For my trip to Taiwan, 2003 Jan31 to Feb17, I carried 512MB of flash memory for my Nikon E5700 digital camera,
which allowed me to snap over 400 photos (full size JPEGs at NORMAL compression) between visits to a
computer. 512MB is more memory than most computers presently have, and is roughly a full CD's worth.
I came home with my photos on 2 CD's, having burned them on Richard's computer - they would have fit
comfortably on one, had I finished the job of sorting & discarding.
Developing being free does have a downside: I tend to snap so many pictures, that going through them becomes
an enormous job.
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In the Tokyo airport, enroute:
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A shot of the Northwest part of the air-terminal, showing a semi-circular
arrangement of 747's, one of which brought me to Tokyo.
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Some signs I can read most of.
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Others not at all - like this scary looking Departures screen.
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But if you wait 20 seconds, the Departures screen switches to English, ...
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In Taiwan:
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Richard & Betty come to meet me at the Kao-hsiung (pronounced Gow-shung) airport, with their Mitsubishi
Varica van.
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We stop at the Night Market in Pin-tung (pronounced Pin-dung).
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And at some street venders.
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And arrive at Richard & Betty's apartment in Pin-tung. Note the large photo on the wall behind Richard
is of him on skis in the Yukon - I wonder what that photo does for one on a hot and muggy
summer day in Taiwan?
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Betty teaches English in their house, mostly to children, which may explain why the wall is labeled "wall",
the bookshelf is labeled "bookshelf", etc. It also explains those charts around the living-room showing
which mouth-parts are used to make each sound in spoken English.
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Some lilies in a vase.
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