Juggling in Tokyo

Ken Nishimura's blog about juggling, photos, living and sometimes working in Tokyo.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

surgery

My baby daughter had a minor surgery to remove a rather big mole on her face. It's so big that I spotted it right away when she was getting out to this world. I thought it was just some sort of tissue or blood, but soon found out that it's a mole. Since then, we have discussed what we should do about it.

After a copule of weeks, we completely got used to seeing her with the mole, we didn't care as much as others who meet her for the first time. Actually, we even think that the mole makes our baby look cuter.

It's not about what WE think about it, but about what people react to it. Everytime she meets new people, she gets compliments like, wow how cute, she's so adorable etc., at the same time, they pause and look at the mole saying, oh what happened? ah, she's got scar, hey, she's got something on her face...

We cannot leave the mole, and let her future friends tease her. She might get along with it when she gets 30 years old, but I don't think she will be better off without it throughout childhood.

I thought it would be just a quick and easy laser operation, but laser turned out be not the best choice. Cutting it out with a knife seemed the best way and we chose that. The doctor says it will be almost unnoticeable by the time she gets 20 years old. Even though it wasn't a good thing for a little baby to be anesthetized, she got by somehow.

Now, she has a skin-color bandage over the stitches, and I can imagine how she is going to look when the scar cures. She looks much better without the mole. 10 to 20 years later, we, including herself, will not remember how she looked with it.

Monday, February 12, 2007

Wedding party

With my wife, I went to a wedding party in Aoyama. I've looked forward to this day since I bought a nice new flashgun and wanted to try it. Superb French food was another one that I was looking forward to. Wedding, good for him. :)









Sunday, February 11, 2007

Aauarium



Would've been nice if she had known what she was looking at.

valentine's day


Februray 14th, Valentine's Day is just around the corner. My 7 month old daughter gave some chocolate. Here in Japan, Valentine's day is the day that women show thier affection or infatuation to men.

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Is our small world really that small?

You may have heard of Kevin Bacon Game or Six degrees of Kevin Bacon. It's based on Small world phenomenon found and theorized in 1960s by a pychologist, Stanley Milgram.

As popular as it may, this small world hypothesis could have been wrong. This guy is saying that Milgram didn't have enough evidence to support his hypothesis. (See: Six Degrees of Separation: An Urban Myth?)

Although arguing something based on a few personal experiences is nonsensical, I really felt that my world is really small for the reason pointed out in the article above; educated people gather in a small circle, which gives them an impression that the world is smaller than it really is.

At a press conference, I approached a guy, whom I was certain that I had met about 13 years ago. He's a graduate of Waseda University like me and we drank some beer together at a small meeting. I remember him saying that he would start working for a well-known publishing company.

I hadn't met him since that occasion, but when he spoke and said his name at another conference, I suddenly recognized his face. We both wound up with a very similar occupation.

That's not all. I googled his name and found that both of our web pages are linked from the same page, where there are only 4 links. I found his name next to mine, meaning that he once was an active member of Mensa, a world-wide organization only puzzle-addicts can join. Mensa Japan is a really small group and we could have met at one of the Mensa meetings.

So, after the conference, I stroke up a conversation with him and said that we had met once before. He didn't seem to remember me. I told him about the Mensa and some names from Mensa Japan, and yes, we could have met if he hadn't stopped going to them on a regular basis.

What a small world, huh? But, come to think of it, we both graduated from the same University almost at the same time, and the reason we met 13 years ago was because we both were fascinated by computer technologies. It's not because our world is small but rather because I live in a small world.

Funny thing is that even though he didn't recognize my face, he knew my name. There's somebody in his company who says to him that I am a very good writer and he should pay attention to my ariticles. There's somebody that I don't know who appreciate me for what do! I was just ecstatic!!

I lost confidence with my job years ago. I felt like I was useless and indeed, for the last 3 years or so, I didn't do much, thinking about the next step. Our industry didn't seem to have a rosy future. Neither did I. All of a sudden, we were put aside from the rest of the world. That's how I felt when working for a paper magazine. Nobody wanted to get IT information from magazines any longer. PC has become a comodity and nobody wants to learn about it, they just want to use it for web browsing and emailing, or whatever.

