New keys recut

I mentioned yesterday that I had new keys cut for our new front door lock, and they didn’t work. So today after my morning ethics classes I went to the hardware store again and took the keys back. The woman there examined the cut keys and tried putting them in the cutting machine again to see if it would take a bit more metal off. And lo it did, and I tested the keys in the lock there and then (since the lock isn’t in the door yet), and they worked. 🎉

I’m not sure I did much else of note today. Oh, I sent off a package containing copies of my two Irregular Webcomic! books:

Burning Down the Alehouse Prepare for the Wurst

A reader asked if I still had any left, and yes, I do have a few copies of each. So they sent some money and I mailed off the package.

I also did a bit of thinking about contacting an electrician. We’re planning to replace some light fittings in our place with new ones, and intending to go to a showroom on the weekend to choose some styles. Then we need to get an electrician in to install them. I tried phoning the old electrician we used many years ago, but it seems he’s no longer working. So I contacted our apartment building committee to ask if they had any preferred electricians that we could use. I got some details, but a bit late so I’ll call tomorrow.

More Japanese birds

Today I worked on the next Darths & Droids strip, then got stuck into finishing off processing and uploading photos from my last day in Tokyo. I also went through and found all the photos I’d taken of birds, and identified all the species. Some of them were a bit tricky, since I only got shots from a distance with my phone. But I’m pleased to say that overall I added seven new species to my list, plus a Eurasian coot, which I’ve photographed in other countries but not Japan.

Including brown-eared bulbul:

Brown-eared bulbul

Eurasian teals:

Eurasian teal

Tufted ducks:

Tufted duck

And common pochard:

Common pochard

At lunch I took Scully for a walk to the hardware store, where I had some new keys cut for the new lock that will be installed on our new door when the fire safety people come to replace our old door on Friday. Unfortunately when I got back home and tested the new keys they didn’t work! The supplied keys have six places where the metal has been removed to set a new level different from the blank. But the cut keys only have metal removed from the five spots closest to the back of the key. There’s a whole spot nearest the tip of the key which wasn’t ground down. So now I’m going to have to go back and either get them properly cut or my money back and go somewhere else. This time I’ll take the actual lock with me and test them in the shop before leaving.

This evening, fried rice for dinner, followed by three ethics classes.

Getting back in the swing Tuesday

I got another good sleep, although I went to bed a bit late due to not finishing ethics classes until 10pm last night. Tonight should be an earlier night.

My first task today was writing the new lesson plan for the new week’s classes. The topic this week is “Always Connected”, discussing the modern phenomenon of being able to contact and be contacted at all times, no matter where you are, thanks to mobile phones and devices. I start with a story about myself, and the fact that when I was the age of the kids in the classes, I had a pen-pal. I think I’ll have to explain what a pen-pal is! And how over time, as technology advanced, we moved from exchanging letters to e-mails, and then onto social media. And along the way I ask the kids about the effects of this technology change on how we communicate and our well-being. In the afternoon I had two classes to finish off the “Danger!” topic from last week, then in the evening the first class on the new topic.

After completing the plan (before the afternoon classes), I went for a walk with Scully up to the pie shop to get some lunch. They had a new special today, a peri-peri chicken pie. This sounded great so I tried one, and it was indeed very good.

I also spent a bit of time processing some photos from my last day on Tokyo. Here are some from Nezu Jinja shrine, in Nezu, Tokyo. The entrance, with the market:

Nezu Jinja shrine

Torii gates:

Nezu Jinja shrine

Torii and a pavilion overlooking a koi pond:

Nezu Jinja shrine

Ema plaques and the main temple building:

Ema at Nezu Jinja shrine

A warbling white-eye. Taken with my phone!:

Warbling white-eye

Back to the grind

Today was my first full day home from my trip, and it was a busy one. I had two ethics classes in the morning. Unfortunately about half an hour before the first class I got a message from my Internet provider saying that there was emergency maintenance being carried out, and my broadband connection would be interrupted, starting in 20 minutes!

As it turned out, it was a bit later than that. I had time to start the Zoom class and one kid joined in… and then my network dropped out. I’d had time to send a message to the students warning them that the class might be cancelled because of this. The net came back about half an hour later, so my next class was unaffected, but I had to refund the class fees for all the students in the first class.

After the second one, I had to quickly get ready and dash out the door to take Scully to my wife’s work, and then catch a train into the university for today’s Data Engineering lecture. I made it with a few minutes to spare, but had to eat a quick lunch of sushi that I’d picked up on the way during the first few minutes of the professor starting the lecture.

