Saturday, July 9, 2011

アップデート

久しぶりな・・・ブライアンです。

ロックバンドに入ったよ。リードギターを弾いています(ちょっと下手のに・・・本当にいいんかな?)明日・・・いいえ、今日は初めてのセッションです。今は僕と歌手だけ・・・ベースとドラムを探しています。後でライブをやります。毎日ギターを練習します。すごく楽しいですよ。

えーと・・・他には色々あったからお姉ちゃんと子供たちは僕んちに住んでいます。混んでいますよ。いっぱい家事があります。

ああ!日本語の映画を買った:ハリーポッター3-6とBECK。ハリーポッターは全然面白くない(ハーマイオニーの声優が好きですけど)。でもBECKはすごく面白い。最高の映画ですよ。(もちろん、バンドの物語・・・いい音楽ですよ。)真帆は可愛いな・・・

5時ですから今すぐ寝ます。

おやすみなさ~い!

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

日本語 Progress Report 4

My first novels have arrived! I've gotten surprisingly far (read: 20 pages) into 俺妹1 in the past week. It's amazing how much kanji help comprehension, even if I only know a few dozen readings at this point.

Still haven't bought any anime; Amazon sucks and does not accept PayPal (but they'd be perfectly happy to have my bank details themselves... yeah right) and of course none of the big box stores stock anything I want. (In any case, I just blew all my money on a POD HD, so I don't have the cash to buy any right now anyway.)

My sentence SRS deck is growing steadily, currently sitting at 270 cards. (All from Naoko Chino's All About Particles -- I'm going to do the whole book before moving on to other sources.) So far I've noticed a few things:

- I have to physically write out a kanji compound a few times to remember it. Reading is no problem in most cases, but being able to produce the correct kanji by hand is difficult. (Since I do all the data entry by typing (obviously) I guess I don't fully acknowledge the component characters?) Hopefully this is a short term thing and more exposure will make this easier.

- Kana are hard to write neatly. All of the odd curves are very different from the limited strokes of writing kanji. か and て give me particular trouble. (Oddly, though, み is one of the easiest for me to write...)

- Khatz (AJATT) is right about "don't bother studying grammar" -- I can already pick out the basic gist of some sentences after 3 weeks.

I've also spent time getting my immersion environment up for real. I revived my twitter account and follow a bunch of Japanese people. (NHK news, ニコニコ guitarists, character twitters, etc.) This has produced some interesting material that I plan to SRS (once I figure out the necessary readings and such -- they'll sit in a .txt file until then.) I've also started using Khatz's URL shuffler, which is all kinds of awesome -- one click and I get either a Japanese webpage or a YouTube music video. (Unfortunately, I don't see a means of separating the two so that I could chose whether I want reading material or listening material.) As an aside, Dengeki's web site is more of a time-sink than Wikipedia. Hours have been wasted...

じゃ・・・またなぁ。

Monday, February 28, 2011

日本語 Progress Report 3 - RTK1 Complete

As of 4:30 this afternoon, I am *DONE* with Volume 1 of Remembering the Kanji! 131 days after I started. Obviously, this isn't the end of kanji study. Beyond reviewing, there are the 157 kanji recently added to the General Use list that I need to learn, and I will probably go through RTK3 at some point. (I want the same level of literacy in Japanese as I have in English; that means being able to read novels, which don't abide by the General Use list all that much.)

Still, it feels pretty good to see that magic number of 2042 on my kanji SRS deck.

So where to go from here? For the next month or so I'm only going to have access to my bi-lingual sentence sources (All About Particles and two different sentence pattern dictionaries.) Not exactly the most intriguing material, but it should hopefully get me started on grammar and vocabulary.

I have nine novels on order: the first four 涼宮ハルヒ novels, and 俺の妹 1 and 3-6 (2&7 went out of stock while Paypal was doing their thing, so I'll pick those up later. 1-4 parallel the anime anyway, so I don't think I'll miss too much.) Will probably pick up the Railgun manga when I can find somewhere to buy it other than Amazon. Also looking at getting a bunch of Bandai/Funamation localized anime -- Japanese voice tracks and region 1 encoding, and a hell of a lot cheaper than importing. (Seriously. Full series of Air and Kanon for 20 bucks each? I'm there.)

