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Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Jan 21 1:30 pm)



Subject: Off to Tokyo (OT)


ashley9803 ( ) posted Mon, 12 March 2007 at 3:40 AM · edited Sat, 11 January 2025 at 8:07 AM

I'm going to Tokyo for two weeks with the kids next month.
Wondering if there's anything Poser/3D related events or places I should know about.
As Japan is so heavily into Poser there could  very well be something to see.
Any Japanese Renderosity people out there to offer advise?
Another reason for this post; very hard to find accommodation in Tokyo for the period 8th of April to the 18th of April with 2 kids, any assistance with this would be greatly appreciated.

Ashley


nomuse ( ) posted Mon, 12 March 2007 at 4:35 PM · edited Mon, 12 March 2007 at 4:38 PM

Oh, I am an envious! I only got to spend a few days there last time. I'd think strongly about Minshuku, if your kids are mature and flexible enough to deal with non-Western accommodations. They are like a bed-and-breakfast; usually in smaller places, sometimes people's homes, generally a six-tatami-mat room and bathroom down the hall, futon and yukata provided. Very good bargain...around the Yamanote Loop comes down to 4,000 yen...and you get a touch of traditional living (including Japanese style bath if you want it; they have showers as well, though). Best place to find one, though, is to stop by the tourism offices when you get into town and they'll call around for a reservation and basically clear the route for you. A few of them have an online-presence, tho.. this is a tourist-oriented but nicely located one; http://www.kimi-ryokan.jp/index.html There's a nation-wide network of them, too, sort of like a yellow pages and better business combined. (The travel plan I inherited from my mom, is, reserve your first night in a decent hotel close to the airport. AFTER you have a good night's sleep and recover from the flight, you go searching in town for something cheaper -- and closer to where you want to be.) If you are at all gadget-happy stop by the Akihabara (step right out of Akihabara Station on the Yamanote Line and you are in the middle of it.) Giant departos for electronics and software, but better yet, millions of speciality shops and a giant arcade that's bargain electronics and flea mart and swap shop and so forth. And you can haggle there, too! Geek heaven. Not a substitute for Tokyo Disneland, but there's a couple of massive arcades around town. One in O-daiba -- you can take the Yurikamome monorail out from around the Ginza to get there. I don't know the details but I'll but Shinjuku's got a few as well. Me, if I was an artist and in Japan I wouldn't be thinking about software or computers. I'd be out drinking in the scenery. Shinjuku for your glass-brick fix. Imperial Palace for giant gardens. Not as many shrines or temples in town (well, okay...not compared with, say, Kyoto), but still plenty to see. Gardens a'plenty. And don't forget to head into old Edo, stroll in one of the edomachi neighborhoods there. They are mostly reconstructed and a bit touristy now (as much Japanese tourists as foreign tourists), but still a kick to be in an old-style neighborhood that could come out of a samurai film. Bring lots of cameras. I'd swear, even a dumpster in Japan would position itself "just so" to be an amazing composition. It's like the entire land is conscious of contrast and balance and rhythm and just sets up these beautiful shots all the time. If you are a texture artist you'll just cry; fabulously intricate Buddhist art, wonderfully weathered paint and moss-grown tile, incredibly rich natural woods....the list goes on and on. (Forgot to add -- if at all possible schedule yourself a day trip out of town. Amazing how rural much of Japan appears, once you get out of the big city. Rustic old-style buildings with thatched roofs, tiny terraced rice paddies, little dirt country roads...and of course the natural scenery is, as usual, spectacular.) I could talk endlessly on this. I imagine you've done some research already. I'd say stay away from the big tourist destinations if possible. Many of them are worth it but Japan can really do a big crowd well. And the merchandizing around some of these places can get a bit annoying (as can the western tourists, who do tend to be larger, louder, and a lot less conscious of the people around them). Oh...if you mean to spend a lot of time in people's houses, or visiting temples (definitely worth a visit, especially one that's not so crowded), bring shoes that come off and come on easily!


ashley9803 ( ) posted Mon, 12 March 2007 at 10:06 PM

Thank you nomuse


Miss Nancy ( ) posted Mon, 12 March 2007 at 11:40 PM

o.k., bon voyage; sayonara. say hello to batlabs, kozaburo and Hokusai-san for us.



kuroyume0161 ( ) posted Tue, 13 March 2007 at 2:47 AM · edited Tue, 13 March 2007 at 2:48 AM

Don't say 'sayonara'  - say 'chotto matte' (a little later) or 'jaa, matte' (see you later).  Sayonara carries a sort of finality (unlike 'bon voyage' which literally means 'good trip') - that is, 'good bye for good'.

As ashley said, I envy you.  I have had only one missed opportunity to go to Japan and it would have been rather constructed and limited (as part of my doujou to see the shoto).  I would rather go for at least several weeks and explore the historical and various areas - would love to be present at some of the communal ceremonies and see some sumou in person!

The culture of Japan has changed ridiculously in the past 50+ years.  Before that, their culture was little changed from the Edo back to Heian eras - that is what excites me: samurai, bushido, community and other possibly idealistic notions of their past (fully realizing the limitations and cons of such a societal structure).  Before the end of WWII, Geisha was an honorable tradition - afterwards, it became synonomous with 'prostitute' - but they were never the same thing.

C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot. C++ makes it harder, but when you do, you blow your whole leg off.

 -- Bjarne Stroustrup

Contact Me | Kuroyume's DevelopmentZone


ashley9803 ( ) posted Tue, 13 March 2007 at 3:22 AM

Thanks for your comments guys.I was last there in 1983 in winter.
I don't know how I forgot this but my nephew lives in Tokyo and is married to a Japanese lady.
(We're not a really close family and my brothers and sisters are all over the place)
Got my sister to email him to ask him to arrange accommodation in Tokyo. He speaks Japanese and has lived there for 11 years so I think he'll come through.
I got over 200 yen to the Aust. dollar in 1983, it's now 92 yen so things won't be cheep, but money is worthless unless you spend it.


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