After the lecture was over, I caught a train back home and then went out for a run, since I haven’t done any for a couple of weeks due to my trip. It was warm and humid, and I’m still a bit tired, so I only did 2.5k instead of my usual 5.

I made pizza for dinner. Our usual pumpkin and walnut toppings. And then had two more ethics classes late in the evening before bedtime.

I processed some photos from the Japan trip today, but I haven’t uploaded any new ones. Hopefully tomorrow I’ll have a bit more time to show off some photos from the last day there.

Oh, I also think I won’t bring back the listing of new comics content to this blog. I didn’t have time to do it while travelling, and it’s just easier not having to do it every day. Anyone reading this probably doesn’t need the reminders!

Tokyo day 8: Nezu Jinja, Yanaka Ginza, flying home

(I missed posting an update yesterday as I was away from WiFi. So this is Saturday’s and Sunday’s events combined. Also, I haven’t had time to upload any photos yet, so this post doesn’t have any photos.)

Saturday 1 March

We set an alarm for 07:30 this morning. We planned to message my in-laws to arrange a breakfast time, but we were ready to go well before them, so my wife and I headed over to the City Bakery by ourselves. I had the granola this time, which was good, but a very small serve. I’d normally have three times that much at home for breakfast. We were finished pretty much as the in-laws arrived, so we just said hi in passing and went back to our room to finish packing and check out of the hotel. We arranged to meet after checking out at 10:30. Everyone dropped their luggage at the hotel luggage room, to be picked up in the evening.

We caught a Yamanote Line train north to Nishi-Nippori, where we changed for a Chiyoda Line train to take us two stops to Nezu. This is further north than I’ve ever been before in Tokyo, seeing new sights and neighbourhoods. Right near Nezu Station is Nezu Jinja, a Shinto shrine. This one is smaller and less well known that some others, but notable for having hundreds of red torii gates, which are rarer in Tokyo than at the famous temples in Kyoto. I thought this would be a great finish to our time in Tokyo for my in-laws.

When we got to the temple, there were a handful of market stalls just inside the entrance, selling mostly foodstuffs: rice crackers, mochi, cakes, and one selling fresh vegetables.Beyond this was a small pond with dozens of tortoises sunning themselves on a rock. People were tossing food, and dozens of pigeons were flocking around for it, plus another couple of birds which I couldn’t identify until I looked them up on eBird: brown-eared bulbuls. I’m not sure if I’ve ever seen this species before. A bit later I got a decent photo of one, so that’s good too.

Near here was the beginning of the path under the torii. I was surprised how small they were, each one with an opening basically the size of a door, not much bigger than would allow a person through. I had been expecting them to be much larger, like the ones at Fushimi Inari Taisha in Kyoto. Still, it was fun and very scenic to walk through the corridor created by the gates, and there weren’t nearly as many people as in Kyoto. There was one Spanish couple who took forever taking photos of each other at multiple scenic spots, causing us to have to wait interminably for a photo without them in it, but for the most part it was pretty quiet and easy to get good photos.

After finishing the torii walk, we explored the rest of the shrine, with one large courtyard and building, and a few smaller outbuildings and features. It wasn’t a large shrine, so we finished without taking too long and then began walking towards the Yanaka Ginza shopping street for our next sight of the day.

On the way we stopped at the Art Cafe Polypus for lunch and drinks. My wife decided to go explore around the area on her own while the rest of us ate. I got a chicken curry donburi and it came with a drink as a lunch set, so I chose the house-made ginger lemonade. Both the food and drink were pretty good. We sat up in a room on the third floor which just had three tables in it, while the counter and a few other tables were on the second floor. We thought we were the only customers until we left, when we saw that the second floor was full of people.

Rejoining my wife, we walked towards Yanaka Ginza. This is an old shopping street that survived the war, with many older buildings crowding a narrow street lined with shops. As we got near, the tourist density grew, showing that this place was more well-known that Nezu Jinja. The shopping street itself was picturesque, but somewhat crowded, with hundreds of people walking in both directions. There were street food stalls, restaurants, and various shops, many with interesting things to look at. My wife bought us a ceramic bowl, like a slightly small rice bowl, in the wabi-sabi style with some asymmetry to the shape.