Actually, the weekly PC magazine I had worked for for the last 3 years was selling well. It still boasts a circulation of around 200,000, which is pretty good for a PC magazine in Japan. Yet, the problem for me was the magazine is rather boring. Articles are short, shallow and stupid.

I learnt how to layout pages in order to make an article more apealing, easy to digest; ideally, no more than 3 seconds to read one page. There are certain rules, techniques and skills required to creat a good page for a weekly magazine.

To learn those kind of things was a good experience, however, my expertise on computer was almost useless. My experience of writing, interviewing meant nothing. On a late friday night, then my boss said to me, ``Look, you have been doing this job for like 10 years. It's a shame that you can't do this easy task''. He was really really bossy and threw my plans away again and again.

I know that I have a negative personality that when accused of something, I tend to admit that, at least I would try to find my short-falls. I was really devasted when the bastard boss made that remark. He wasn't right since what I had been doing was not to make a stupid page for a weekly magazine. I was good at understanding cutting-edge new technologies and writing about them, but not good at page layout. I was a writer, not an page layout guy.

Looking back, he should have given me time to learn. In fact, I think he was the worst boss I had ever had. He was supposed to encourage me, not discourage. There's a reason, I think, for that, though. Once he was transferred to a monthly magazine that I was working for, which was a very technical magazine and all staff members were techy writers. The bastard boss could not write a line since he's not a tech-savvy. I sympathyzed him since he can't write anything interesting. Jokes and wits are banal at best. Then, he ended up sleeping at the desk everyday, compaining that he would quit the company. So, at that magazine, I was good and he wasn't. He was pushed to the verge of nervous breakdown. Therefore, he had a good reason to take a revenge at me when we both got transfered to the weekly magazine, which he had been working for for ages.

Anyways, I had not been confident in what I do for quite some time. Then, somebody in my new office appreciated my article and gave me an in-house award. And then, somebody from a competing company knew me as a good technical writer. Since I joined the new office, page views have been going up on a weekly basis. Things are getting better.

This is why I feel like I am back in MY pool.

Wow, I have never written this much in English. Hope it makes some sense. It's good that my Japanese speaking collegues and friends wouldn't read this. I can't write things like this for my Japanese blog.

Friday, February 09, 2007

Paper or online

I feel exactly the same way as this guy.

Consumer - Magazines vs. The Web: End of an Era


Of course, when I worked at the magazine I rarely questioned its ability to compete in the marketplace with all the Web upstarts. But now that I’ve been immersed in the Web world for awhile, when I stand back and look at the situation, I think magazines are destined to fail at this enterprise.


One of the reasons I quit the former comapany is because they seemed to be stuck in a rut doing the publishing business for way too long. They just can't make a move toward the web era. My new company is solely dedicated for online media. And, like this guy says in the article above, publishing online doesn't require quality as high as paper-based magazines. To publish article on paper pages, it takes a lot time to layout and count the number of lines, etc. It involves many staff members like a camera guy, writer, editor, page designer, director and such. You have to proofread at least three to four times before your page goes to the printing company.

Web publishing is a whole lot more easy, and I love the speed. It's more like blogging. Actually, I have this strange feeling that now I do blogging professionaly, which is good for me. I like blogging. I always want to tell somebody what I learnt recently, be it something about juggling, camera or, well IT news.

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

chosen

My article about what could happen after web2.0 was chosen as an ``article of this month award'' or something like that in the office. Even though it's a completely in-houser award that almost anybody could get, I felt relieved. It's been a little over two months since I came to this new company. I seem to have settled down. Glad I changed my jobs.

Saturday, February 03, 2007

6b half shower

My 6 ball shower is just starting click. Seems like I need much more practice, though.

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Tokyo Tower

With my wife and baby, I went into the tower. We are such tourists or what? Nah, we live pretty near from Tokyo Tower. We just stopped by after buying some tofu.