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The Bjørner Japan Diary
Trivia & Photos: "Blow-by-Blow"
February - Mid April 2006

Kari & Dines Bjørner

December 22, 2006


Contents

February 2006

Satomicho

  • Satomicho is the name of our "district" (and hence of the streets).
  • Our address is: Apt.303 Townheights Satomicho, 44-1 Satomicho,
    Kanazawa, Ishikawa 920-0989, Japan
  • The apt. house is called: Townheights Satomicho.
  • Kanazawa is the city name, some 450,000 inhabitants.
  • Ishikawa is the name of the prefecture (i.e., province, state).

Above: Street leading to our apartment (behind the photographer).

Above: Our apartment house.Our apt. is the one with the brown (desk) in the corner window.
The living room window is half-hidden and right above the tree in the center photo.

Above: View from our living room. The red building is city hall.

Click this for more photos of Satomicho district and our apartment .

February Continued

  • 21 Feb., initial impressions at work: Nice introduction here at JAIST, nice big office, loads of computers, and after now two weeks here Dines is heading a small group of one Post.doc., one PhD stud., and one M.Sc. student. I've written a document formalising what one might mean by a document (well there seems to be an inexhaustible lot one can say about documents without yet having captured "all"!). In this group we are now looking at Digital Rights Management (DRM), in fact, a rather fascinating area of licensing the rendering (playing, viewing, copying) of digital documents.

  • General: Kanazawa is neat: 400,000 approx., beautiful parks, an ancient castle, cozy restaurants, galore, and we have tried now quite a few. We have a bank account, credit cards, chops, alien registration cards, health insurance cards, etc., etc. Dines has a lovely secr., Miss Yuko Banba. She speaks English very beautifully, spent 4 years in Santa Rosa, near Napa Valley, Calif. Kari got carried away a bit too much perhaps, attending zillions of courses at the very nearby Intl.Lounge: Ikebana, Japanese for beginners, Papercutting, Embroidery, etc., etc. Dines commute: Bus, train, bus. 35 mins. on the train - and have used that productively to read now 5 clever papers on DRM, as well as refereeing a paper. JAIST is 30kms south of Kanazawa. Spring is coming.

March 2006

  • Early March, travel preparations: Kari flies off, 8-24 March, to Seattle, to be with Nikolaj, Bodil, Marianne, Katrine and Jakob, for 16 days. Dines is flying off to meetings in Tokyo, and to a quickie luxury stay at a smart hotel in Brügge, Belgium: The IFIP WG2.3 meeting 13-18 March. Our daughter, Charlotte's hand is trembling: She is signing/or about to sign buying what appears to be a very nice house in Trørød. (Some days later: She bought it! It is very nice.)

  • March 7-8, Kari off to Seattle: Kari flew off to Seattle Wedn. 8 March. Taxi was ordered by Dines' secr. and came at 9:10 (for 9:15 - here precision and reliability is Number ONE): for Kanazawa station, then express airport bus, and flight 11:45 for Haneda, the "domestic" airport in Tokyo. From there by bus to Narita, and from there 5:45 pm to Seattle. We went out the evening before to our favourite local Sushi rest., sat, as always at the counter, and talked much with the amazingly well-speaking Mr. Yousjimo, the sushi chef.

  • March 10-13, Dines off to Tokyo: Dines flew off, early Friday March 10, to Tokyo for meetings in the late afternoon and fine dinner + a later "modern" version of a Geisha-evening. Drinking Chateaux Margaux and other ridiculously priced French wines. Company was CSK. Host was its Director, Mr. Teiichi Aruga. Fascinating executive. The next two full days, Sat., and Sun., Dines just relaxed: Dines had prepared substantive reports for the above and for another meeting, see below - and preferred to be in a nice warm hotel room in Tokyo rather than in the still cold apt. in Kanazawa. One has to understand that Dines has probably been in Tokyo more than 50 times since 1978, for a total of possibly almost a full year, and at all times of the year. So Dines do know quite a bit of Tokyo. And Dines could therefore wander at his ease, relax and enjoy what is unique Edo. Bookstores: Maruzen, Yaesu and Kinokuniya and the many ones at Jimbocho's Book Street, Kanda. His favourite there us Isseido (7 Kanda Jimbocho). In between meandering Dines had Sushi at Dines' favourite, "behind" the railway line, near Shimbashi Station, 5 minutes from the Imperial Hotel (where Dines has stayed many times since 1979). Dines also went for a cocktail, it became two, at the Old Imperial Bar, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and still preserved.

  • March 13-18, Dines off to Brügge: Then Dines flow off to Brügge in Belgium: Lufthansa to Frankfurt and on to Brussels, then train. From 10:40 am Japan time to 7 pm Belgium time. Ticket was "cattle" class, but luckily Dines was upgraded and had a splendid business class seat. It could be automatically set into 6 different shapes and tuned to any position in-between these. A favourite was fully horisontal. Dines spent from Monday evening 13 March 7 pm to Saturday morning 18 March 7 am at a nice hotel, Navarra, in Brügge, with 25 old friends, all computer scientists, presenting ideas to one another, discussing them, and eating sumptuous lunches and dinners. Friday it was all over before noon. Wedn. and Fri. afternoons Dines then had time to sightsee. Kari and Dines were in Brügge as far back as 1977. Most interesting was the Groening Museum with paintings by van Eyck, Hans Memling and others.

  • March 19-22, Dines back to Tokyo: Sat. return via Brussels and Munich to Tokyo, arriving half-broken (no upgrading), at Dines' Tokyo hotel at noon Sunday. Monday Dines' colleagues and Dines had a meeting from 11 am till about 2:30 pm. Later that afternoon Dines visited the UN University HQ and chatted with old acquaintances from our time with the UN (1991-1997). Next morning back to Kanazawa: Air from Haneda and bus, one hour, from local airport Komatsu.

  • March 26, Kari back from Seattle: Meanwhile Kari was 16 days in Seattle. Came home last night at 10:30 pm. She had had a fine time with Marianne (8), Katrine (5), Jakob (3), Nikolaj (38 on the 28th of March) and Bodil (40 years today, Sunday 26th). Kari brought home many patchwork fabrics and several, some 8 or so, books.

  • General: We now have a little "circuit" of local restaurants. We've only tried one of the three rests. on the ground floor of our apartment building. There is also a delightful bar, starts at 8 pm and closes the other side of 2 am, when the last customer leaves. He has great Scottish malts, Caribbean rums, etc. He's very entertaining. Cute, slight accent. Despite the restaurants it is always very calm and quiet here. We have walked (Sat. 11 March) in the ``Eastern Pleasure Quarter" of Kanazawa, the geisha district, and had a delightful lunch at a local rest., since 1906! Bought small boxes and things for Kari to bring to the children in Seattle. Sunday we walked in the so-called old samurai district with its beautiful houses and gardens, saw museums, etc. Also a nice sunny day. Dines stayed home Monday, first going to the Immigration Office to get unlimited re-entry permission stamped into Dines' passport, Yen 6,000. Then further working on two documents started the previous Friday. Basically finishing them in a final draft form and distributed to Dines' host professor (Kokichi Futatsugi). In the afternoon (still Sat. 11 March) Kari and Dines walked, in the slight rain, in yet a third old houses quarter. So we saw quite a bit of town. And we like it.

Photos from Restaurants: February - April 2006

Above: Our favourite sushi chef, the sushi bar, and the yakitori place in our apt. building!

Above: Dines' favourite sushi place (near Shimbashi train station), bar (@ the Old Imperial), and teriyaki abalone steak (@ Kamon, Imperial Hotel), all in Tokyo

Click this for more photos of Japanese restaurants .

March + April 2006

Kanazawa

Musings: Japanese Bureaucracy

We are having our fill of it. Some episodes are:

Forms Filling: There are 2-3 papers at least, with signatures (chops using Dines' hanko, i.e., Dines' Japanese seal with Katakane for "Bjorner") and lots and lots of the very same information that one has given thrice before to the same authority (usually the university administration, or the bank, or the local and regional immigration services). One feels, but Dines might be wrong, that one has filled out - with the extremely kind help of Dines' secretary, Miss Yuko Banba - such forms at least 15 times.

Immigration: We filled out application forms at the Japanese Consulate (Embassy) in Copenhagen. For that effort we got a one entry resident visa for three years to Japan. One entry only. Not multiple entries. That took a week. Then we filled out rather similar forms, all over at the Kanazawa city immigration services to obtain the Alien Registration Card. No, it had to be done all over again, no streamlining this into one process. That took two weeks. Then, to obtain multiple entry status we went to a third office, way out of town, bus, walk, and bus again. Only that took two photos, half a page of form to fill out, and wait 10 minutes. All done!

Telephone and ADSL: To get a telephone line opened takes applications and 2 weeks of waiting! (In Calif., in 1963, it took approx. half a day!) To get an ADSL line also took applications - but longer time: three weeks!

