Slushpodding
Jan. 20th, 2005 07:40 pm
Another day, another amazing new technological innovation! This time it's 'slushpodding'. Are you stuck with a handheld audio device in a town full of slush? Then make a slush blog and slushpod it! Here's mine, nearly live from Hakodate, Hokkaido.
Slush Blog (mono mp3 file, 23 minutes, 12.8MB)
(no subject)
Date: 2005-01-20 11:19 am (UTC)I also enjoy nattou.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-01-20 12:57 pm (UTC)I adore natto. The fact that you don't is a very good defence if people ever accuse you of being too much the Japanophile.
A suitably contemplative space to play sound? How about sticking some speakers in one of those kobans? It's not as if they're doing anything in there except eating katsudon or something.
E-to-
Date: 2005-01-20 01:42 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-01-20 03:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-01-20 03:16 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-01-20 05:38 pm (UTC)the office, not the band
Date: 2005-01-20 06:46 pm (UTC)" ...as our officespaces have to become more human.
A good example is the flexible officeconcept of the Dutch insurance company Interpolis.
Having about a thousand staff mostly teleworking outdoors, on the road or at home, the character of the main office in Tilburg inevitably was changing.
Losing its function as workingplace the mainoffice developed into a meetingplace, combining work-related activities as discussions, meetings, lunches next to working situations in a traditional sense. Instead of an office, Interpolis likes to call it a small innercity for their people, comparable to similar earlier developed officeconcepts."
clubhouse and ear-chairs at the office
erik
the netherlands
The Poster?
Date: 2005-01-20 11:51 pm (UTC)Re: The Poster?
Date: 2005-01-21 04:18 pm (UTC)Gamekeeper
Date: 2005-01-21 06:07 pm (UTC)Richard G
(no subject)
Date: 2005-01-21 07:32 pm (UTC)Slush Blog
Date: 2005-01-24 02:34 am (UTC)With regards to your comment that downtown is the past and the modernist campus with it's young students is the future: unfortunately, you may have it backwards, as you can read in this recent article on Japan's looming demographic crisis. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4148635.stm)