And so, phase II! Begin!

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Winter 2011 Anime

Taking a break from talking about my Japanese project...

Wow, the new season of anime blows. Anyone else getting the distinct feeling that everyone's shoveling the fanservice-heavy shows out the door now before the Tokyo ban goes into effect?

What I'm watching this season:
- Index II (con't) - Ah, what the hell. Yes, the plot makes no sense, but at least they try. And there's Mikoto, Kuroko, and Last Order to make it worthwhile. (TBH, another season of Railgun would be nice after this...)

- Hourou Musuko - So far, best anime this season. Takes its subject matter seriously and doesn't slip into stereotypes like EVERY western show does when dealing with sexuality. (If someone who is transgender/transsexual show up in a Western show, it's always "you're ex is now a man, baby!") Also, excellent music, excellent art, excellent animation.

- Kore wa Zombie Desu ka? - Well, it's funny. And then it slips in a bit of drama for about 20 seconds. Not quite sure what to make of it. (And good lord, isn't the tsundere loli archtype dead yet? It's a parody of a parody at this point.)

- Oniichan no Koto Nanka Zenzen blahblahlongname - I have no excuses. This is a terrible, terrible show, but I keep watching, like a slow-motion trainwreck. The mother, at least, is hilarious: "Please don't get arrested!" Otherwise, it's taking Ore no Imouto, stripping everything that made that series good, and playing up the incest to the point that KissXSis looks classy. (At least those two were upfront about it... I guess?) Oh, and the art is terrible -- someone needs to get the animators to look at some real people every now and again.


Non-airing series I'm watching:

- Planetes - Wow. Realistic SF is rare enough; realistic SF outside of novels is unheard of. Tanabe is what a female character should be; not too brash, not a doormat, perfectly capable of working physically, but not a complete badass. In other words, a realistic woman. Sooo rare in fiction. (Fee is pretty awesome too; reminds me of Zoe from Firefly. Don't get between that woman and smoking, even if you are international terrorists!)

- Kimi no Todoke - Just trying it at this point, since the new season piqued my interest. Meh. Shoujo series are okay in small doses; marathoning one leaves me twitchy.

- Darker than Black - Seems to be along the same lines as GITS:SAC. Always a good thing.

I also have the rest of Ichiban Urshiro no Daimaou sitting around, but Konoe is the only saving grace for that show.

Still waiting for KyoAni to show up again. Preferably with a Little Busters! anime or moar Haruhi.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

日本語 Progress Update 2

According to Anki, I am exactly 3 months into my study of kanji. Some deck stats:

1230 cards
97.3% (403/414) Mature card retention
Avg Reviews (past week): 92.4/day

None of which, of course, actually means a damn thing, but I'm a whore for statistics.

I've made a few adjustments to my SRS method -- namely increasing the number of new cards per day to 25. This keeps pace better with the number of cards I add, and also means that I will finish RTK1 (plus the 157 kanji in the RTK1 Supplement) by the beginning of March. In fact, I'm going to go ahead and set myself a goal: All RTK1 kanji entered (though not necessarily reviewed) into Anki by 12:00am March 1st.

My attempt at starting sentences early has been aborted. I'm finding that the most useful kanji in RTK are coming closer to the end of the book rather than the beginning. I may know some 1200 kanji, but it's the one or two that show up *everywhere* that I don't know that will keep me from learning sentences properly. So that will have to wait, I think.

That said, I am doing more informal reading of Japanese. I've downloaded a Japanese dictionary for my iPod, and have been using that to look up words while I play リトルバスターズ. My retention of these words is pretty horrid, but that's not the point. (The point is that VNs are more fun if you actually understand the choices you're making.)

All in all, I'm satisfied with my progress so far. Kanji are no longer a slog, and I'm able to enjoy some basic reading amidst my audio immersion. The notion of visiting Japan in a year with full fluency is not as far-fetched as I once thought.