After reaching the end of the street we were at Nippori Station, where we boarded a train back to Shinagawa. We arrived there about 15:30. My in-laws went into the hotel to rest up a bit, while my wife and I ventured out again to walk around and keep moving, rather than sit and for a couple of hours. We walked back over to Gotanda to look around some of the shops there. On the way we passed two embassies, the embassy of Iceland, and one with the plaque on the door written in Cyrillic script that I couldn’t read but later searched and found it to be the Embassy of Serbia.

When we reached Gotanda, there was a small shopping mall, but it didn’t have a lot in it. After walking around a few of the streets M. decided she could do with a coffee and I searched cafes in the area, finding Café au Lait Tokyo. This was also up an unassuming old staircase on the second floor of a building. When we arrived they said they only had room at the bar for us, so we sat there. There was another room up the front with a window facing the street where there were a few tables with very plush lounge chairs and sofas. They only served café au lait coffee, but you could customise it in various ways with amounts of milk, amounts of sugar, different toppings, flavours, types of milk, etc. They guy behind the bar gave us each a small slip of paper and highlighter pens to mark our customisations. I was worried they’d ask me to order a coffee in order to sit there, but they were okay when we only ordered one drink. My wife also got a grilled cheese sandwich, asking for no ham on the ham and cheese menu item, and then having to say no mustard or ketchup either when the guy asked if she wanted those. I chose a mini dessert of a caramel mouse cake, which was a smallish serving, but enough to satisfy a sweet tooth. The coffee came in a small wide bowl without any handle, and she said it was good.

From here we decided to take a further walk down towards Osaki, along the Meguro River. I thought we might see some more birds, but the river was very canal-like and we didn’t see any. We found the Osaki New City shopping mall and looked around. It was larger and better than the one at Gotanda, but not very big, with only two moderate sized floors of shops.

Once done with that we headed back to the hotel, via another route. At first we passed mainly office buildings, but we turned into a residential neighbourhood and this was much more interesting, with a mix of old houses and some very new and expensive looking apartment buildings. We arrived back at the hotel at 18:00.

We met up with my in-laws, collected our luggage, and left for Haneda Airport about 18:20. We caught the Keikyu Line Haneda Express and arrived at the airport just before 19:00. We passed through security and customs, which were a little busy so it took some time, and then had a couple of hours to wait for our flight. My wife and I did some stretching exercises to help ensure we didn’t get stiff or cramped during the long hours of sitting on the flight. We boarded and departed just a few minutes behind schedule.

Sunday 2 March

Despite not really sleeping on the flight, the time seemed to pass faster than I expected, and before we knew it they were turning the lights on for the breakfast service. We flew into Sydney Airport from the north, and had a good view of the city out the left side of the plane. We landed just before 09:30.

Unfortunately there were several delays getting home. First, the terminal was full when we arrived, so the plane had to wait on the tarmac until a gate became available. Then there were a few flights arriving at the same time, and there was a long queue to get through the automated passport checking gates, so that took some time. We didn’t have to wait for checked luggage, so we left my in-laws at the baggage claim since were were heading to our respective homes by different transport, so there was no point waiting for them. My wife and I headed down to the train station and boarded a train to Central where we intended to change for a train on our own line that would drop us a short walk from home.

But as we pulled into Central it was clear that something was wrong. None of the other platforms in the entire station had so much as a single person on them waiting for trains. This could mean only one thing: the trains were not running. Obviously the airport train was, but it seemed no other train line was. Checking online, I discovered that the only trains running were essentially a shuttle between the airport and Central, and the Metro lin, which was also running a reduced service, with a shuttle between Central and Martin Place, and another shuttle from Martin Place to Tallawong. We could take the Metro and walk a longer distance from the nearest station to our home. Normally this would be a single train, but today for some reason we had to change trains at Martin Place. So our trip home had an extra train change and a walk about twice as long at the home end.

My wife stopped for an iced coffee in the Sydney heat and humidity that was a shock after being in winter Tokyo. We arrived at home, for one more shock.

When the lift door opened on our floor of our apartment building, we were greeted by the sight of a large plastic bin sitting in the corridor, catching a continual stream of drips leaking from a light fitting in the ceiling. The bin was half full, and the carpet in the corridor soaking wet!

We quickly went into our apartment and checked if the ceiling was leaking water anywhere. Thankfully it was all dry, but this was a definite moment of panic, thinking maybe our bedroom or living room might have been flooded while we were away. A building management representative arrived soon afterwards with a plumber, and I asked what the story was, and the guy said the leak only happened two or three hours ago, and was a hot water pipe in the corridor, which the plumber was about to fix. Phew!


That ends the travel diary, but we had a few others things to do today. We went grocery shopping to restock with vegetables and fruit and milk. My wife’s friend brought Scully back over to drop her off, and my wife went with them to catch up and have a coffee out while I prepared for my ethics classes. I had three tonight, and it was a bit of a struggle with tiredness, but I managed okay.

Time for an early night to bed and hopefully a good sleep before tomorrow, which will be my usual very busy Monday.

Tokyo day 7: ISO meeting day 4, Sekaido Shinjuku, Akasaka

Friday 28 February

We set an alarm for 07:30, to give me time to get ready and leave at 08:00 to walk to the last day of my ISO Photography Standards meeting. I had some leftover sweet food items as a makeshift partial breakfast before heading out, and picked up an onigiri and a cup of vegetable sticks from a 7-11 near the meeting venue to fill it out with something a bit healthier.

The last technical session was about image information content, measuring camera reproduction fidelity using metrics based on Shannon information theory. Following this we had the administrative closing sessions, going over action items and planning for future meetings. The next will be in Berlin in June, which my wife and I will also be travelling to. At the start of the lunch break I had to participate in editing of resolutions, a job which falls to one representative from each country. As the only Australian attending, I always end up doing this task.

For lunch I walked over to the MSB Tamachi building, which has a couple of floors of restaurants. I looked around before choosing こびんちょ (Kobincho) a place that had a lunch special of a bowl of udon noodles with a small tempura-don bowl of tempura prawns and vegetables on rice. It was pretty good!

Tempura udon lunch

After lunch, the meeting concluded at 14:29, one minute earlier than listed in the agenda.

I walked back via another different route, this time taking a walkway along one of the canals running north-south through Shibaura. This was a more pleasant walk, and I took my time a bit since I saw several different birds: mallards, tufted ducks, eastern spot-billed ducks, eurasian coots, a white wagtail, and lots and lots of black-headed gulls. I also saw what looked like an eagle soaring high overhead, but couldn’t identify the species.

Black-headed gulls

As I neared the hotel, walking through Shinagawa Station, I spotted a very bewildered looking young woman with a large suitcase looking around in obvious confusion. I asked her if she needed help finding anything and she answered in an American accent, saying she wanted to get tickets for the Narita Express to the airport and her phone had died and she didn’t know where to go. I knew there were multiple ticket offices in the station for different train companies, and checked which was the right one on my phone, then pointed her in the right direction. She was very grateful – I hope she made it to the airport okay!

I got back to the hotel a bit after 15:00, and the others were waiting for me in the hotel lobby, keen to go out again! They’d spent the morning walking down to Kitashinagawa to explore the old style neighbourhood there, which we’d discovered ourselves last trip. But now, rejoining me, the plan was to head out to Sekaido, the giant art supply store in Shinjuku. My mother-in-law is a keen artist, working in pencil and watercolour, and wanted to browse and maybe buy some things that would be difficult to get at home. And my wife has recently taken up ink sketching and watercolour as well.

We took a Yamanote Line train to Shinjuku and headed across to Sekaido. The walk passed through a vibrant shopping district, and the others stopped to check out another of the shops before we got to our destination. Once in Sekaido, we explored the third floor with painting supplies, then the second with paper and drawing supplies. This took some time as there was so much to see, and everyone but me bought a few things. We briefly looked around the ground floor, which had stationery, before leaving to head back to Shinjuku Station to catch a Marunouchi Line subway train to Akasaka-Mitsuke Station.

Here we walked a short distance to Hitori Shabu Shabu Nanadaime Matsugoro, a shabu shabu restaurant which I’d booked for dinner. When we walked in the door, a woman asked if we had a reservation, and when I said yes, she knew my name instantly without having to check. She showed us to four adjacent bar seats that were part of an oval surrounding the central kitchen area, and then explained the menu to us in moderately good English. She was extremely friendly and helpful, and after our meal my wife gave her one of the Australia stickers we’d brought to give to helpful people.

