May. 15th, 2006

elfs: (Default)
I've been following the Japanese lessons from Japanese Pod 101, which is just a fabulous resource if you want to learn the language. You can actually hear the rocky start, and then the experimentation with opening music, and then the routine they fell into after about two weeks, so it has the sense of a real podcast. They have a reliable schedule and a willing sponsor, so they're doing well. The podcasts are free, but if you want any of the written materials and reading lessons, it costs $60 a year. I haven't bought in yet, but the spoken lessons are excellent, and they only take ten to fifteen minutes a day. (Usually more like fifteen, meaning that at the end of every episode Peter, the English speaker of the team, apologizes for "going over again.")

I was listening to an episode I missed, Survival Phrases Lesson 2, and Natsuko and Kazunori are invited to say "Kampai!" together, they do, and then Peter says, "That was a very interesting phrase you used there, Natsuko. What was it?"

The lesson then goes on to explain "Se'eh No," an expression derived from "initiate" or "attack," and basically has the same meaning as "Ready, Go!" in English. Natsuko used it to provide the beat on which she and the male voice will speak at the same time.

I rewound it three times to check: they edited out Natsuko's original "Se'eh No." It's missing from the recording. Although the editor faithfully and reliably left it in for the initial lesson, Natsuko's first use of the phrase, the one that sparked Peter's comment, is missing. There's no context for what he's saying.

Nothing particularly remarkable about this, but it was a good lesson about editing: your audience will hear everything, especially your mistakes.
elfs: (Default)
This morning, my laptop had to undergo a therapeutic reboot.

On the bus, I noticed this morning that my laptop battery read 94%: 1:03, which to me was just wrong; at 94% battery I should have over two hours of performance left. Something was running away.

I pulled up the process monitor top and looked. The kernel USB hub server was the runaway, eating upto 95% of the CPU and basically eating the battery alive. This was apparently associated with my disconnecting the iPod and then suspending the laptop before the hub had a chance to register the disconnect.

A quick reboot and everything was well but, man, that's annoying. Reboot a Linux box? What is this, an abusive relationship?

Vitamin V.

May. 15th, 2006 10:37 am
elfs: (Default)
Warning: much talk about my penis. )

Profile

elfs: (Default)
Elf Sternberg

March 2026

S M T W T F S
1234567
8910111213 14
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 16th, 2026 01:28 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios