Monthly Archives: April 2006

Anime Review: Fansubs, Part 2

I’m bumping Karin into its own part, and continuing with just one show for today’s post.

The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya: This show will be licensed for Region 1, make no mistake. And I will be buying every DVD the moment it hits the shelves, even though I’ll have seen the show already through fansubs. How can I describe it without giving spoilers? It’s just too good to give the jokes away…. Sigh.

It is, hands down, the funniest show I have seen in ages. I haven’t seen writing this hilarious since the very first episode of South Park. And they do it without scatological humor and kids using locker-room language. One poster on the Anime News Network forums compared the snappy humor to an American sitcom, but that’s an insult to Melancholy. American sitcoms are potty humor by comparison. The dialog and narration are so “tightâ€? that there’s hardly a wasted word or scene. You almost don’t even notice that there’s some seriously weird stuff going on. Haruhi, as the female lead, is a maniacal tyrant, bullying the others in the SOS Brigade to get her way. She’s not mean, she’s just incredibly focused, and others are just objects to her. Kyon is a cynical-but-amiable slacker who makes the mistake of accidentally befriending her. And the others were dragged in by Haruhi… or were they? Continue reading

Busy Weekend

Well, I’m back from a DOS-attack enforced exile to note that work and the weekend are both looking rather busy. It will probably be Sunday before I can continue with much in the way of posting. That’s too bad, because I’d like to spend time hopping up and down on Rick Casey’s case (or face, I’m not particular) for his hyped up outrage (make that OUTRAGE!!!!) over the fact that the Texas Ethics Committee levied the largest fine in it’s history against opponents of Metro’s rail referendum. Seems it was far too light of a punishment for Mr. Casey’s taste , as it failed to include keelhauling or drawing and quartering. No punishment is too cruel or unusual for the dastardly opponents of MetroRail!

That would be the same Metro that is now determined to ignore the results of such referendums, and continues to dodge the issue of corrosion due to stray current. Two things about which Mr. Casey seems to have absolutely no outrage at all. . . . Strange, isn’t it?

Anime Review: Fansubs, Part 1

Lately, my appetite for anime has completely outstripped my wallet’s ability to pay for it. Fortunately, there’s always a solution as long as there’s the internet: fansubs. So recently, I decided to investigate the world of fansubing, and was surprised at some of the things I learned.

For those not familiar with the world of anime, fansubs are copies of the original Japanese program, subtitled by groups of bilingual fans. The various clubs doing this work are highly competitive, resulting in work that is often better than the professionally subbed versions you buy on DVD. Several innovations in subtitling came out of the fansub community, such as the use of yellow or outlined letters; these were later picked up by the companies which license the programs for international distribution.

Although it is legally pirating, fansubs occupy a strange semi-tolerated niche in the anime industry, as potential importers can watch the fan “buzz� and get an idea over what series might be profitable to license. In return for freedom from hassles, most groups voluntarily withdraw distribution of their files after a series or movie is licensed, or sometimes when distribution begins. (Of course, there’s also the usual scofflaws. Some people are just that way.)

Since last Friday night, I have used BlogTorrent (acquired through J.Greely’s site) to download about 30 episodes of various shows. I’d tried to install and use other BitTorrent clients before, only to fail miserably; I didn’t understand the whole seeding process (and still don’t) but BlogTorrent has worked great without me having to understand much of anything. I go find a website with a link to a torrent, I click on it, save it, and BlogTorrent handles all the rest.

None of the programs I’ve downloaded have yet been licensed in Region 1 (North America) to my knowledge. In fact, two of them are brand new, having just premiered on Japanese TV. I have one thing to say about HDTV there: “awesome!� In fact, it wasn’t until I started to write this that I remembered, “Hey, that’s not taken from a DVD, that was broadcast!� It sucks that American TV is so far behind, technically.

So, for anyone who might be interested in doing their own acquisition, here’s what I’ve downloaded, with my reviews. I’ll try to avoid spoilers, but it’s not entirely possible.

Girl’s High has enough fanservice to make Najica Panty Blitz look tame. However, after being challenged by Pixy Misa’s Cutey Honey link over on Shamus Young’s’ site, causing an instant 601 error in my brain (think Andromeda Strain: “too much data, the system can’t handle it all”), I realized that I was going to have to do some serious captures to get my point across. So rather than hold up this entire post, I’ll just leave you with these two and come back later for a fanservice special.

Ok, I admit it. I spent too much time staring at her and I can’t finish this post tonight.

It just needs a little adjustment, Eriko…. Ah, oops….

Based on the writer’s own high-school experiences (but I suspect very loosely) this is the story of six first-year students at an all-girls school. How bad is the fanservice? Well, you don’t need a two-foot tall cameraman to see the panties after these girls get through with their scissors! The dialog is as suggestive, if not more, and the situations are tailor made for girls to be running around in way too little clothing. Somehow, I doubt any high school really makes its students spend a whole day running around in nothing but panties and open smocks while getting medical exams (episode 2). Still, the characters are surprisingly fun to watch, especially the rivals Kouda and Eriko, and the dialogue is over the top. After only two episodes though, I have no idea if there will be any semblance of a plot. I’m not going to spend a lot of time discussing the characters in this post. I just haven’t found much else to describe. Or maybe I was just distracted by the panties.

There are two series that I just don’t have any idea why I watch them, but I do (or did).

Ah! My Goddess (season 2) is the first. I downloaded two episodes, and watched about ten minutes of each to get a sense of how the first season is going to end and what the second will be like. I have to say I love the new opening. The music is bagpipe-oriented and the visuals show scenes of Heaven, which I believe is strongly influenced by the designs of the AMG movie. (I’m going to have to get that soon. . .) The closing is made up of pans over a scrapbook with pictures of the characters, and the music is a romantic ballad, similar to country at times, but not as strongly as the first season’s original EP.

The plot is still sticking closely to the manga (comics), although there’s at least one element of a story that has been expanded, and another dropped; additionally the sequence continues to be scrambled compared to the original. It works very well though. The same sweet, light tone continues, although it’s obvious that there was a spot of trouble at the end of the first series, because Yggsdrasil is offline and the goddesses have no “power feed� from Heaven. My original guess (discussed with Steven DenBeste via email) as to what will happen at the end of the first season appears to be close, but wrong; they’re drawing from an arc a little further along. I suspect that the reason is that the segment I expected season one to end with will be the ending to season two or three, because it’s much more epic, and fits better with the opening sequence of episode 1 of season 1.

Every time I watch an episode of this series, I have to ask myself, “why?â€? There’s not a lot of super-dramatic conflicts, few battles, no dire “save the worldâ€? emergencies, no belly-laughs, and rarely any fanservice worth mentioning. The real story is the slow-paced romance between Keiichi, a mortal, and Belldandy, a goddesses sent to grant him one wish, only she turned out to be the wish–something she is very happy with. But the only answer I can come up with is that it’s a very sweet, warm show, with characters you can enjoy spending time with. It just doesn’t have a bad bone it’s body. Even Sayoko, arguably the second-leading villain in the show, is a sympathetic character whose pain you can feel. If I had a significant other, this would be my first pick for an evening of cuddling on the couch while watching TV, also my second, third, and fourth.

Edit: And finally, Fireball20xl is back, so I can post this link to the fan manga TRG, showing the occasional drawback to Skuld’s mode of transport, which teleports her from one body of water to another. No, that’s not really Belldandy she’s arguing with. Let’s just say that another Urd potion went haywire…

Tomorrow, I will continue with part 2, reviewing Karin and my favorite, The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya.

He Could Have Been Talking About Houston

Steven DenBeste says, over at Redstate, “They know what’s best for you.”

A long time ago, in a land far far away called “San Francisco”, there was a real problem with rush hour traffic, especially from East Bay. Anyone who lived in Richmond, or Oakland, or Sausalito, had a choice of one bridge to reach their job in San Francisco: the Oakland Bay Bridge. Traffic trying to feed that bridge was stop-and-go every day and commute times were getting longer and longer.

Someone came up with the idea of creating a light rail system, which eventually became known as BART, the Bay Area Rapid Transit system. It wasn’t going to be cheap, though, especially since it was going to be high tech. But the voters in the Bay Area all voted for it enthusiastically even though the price was going to be high.

Change the name to MetroRail and “enthusiastically” to “barely” and you’ve got Houston….

Eventually they got it all working. . . . And for the next few months the trains ran mostly empty, right past the clogged highways BART was supposed to help.

Someone finally went out and did another survey of voters in the Bay Area to ask them why they had originally favored building BART, at colossal expense. It turns out that the most common answer was, “So that other people will ride it, and get off the freeways, so that I’ll have an easier drive to work.”

Lotta that going around. In a recent column for CBS news, Dick Meyer writes about the attitude he describes as “We know what’s best for you”. It’s hardly new, though. YOU need to ride BART; that’s why we built it.

And Metro says, “YOU need to ride Metro Rail, that’s why we build it.” But this sounds like Metro too:

Originally it was intended that the entire system be computerized. There weren’t going to be any drivers on the trains. After all the tracks were built, they spent some time running empty trains around on it to make sure it worked. Then they had a serious collision.

It turned out that the system was designed so that the computer detected the presence of a train on a given segment by the fact that it was drawing power. But one of the trains suffered a failure and shut itself down, which means it stopped drawing power, and it vanished as far as the computer was concerned. It sent another train through that segment, with about the results you’d expect. Fotunately there wasn’t anyone on board either train.

The only thing they were missing was malfunctioning red lights….

Don’t Be So Hasty

So yesterday, I picked up on this story about how CafePress bounced a check to Silent Running. I thought at the time that he might be jumping the gun by shutting down his CafePress store and going public with the issue, but Mondays are busy and I didn’t have time to comment. Well, it turns out I was right to be concerned:

UPDATE: Ok boys lay off Cafepress. The culprit now appears to be my bank, or more to the point some weenie who screwed up and tried to hide it blaming Cafepress.

More on this dodgey turn pf [sic] events as they unfold when I drop by the local branch for a please explain meeting tomorrow.

My prediction is that the meeting will be fruitless; involving insincere apologies and a strong element of “feces occurs, why are you so upset about it?” Believe me, you do not want to know how difficult some banking problems can be to solve. I’ve watched the city spend six months helping a customer by trying to get two banks and the Federal Reserve in Dallas all on the same page, and fix an error that wasn’t the city’s fault and cost a customer $800. The fault was her bank’s.

Another Reason You Can’t Fire a Civil Servant

New York administrative law judge reinstates an NYC employee and orders only a reprimand for surfing the net.

In his decision, Spooner wrote: “It should be observed that the Internet has become the modern equivalent of a telephone or a daily newspaper, providing a combination of communication and information that most employees use as frequently in their personal lives as for their work.”

Original article can be found here. H/T to Instapundit.

Somehow I don’t think the excuse “I was reading Houblog!” would go over very well in mayor White’s office. . .

If This is Tuesday, it Must Be Flex Time

Just got the latest issue of the City Savvy, an in-house propaganda sheet electronic newsletter to city employees. (Edit: it was electronic only for a while as a cost saving measure, but they’ve gone back to printing it in full color now. Your tax dollars at work…) I occasionally read it when I need a cynical laugh. Why do I say that?

Well, every now and then, whomever the current mayor is at the time picks out a program that has been around for a while, slaps a new coat of paint on it to cover the prior mayor’s name, stencils in his own, publicizes it in Savvy and proclaims it to be the best thing since sliced bread. It ReallyWill! Save! You! (Tax) Money!!!!

This week, it’s the flex time program.
Continue reading

Ubu to the Republican Party: So Long, and Thanks For All the Pork

And illegal immigration, pork, half-assing the War on Islamofacism, pork, creating another huge bureaucracy, more pork, nearly blowing the SCOTUS picks, and, oh, probably a dozen other little things that don’t quite come up to the level of major grievance, such as not prosecuting seditionists. (As much as I’d like to, I can’t blame you for Banner of the Stars III not being licensed in region 1 yet.)

