There has been no response from the company in Japan. I sent my resume to them last Thursday, and on Friday received an email asking me to send an email to a different person in the company to set up a time for a phone interview. I sent that email off right away.
And I waited. And waited.
Two Japanese business days later, I still hadn't gotten a response so I sent off a email asking for confirmation.
And I waited. And waited.
Two more Japanese business days and I have not gotten a response. I've checked in my spam filters, they have not had any false positives. Nothing. Not a peep from these guys. I am getting disappointed. I was so looking forward to this opportunity.
I will try one more email asking for confirmation then give up.
It's a pity. This job was such a good fit for me.
On a totally unrelated note: Reiko, my former language exchange partner, emailed me saying a friend of hers has come to Ottawa to study English and needs a language partner. She asked if I would be willing to do be that partner. I said sure. Reiko said she would pass on my email address to this girl. This should be fun.
Thursday, August 10, 2006
Wednesday, August 09, 2006
if ($credit > $cost) { buyTicket(); }
I got the limit on my credit card upped a bit. Before it was set to just a little bit below the cost of the plane ticket. I can now afford to buy the ticket on my own card. If I couldn't have gotten the limit bumped up then I would have had to get either Bernard or Charles to buy the ticket and paythem back in cash. I wasn't relishing that thought.
Charles also emailed earlier today saying that he has booked the Tokyo hotel. That leaves us with booking the hotels for the second week. We have selected the ones we are planning on staying at, we just have to make reservations.
Many hotels in Japan still accept only cash and require payment up front. When we check into the hotel on the first night we will need 19,800 yen each in out pockets. That seems like a lot but it is for nearly a whole week. At the moment the conversion rate is close to 100JPY = $1CDN. That equates to having nearly $200 in cash at touchdown in Japan. I will talk to Charles to see if he thinks it best to get that money here in Canada or to get it at a bank machine in Japan.
I am getting more and more excited and nervous about this trip. There is still so much up in the air.
I was looking for Japanese goth bars, but most of them are not going to be operating at times that are good for this trip. Maybe the one in Osaka will be do-able. I will examine further.
Charles also emailed earlier today saying that he has booked the Tokyo hotel. That leaves us with booking the hotels for the second week. We have selected the ones we are planning on staying at, we just have to make reservations.
Many hotels in Japan still accept only cash and require payment up front. When we check into the hotel on the first night we will need 19,800 yen each in out pockets. That seems like a lot but it is for nearly a whole week. At the moment the conversion rate is close to 100JPY = $1CDN. That equates to having nearly $200 in cash at touchdown in Japan. I will talk to Charles to see if he thinks it best to get that money here in Canada or to get it at a bank machine in Japan.
I am getting more and more excited and nervous about this trip. There is still so much up in the air.
I was looking for Japanese goth bars, but most of them are not going to be operating at times that are good for this trip. Maybe the one in Osaka will be do-able. I will examine further.
Monday, August 07, 2006
/* The meeting */
We had out latest trip planning meeting last night. It's starting to feel like we are going over the same stuff over and over again. Bernard is the sort of person who needs to plan everything to extreme detail and Charles and I are of the opinion that "we are on vacation, why plan anything?" We are going to let him have the Hakone trip planned to the minute because that is his pet project. He wants to take "The Romance Car" from Tokyo to Hakone. It was so named because the seats don't have arm rests between them, perfect for couples to snuggle. Anyway, the romance car leaves early in the morning from Shinjuku station. So to catch it we will have to wake up early, and rush across Tokyo. Bernard has calculated exactly when we have to wake up and when we have to get from point A to point B to point C. We are letting him have this day because it will make the rest of the trip easier.
Last night though Bernard started to get it through his head that we are all adults and we can go off and do our own things without a tour guide. I don't know how happy he is about that, I think he wants this to be like those prepackaged tours when a tour guide will take you to places of interest so you can take a few pictures. Speaking of pictures that seems to be all he is interested in. The way he talks, he is just interested in taking pictures of the sights not in actually being there. Ah well, to each his own.
The meeting was a potluck dinner so Remi decided to bring drinks but he forgot that I don't drink and Charles was driving so that left him and Bernard to drink all the alcohol. He got really drunk. At one point he found out that he would have to go into a change room and be naked around other guys before going into an onsen. He got nervous. He has never been in a change room before. We tried to assure him that no one was going to be staring at his penis but he was still upset. You could see the fear in his eyes. Or maybe it was the alcohol.
Speaking of onsen, Bernard wants me to sneak my camera into the onsen. Cameras are forbidden there because of all the naked people but he seems to think that he will forget the experience if he doesn't have a photograph of it.
We have basically hashed out all the over riding plans for the Tokyo leg of the trip. We have to book the hotel and figure out what to do with the bulk of our luggage during the Hakone trip. We will probably be able to leave it at the hotel in Tokyo, as many hotels in Japan offer services like that.
We couldn't finalize our plans for Osaka because Olsen was not there but we are very close to getting that done.
Not much else to report.
Last night though Bernard started to get it through his head that we are all adults and we can go off and do our own things without a tour guide. I don't know how happy he is about that, I think he wants this to be like those prepackaged tours when a tour guide will take you to places of interest so you can take a few pictures. Speaking of pictures that seems to be all he is interested in. The way he talks, he is just interested in taking pictures of the sights not in actually being there. Ah well, to each his own.
The meeting was a potluck dinner so Remi decided to bring drinks but he forgot that I don't drink and Charles was driving so that left him and Bernard to drink all the alcohol. He got really drunk. At one point he found out that he would have to go into a change room and be naked around other guys before going into an onsen. He got nervous. He has never been in a change room before. We tried to assure him that no one was going to be staring at his penis but he was still upset. You could see the fear in his eyes. Or maybe it was the alcohol.
Speaking of onsen, Bernard wants me to sneak my camera into the onsen. Cameras are forbidden there because of all the naked people but he seems to think that he will forget the experience if he doesn't have a photograph of it.
We have basically hashed out all the over riding plans for the Tokyo leg of the trip. We have to book the hotel and figure out what to do with the bulk of our luggage during the Hakone trip. We will probably be able to leave it at the hotel in Tokyo, as many hotels in Japan offer services like that.
We couldn't finalize our plans for Osaka because Olsen was not there but we are very close to getting that done.
Not much else to report.
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