Hitori Shabu Shabu Nanadaime Matsugoro

We all ordered food, my wife getting the vegetable plate, while the rest of us got a meat plate, which came with vegetables as well, and we all ordered an additional bowl of rice. The meals came with ponzu sauce and sesame sauce, and additional condiments of chopped spring onion and dried garlic to mix in to taste. There was also a small bottle of chilli oil, which my wife mistook for soy sauce and poured a lot on her rice before tasting it and realising her error! My in-laws had never had shabu shabu before and were very impressed with the variety of ingredients and flavours of the sauces, and the fun of cooking everything yourself in the steaming hotpot, which was really pleasing. I was a little worried they might not like some of the new food experiences, but it’s been a positive experience for them, which is great.

Hitori Shabu Shabu Nanadaime Matsugoro

After the meal, we pondered finding some place to have drinks and maybe a small dessert. I searched the area on Google Maps and located the Bar Wagokoro Akasaka, which was described in Maps as a “cocktail chocolate pairing bar”, which sounded ideal, and it was only two short blocks away. We walked there, but had trouble locating it until my wife spotted a photo outside one building which showed cocktails and chocolates. There was a logo with Japanese on it, but no other indication what sort of a place it was, and the indication that it was on the third floor.

We went up in the tiny lift and emerged in an intimate room with only 15 seats: two tables of four and seven along the bar, facing an impressive wall of whiskies. The top shelf was entirely Japanese whiskies, the second shelf entirely Scotch, and the lowest shelf had other whiskies and various other bar essentials and liqueurs.

Bar Wagokoro Akasaka

The bartender, immaculate in a blue pinstripe suit, brought us English menus and explained the various chocolates and selection options. I chose an “oriental chocolate cocktail” with cinnamon and cardamom, my sister-in-law got a “ruby chocolate and raspberry” cocktail, my wife got a non-alcoholic version of the same, and her mother chose an apple one.

Bar Wagokoro Akasaka

I ordered the sweets assortment, which allowed two choices from the menu of 21 different types of chocolates, plus it came with a selection of other small chocolates, bites of gateaux, and dried fruits, presented on a spectacular patterned plate, while my in-laws chose individual chocolates each. The bartender also brought us complimentary rice crackers.

Bar Wagokoro Akasaka

The drinks and chocolates were extremely well presented and delicious. The bartender was the only staff present, and also the owner according to some online reviews, and very friendly. M. gave him another of our Australia stickers in appreciation. This was a truly delightful find and a delicious way to end our last dinner before heading to the airport tomorrow.

We walked the short distance back to Akasaka-Mitsuge Station and caught a Ginza Line train to Shimbashi, where we changed for a Tokaido Line train to Shinagawa. The Tokaido Line trains are more express and Shinagawa was only one stop away. We got off there and headed back to our hotel for our last night in Tokyo.

Tokyo day 6: Asakusa, ISO meeting day 3

Thursday 27 February

We had a leisurely start this morning, getting ready and planning to meet my in-laws at 08:00 for breakfast. We met up and walked over to the City Bakery at Shinagawa Station. We managed to get a table together after a man moved to make way for us. I had scrambled eggs with prosciutto, while the others had baked goods and coffee.

We headed off to catch a train about 09:00, taking the through train on the Keikyu Line to the Asakusa subway line, and alighting at Asakusa Station. My sister-in-law had looked up a cafe that does intricate three-dimensional caffe latte art and wanted to check it out, and it was only a few steps from one of the subway exits, so we walked there, but discovered the place indicated by Google Maps was an empty building! Oh well.

We continued on to the Kaminarimon Gate and then through it to the array of market stall shops beyond. The area was bustling with tourists, though not nearly as crowded as last time M. and I were here in summer, and of course nowhere near as uncomfortably hot. We browsed slowly along the shops, with the others buying a few things along the way.

Sensō-ji temple, Asakusa

Eventually we reached the Senso-ji temple. Last time my wife and I were here, the crowds and the weather made us turn back before even going in to see the temple. But today was a lot better and we entered through the huge gate leading into the main courtyard. This Buddhist temple was very different from the Shinto shrine of Meiji Jingu. Here instead of purchasing offerings you could buy fortunes, randomised by shaking a tube of numbered sticks and then taking a printed fortune from a matching numbered drawer. My wife got one and drew a “regular fortune”. The instructions printed near the fortune area said if you get a good fortune you should take it with you, whereas if you get a bad fortune you should tie the paper to nearby racks to leave the bad luck behind you.

Sensō-ji temple, Asakusa

We exited to the west side of the main building into the surrounding gardens. These were not very large, but contained well-kept hedges and trees, and a lot of statues, carvings, stone lanterns, smaller outbuildings, and standing stones carved with masses of Japanese text. Reading the informational signs revealed that some of these objects were hundreds of years old, with one stone thought to have been made as far back as 1150.