At this point, I’ve given up on the Republican Party. I’m not voting for them just to keep the Dems out of office. That’s what they want and expect. The only way to remind them of who their bosses are is to humble them. Break them on the anvil of the voting booth, and reforge them into something better.

However, I no longer believe that is likely, and I can’t continue holding my nose and hoping. Therefore, I am no longer a Republican. Henceforth, I am a member of the Jacksonian Party, even if it’s just a party of one. For those who would like to know more about the beliefs of this party, and why Andrew Jackson is it’s namesake, I recommend this article.

Search Engine Follies

This morning, I decided to upgrade my account with SiteMeter, in order to get a better grasp on the traffic coming to my site. Some of the stats that I’ve collected today have been. . . um, peculiar.

I’m not sure how far back the records are going, but it’s further than since I upgraded the account. I think it’s a rolling 24 hours, which I find annoying. The stats have proved to be highly volatile, with some sites “losing” refers, and rankings changing constantly. Another major disagreement I’ve got with this service is that it counts the website itself as a referrer. That means if you go to the index page, then click one of the “continue” links, or a category/archive, Houblog itself is recorded as the referrer–and every page is considered a seperate referrer. I’m getting annoyed with that and I’m not sure I’m getting my money’s worth, but I’ll see how it works out.

Anyway, the top referring non-search engine to my site today was a new blog not even a week old, Gumbo Grousing. After reading up on it a bit, I decided the author had a twisted sense of humor, and added him to my blogroll as well.

The fifth (or seventh, depending on when I looked) leading referrer overall is Steven Den Beste’s Chizumatic. That reminds me, I need to link him under anime as well (his archive is linked under Analysis) . (EDIT: Actually I needed to add the category!) One thing that Sitemeter’s stats do is track the page the referral came from, not just the site. So if I get a sudden spike from a site, I can tell if it’s because I was mentioned in a post as opposed to being added to a blogroll.

There were a couple from BlogHouston and Off the Kuff mixed in there as well, along with a couple of search engines.

Speaking of searches, there were two unusual things I noticed in the stats. First, the most common search engine referral to me right now is not Google. It’s Overture, which appears to be the engine run by Yahoo/SBC/AT&T.

Second, aside from the site name, the number one word used to find Houblog today was:

Panty.

Obviously, I need to blog about anime some more. 🙂

Shhh! Don’t Talk About That in Public!

Every time I think I’ve seen the lowest ebb in corporate cravenness and general cowardice, I am sickened by something even worse. This time, it’s the Livonia Holiday Inn Holidome in Livonia, MI, host to Penguicon, a science fiction and open source software convention. Heaven forbid that people at a convention about science fiction should talk about dirty subjects in public… like warfare.

From the blog of Howard Tayler, author of the webcomic Schlock Mercenary: Continue reading

That’s Odd…

Can anyone explain to me why we’re spending $15,000,000 on fancy water meters that aren’t vandal-proof and won’t pay for themselves while we have to borrow money to make our pension obligations? I’m just askin’ is all…

And why did council just approve over $200k in remediation expenses to clean up the site of the new fire station they’re building to replace the one Lee Brown sold to developers? (Items 1. & 1.a.) Seems it would have been better to keep the original, since it was in a better place.

It was located in 1895 at Polk and Crawford, Polk and Crawford again in 1958, Polk and Crawford again in 1970 and will be closed in 2001. Stations 1 and 8 were combined and relocated to the corner of Milam and St. Joseph and Station 8 was reopened in June of 2001.

Seems someone wanted to put a basketball arena there for some reason.

Other fun things on the agenda that passed: Continue reading

“Reign of Error”

In discussing the insane amount of bonuses that the police department mechanics make, Kevin Whited has coined the best description I’ve heard yet of the Brown era in Houston city government. Not necessarily the most accurate, mind you, but certainly the catchiest. More about it here and here.

I say it’s not the most accurate because after all, some of the “mistakes” were quite deliberate, I’m sure. Just one person’s opinion….