Mobile Phone versus ADSL Costs: Since Dines uses his computer at home, linked up to the Internet, almost exclusively to do scientific and administrative work strongly related to his job at JAIST, Dines was naive enough to believe that Dines' ample computing equipment budget (which, by the way, Dines have little chance or opportunity to use up, too much money for Dines' needs) - since Dines assumed it could be used to defray the ADSL line costs, Dines asked for this. Oh no! But they would pay purchase of a mobile phone and all the work-related costs associated with that phone! Now, can you see it: The cost of ADSL, per month, is well below the cost of the mobile phone purchase cost + usage per month for the period we are here. And: the cost of the JAIST administration to go through the list of mobile phone calls to calculate which are work-related and their cost, well, far exceeds the similar costs for administration of the ADSL line. But a rule is a rule. And rules cannot be changed.

Credit Cards: It turns out that one needs several CCs to survive. Although there is a "generous" 400,000 Yen borrowing ceiling on a credit card, in effect it means that you can only spend much less because the transfers between my bank and the CC company are such as to render that "generous" ceiling a joke. So, instead of wanting my business, they loose it. I now have, or are applying for a total of four CCs!

The Japanese banking system is, so tells my more exerienced expatriates here, the most archaic they know of.

University administrations, banks, etc., instead of being flexible forcess us all to live according to their "rules".

April 2006

  • Sunday 2 - Monday 3 April: Hikone and Hakkeitei Ryokan: Sunday morning we took the regional express train to Maibara (100 minutes) and then, after 5 minutes, the local train, 5 minutes, to Hikone. We walked, with our "carry-on" the 15 minutes through town to the Hikone Castle grounds to the Hakkeitei Ryokan, i.e., Japanese inn. See http://www.hakkeitei.com/english/h/top.htm. A rather phantastic 300 year old place. We got the Ukimido room. Fabulous, really. The price of 52.000 Yen included the room, a sumptuous 8 course dinner and a likewise sumptuous 6 course breakfast, all Japanese, served in our room. We arrived at noon. Got the room at four. Left it the next morning at almost 10. So we just stayed in that room, straight, for over 17 hours - minus the walk down creaking corridors to the bath and toilet! From noon till 4pm Sunday we strolled to, along, and around Castle Street, and mounted the Castle. Very impressive. Train home by 10:16 with 20 minute stop, this time, in Maibara. We home by noon and had had a great journey.

Photos: Hikone

Hakkeitei Ryokan: Outside

Above: Our room is the whole building in the middle of all three photos!
See the castle above the photo in the middle.

Click this for more photos of Hakkeitei ryokan outside .

Hakkeitei Ryokan: Inside

Click this for more photos of Hakkeitei ryokan inside .

Hikone: Castle

Above: Yes, it was raining that afternoon halfway through our castle visit - but it was OK.

Click this for more photos of Hikone castle .

Early - Mid April

  • General - Around April 8-9: About our daily life, seen here two months after our arrival.

    Kari's Daily Life: We get up at around 6-6:30 am most mornings, week ends included. Have breakfast and Dines is out by 7:20 or so. Then there is house work, shopping, cashing monies from the ATMs, window shopping, and the usual stuff.

    Kari has promised Dines to write more for this diary

    Kari's Work: There are two elements to Kari's work - besides what has been described above: the house chores.

    One is attending classes, 3-4-5 times a week, at the International Lounge. Kari enjoys classes in making pictures by paper (no scissors, "tearing" to get soft edges), origami, embroidery, etc.

    Kari has promised Dines to write more for this diary entry

    The other is sewing and P&Q: patch-working and quilting. Kari brought a fair selection of fabrics with here from Denmark, and quite a large selection, in a huge "back to school trunk" with her from Seattle. So now Kari is washing some of these fabrics, cutting them p: some to parts to keep, some to sell - in Denmark.

    Kari has promised Dines to write more for this diary entry

    Dines' Travel to and from Work: We get up at around 6 am every day, week ends included. Week days, Monday through Friday Dines commutes. First a leisurely stroll, some 5-7 minutes to the Korinbo bus stop. Then a walk of typically 4-5 minutes. The #87 bus then takes him to Nomachi Station, another 6-7 minutes. Payment is 200 Yen, i.e., US$2, approx., and, in Dines' case, is by an electronic card which carries some 27 such trips. It is easily recharged, usually by paying 5 thousand Yen, or approx. US$50. The train cost to Tsurugi, "end of the line" is 460 Yen and is paid by a ticket from a booklet of 20 such, at 10% reduced price. The train ride is almost 40 minutes during which Dines continues to read either scientific (or technical) papers, or, more leisurely, a book. Presently Dines is reading Haruki Murakami's The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle. At Tsurugi the JAIST Shuttle bus takes us to JAIST in 9 minutes. From Dines leaves Kari till he sits in his office some 65 minutes has passed, 40 of them reading, 20 of them observing local life. Dines usually take the 8:44 am train in the morning and the 4:58 pm train in the evening.