Sensō-ji temple, Asakusa

From this west side of the temple, the others spotted an interesting looking side street with shops that they wanted to check out, so we continued in that direction rather than heading back towards Kaminarimon. We end up doing a large loop around several blocks, but partway through we decided to stop for lunch. It was getting close to midday and we needed to be back on a train heading south soon after 13:00 for me to make the resumption of my ISO Standards meeting at 14:00. (The morning was taken off to allow attendees to visit the CP+ camera show in Yokohama, during the VIP and media opening time, before it opened to the general public.)

I searched the area for suitable eating places to satisfy our various food requirements, and found a cafe called Coffee Kan not far away. It did simple sandwiches and pancakes and some rice and pasta dishes. We got a table straight away and ordered sandwiches, while my wife decided to go out and look around and have the scone she’d brought from our breakfast venue. The sandwiches were pretty good, with nice fresh ingredients and thick fluffy white bread slices.

After eating we met up with my wife outside, who had wandered off to look at some more shops in the area. We walked back to Asakusa Station and boarded a train heading south. On the train I realised that it didn’t seem to stop at Shinagawa, and looking at the line map I realised the subway line branched at Sengakuji, and we were on a train that went the other way. My wife confirmed this with a nice older lady who spoke English, who told us we needed to change trains there. This was only one stop past Mita, where I needed to get off for my ISO meeting, so I suggested we all get off there, and I could check the destination indicators to see what train they needed to get to Shinagawa. I figured it’d probably be the next train behind us. The old lady got off with us and said she was going to Shinagawa too, so she could help my co-travellers to get there. I left them at Mita, exiting the station and walking over to Shibaura for my afternoon of meetings.

This afternoon the first technical session was on image flare characterisation. There was a lot of discussion on determining the appropriate exposure time for taking photos to measure image flare. This is a tricky topic because normal camera exposure is designed for scenes that humans might look at, with more or less even lighting for the most part. But to measure image flare you need to take photos of bright points of light in a dark room, and the camera exposure system freaks out and doesn’t know what to do. So we have to come up with a way of defining what the exposure should be so that you can see and measure the camera flare on the resulting images, without it being overexposed.

The second session was discussing low light performance with hand-held camera shake to evaluate image stabilisation methods. For this one, Dietmar had collated the experiments he’d performed using all of the meeting participants as observers, judging the image quality of various degradations (the one I did on Tuesday). He’d done some preliminary statistics and showed off the numbers. He plans to run many more tests with other observers to build up a solid foundation for determining threshold levels for image acceptable/unacceptable degradation due to low light and image stabilisation.

We finished just before 17:00 and I walked back to our hotel. I walked a different way this time, crossing over the canal to the Shiba side and walking along the main road back to Shinagawa. I detoured off the main road to take a couple of back streets in one area, that looked on the map like it had a lot of shops and restaurants. However it turned out to be mostly residential with only a few restaurants scattered here and there.

After rejoining M. in the hotel room, we arranged to meet T. and K. at 18:00 to go to dinner. We had nothing booked for tonight, with a vague plan to maybe go get some ramen, since ramen places don’t take bookings. I’d done some checking online and found that Ippudo did vegan ramen, and they had a branch in Gotanda, just two stops away on the Yamonote Line, so it was simple to get to. But today at the meeting I double checked the menu and discovered that only certain Ippudo stores had the vegan ramen dishes. The only places in Tokyo were at Shinjuku and Ginza. So we decided to head to Ginza, where the Ippudo was very close to one of the exits from Higashi-Ginza Station.

We arrived and there were two couples ahead of us in the queue for tables, but there were empty seats inside being cleaned up, so we didn’t have long to wait before we were all ushered in. We had a good table for four in the back corner. I ordered the “Akamaru” ramen, which is an Ippudo innovation based on the more traditional “Shiromaru” ramen, which my in-laws opted for when I explained the differences in flavour and richness. My wife decided not to have the vegan ramen after all, and opted for some simple rice with a soft-boiled egg. We also had a serve of gyoza to share as a side. My ramen was really good, and in-laws declared that theirs was really delicious too.

