudl be under this thread but well
are there any major piracy issues in japan? (be in anime, games, console, software etc etc.) you know, pc game piracy are getting better, probably due to the online gaming features, but when it comes to purely offline stuff wouldnt most people just bt off and get some cracks? eroge etc . . . even software like windows, photoshops and stuff . . the worst would be console games i guess, look at psp, nds etc . . i could literally see pirates everywhere are the situation in japan similar to this as well? you know, when your in train, you could see people switching games in psp/nds without removing the disk and stuff -_- |
2007-12-20, 13:53 | Link #474 | |
Obey the Darkly Cute ...
Author
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: On the whole, I'd rather be in Kyoto ...
Age: 66
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http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-b...0070710b2.html Sorry, I no longer buy into the industry framing this issue as "piracy". Its taking a word that invokes a incredibly violent behavior and applying it to copyright violation. Therefore when the consumer public buys into using the phrase they fall to the propaganda efforts of the industry. As far as copyright and bootlegging goes <shrug> "major" depends on how you define it. Are the corporations involved making major profits? Gee, accurate information is actually quite hard to come by. How would one *measure* the amount of copyright violation and then make a determination about "major" or not? Every unauthorized copy does not equal lost sale so that doesn't work... hmmmm. Seriously, the question is difficult to answer framed as it is. There's some copying and sharing for sure. Is it enough to damage sales and affect the willingness of industry to continue their work? Unknown.
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2008-01-06, 21:32 | Link #475 |
~
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Boston
Age: 35
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on working in japan
http://economist.com/business/displa...ry_id=10424391 |
2008-01-07, 02:32 | Link #476 | |
( ಠ_ಠ)
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Somewhere, between the sacred silence and sleep
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Yes, there is a copyright violation issue in Japan, just like any country. Majority of them comes from the P2P file sharing using anonymously encoded softwares, mainly one called "winny" (And although less userbase, "share") Unlike bittorrent, which isn't very anonymous in client to client nor is it only used for piracy (video game patches, for example, makes good use of this efficient client based network) winny's secure anonymousity and cache sharing renders its use almost completely for piracy. Bittorrent is not very widly used in Japan, and neither are majority of english-based file sharing software. However, the "piracy" problems in Japan is mostly due to file-sharing, and not in physical form of business like it is in many of the asian countries. You don't see very many people selling pirated CDs and DVDs on the streets or in stores, and only ones found are mostly indivisual unique cases. It's somewhat similar to US, although US DOES have shady retailers selling illegal pirated chinese CD/DVDs. And those bootleg Nintendo systems you see sold in the hallways of shopping malls. You've seen them, haven't you? However, these cases in US are not nearly as wide spread as most asian countries (especially in the developing nations). The extent of piracy problems is somewhat hard to measure for Japan, as it's mostly among computer geeks and younger generations with some knowledge of P2P. The fact that it doesn't have a large retail distribution does suggest its economical impact isn't as bad, but the problem still does exist, even if smaller than most nations.
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2008-01-12, 04:18 | Link #477 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
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Are japanese children so dependent on mobile phones as this article says ? It's true that in this country where I'm living there are more mobile phones in circulation than there are people (according to the telecom operators), but I've never heard of people relying so much on them.
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2008-01-12, 10:01 | Link #478 | ||
Apathy moe~
Scanlator
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Atlanta, USA / Seoul, Korea
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culture, discussion, japan, japanese culture |
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