    Dines' Work: Dines' work divides into several parts:

    • Domain Engineering. Two reports: On Domains and Domain Engineering: Prerequisite for Trustworthy Software, A Necessity for Believable Project Management and Towards a Theory of Documents.

    • Digital Rights: Consumers and Producers in a Digital World: See Specifications of Digital Rights Languages . We are now in the process of defining two script languages , one for the communications that take place in health care between patients and medical staff and supposedly somehow focused on the Patient Medical Reports , and one for the communications that take place in public administration around Administrative Documents . We will design these languages around modal concepts of rights and obligations (permissions and commitments), knowledge and belief, time and space. Finally we shall try relate the communication acts to Game Theory .

    • Click this for my April - May Lectures at JAIST .

    • Preparation of a paper for an invited IWAAPF 2006 talk.

    • Preparation of lectures for Macau Government staff around e-Macao - a project "master-minded" by UNU-IIST , and in particular by Dr. Tomasz Janowski: Click People, then click Staff and Fellows, and then click Dr. Tomasz Janowski

    • Tokyo/JAIST Lectures: Four evenings of 190 minutes, 6:30-9:40 pm.

    • Book Editing: Dines is editing a book: Logics of [Formal] Specification Languages . To be published in the same series as Dines' three books - by Springer. Editing also means: making sure all 9 sets of authors use the same styles, that the macros do noit conflict and can all be compiled as one set, making sure that all 9 language chapters have adequate subject and symbol indexing, etc., etc. Zillions of minute things. (This takes time!)

    • Writing yet a book! Dines is trying to ruthlessly assess whether he has achieved what he wanted with his three volume book, 2413 pages, that was published 9 Dec., 2005, 9 Feb., 2006 and 9 March, 2006. It is built up around the seven theses that he claims runs through this book, these volumes, as a rainbow coloured braid. Dines expects the estimated 140 page "Thesis" to be finished by the time we return to Denmark.

    • Academia Europaea: Dines is chairman of AE's Informatics Section. Dines' trip to Budapest is to two half day meetings, of the AE Nominations Committee and the AE Council. Dines worked with his membership to nominate 24 new members of AE/IS - and the fate of these nominations will be decided April 19 and 20. Dines has recently nominated a six man Section Committee, and it must be presented in name at the Council Meeting, as must our Section's plans for a two day "grand challenges of informatics" symposium at the AE Annual General Meeting in Budapest in September this year.

    In addition Dines is reviewing assistant and associate professorship applications and very large scale (i.e., Euro 80 million) applications for the German Research Council! Lots to do!

  • Tokyo-Vienna-Budapest-Kyoto (written 9 April, Charlotte's Birthday):

    These days Kari and Dines are preparing for trips to Tokyo (14-19 April) and Kyoto (22-24 April), resp. for Tokyo (one evening and night 14/15 April), Vienna (14-15 April, arrival 4pm, dept. 3pm), Budapest (16-21) and Kyoto (as for Kari). Expect some future diary entries on this. In Tokyo and Kyoto Kari and I will meet our friends since February 1969: Peggy and Peter Stark. Kari will, additionally scour Tokyo's P&Q stores. Undoubtedly she will have to buy another trunk! In Vienna Dines will stay at Hotel Wandl , an old favourite. And in Budapest at Hotel Sofitel , another favourite. In Budapest Dines will meet Szeredi Peter and his family, and hopes to meet Bach Hedda and Ivan. Be sure of one thing: the tremendously boring hardship of intercontinental travels on "cattle class" sort of "pays off" when you can stroll down Wollzeile in Wien, have dinner Saturday eveniningat 7pm at Plachutta ; attend an Easter Morning 11 am concert at the Augustiner Kirche ; followed by an early lunch at Hotel Sacher's outdoor/wintergarden cafe/restaurant (Rote Bar - you can see the winter garden through the opening to the right) before taking the train to Budapest at 3:45 pm. All restaurant bookings are made!

  • Week-end Walks in Kanazawa: We have spent many hours most week-ends walking at our leisure around Kanazawa. Dines believes the below photos speak for themselves.

Kanazawa Architecture

Click this for more photos of houses in Kanazawa .

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About this document ...

The Bjørner Japan Diary
Trivia & Photos: "Blow-by-Blow"
February - Mid April 2006

This document was generated using the LaTeX2HTML translator Version 2002-2-1 (1.71)

Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, Nikos Drakos, Computer Based Learning Unit, University of Leeds.
Copyright © 1997, 1998, 1999, Ross Moore, Mathematics Department, Macquarie University, Sydney.

The command line arguments were:
latex2html -split 0 -toc_depth 6 1-diary

The translation was initiated by Dines Bjorner on 2006-12-22


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Dines Bjorner 2006-12-22