Ramen at Ippudo Ginza

We headed back to our hotel. My mother-in-law turned in for the night while the rest of us went up to the bar at Table 9 Tokyo, the fancy bar/restaurant on the 39th floor of our hotel. It was very funky with ambient dance music and lots of colour-changing lights. The drinks menu was impressive, containing some super expensive whiskies. We had a drink each and stared out at the mesmerising view of Tokyo at night. Our table faced a window looking north to the centre of the city, so it was full of buildings and lights.

Table 9 Tokyo bar

After this we headed back down to our rooms for the night.

Tokyo day 5: ISO meeting day 2

Wednesday 26 February

We got up at 06:15 and prepared for a quick departure. We need to be at the LOVE sculpture (by Robert Indiana) in Shinjuku by 07:50 for my wife and her mother and sister to meet up for their guided day tour to Mount Fuji. I ran down to the 7-11 to get a caffe latte for my wife while she got up and dressed. I quickly ate a couple of the onigiri I’d bought last night and we dashed out to meet my in-laws in the hotel lobby. I led us all over to Shinagawa Station where we caught a train to Shinjuku again (as for last night’s dinner). Being only 07:00, rush hour hadn’t really gotten underway and the train was not full. This time we wanted a western exit. We found a long tunnel that led for a few blocks west until I decided to ascend to street level. From there it was an easy walk a block to the sculpture meeting point.

LOVE sculpture, Shinjuku

We were a bit early and my sister-in-law went to a nearby 7-11 to get a coffee. The tour operator arrived and had the crowd of people waiting there queue up for two different tours, the Mount Fuji one, and a Tokyo city tour. The first was the most popular, with about 50 or 60 people queueing up to register. There were about four buses parked nearby, so presumably they are taking multiple loads of people. My wife got in the queue and I went to collect the in-laws and show them where she was waiting.

With the tour group met up, I left them to head back to Shibaura for today’s ISO meeting session. I thought the best way might be to take a subway line east across central Tokyo, but checking routes revealed the quickest way there was in fact to hop back on the Yamanote Line and go back south through Shinagawa to Tamachi Station. So I did that rather than wrangle with multiple subway lines and changing trains. The station and train was more busy now, with the train ride being full, but not overly crowded. I made it to the CIPA building by 08:30, in plenty of time.

The first technical session today was a discussion of revising the standard on measuring camera resolution. An expert proposed making changes to take into account the fact that different cameras have different colour conversion matrices because of the construction of their RGB filters, so converting the raw signals to luminance to calculate resolution should differ depending on the camera being tested. There was some discussion about this and the exact details of how cameras do this, with Paul (from Apple) pointing out that cameras which measure white balance take that into account and convert the colours differently, so it might not only depend on the hardware, but also very from shot to shot. This needs to be investigated further, so discussion will take place offline outside this meeting.

The next session was about characterising depth camera measurements. This is still in the early development stages, with some basic performance metrics being worked on and tested. The presentation went on to propose further types of measurements that could be made to characterise depth measurements. One interesting point was that some depth cameras produce point clouds while others produce depth maps, and there’s no easy or direct way to compare these two, so there has to be some consideration of how to measure both types with cross-consistency. And another is that it’s difficult to align a depth image for quantitative measurement of resolution because the spatial resolution is often so low that any alignment markers are lost and even with a symmetrical circular target object, the resolution is so low that it’s difficult to locate the centre of the pattern.

The rest of the day was devoted to high dynamic range (HDR) imaging topics. First was a “best practices” discussion for topics related to how to handle and process HDR image files – more like a list of guidelines and recipes than definitional standards. Then was a session on the standardisation of HDR image file format, and then definition of a gain map for conversion to SDR and another representations. And finally a session on HDR camera readouts to enable shooting HDR with quantitative exposure and dynamic range indicators on the camera display.

In between we broke for lunch. I went with Atsushi-san again, and this time he said he’d remembered a ramen place we could go to, since I mentioned ramen yesterday but we ended up going go to a soba/udon place instead. He led us across Tamachi Station to the street on the other side, out of Shibaura and into Shiba. Here he said there was a building with several restaurants inside, including a good ramen place he’d eaten at last year. However when we arrived, the building wasn’t there! It was just a fenced-off hole in the ground, with heavy vehicles ready for a new construction. So we crossed the main road and Atsushi suggested we try a narrow street lined with restaurants. We found a small ramen place with a dozen tightly spaced stools facing the counter and two guys cooking behind it, called らーめん もとまる (Ramen Motomaru).

Ramen Motomaru, Shiba, Tokyo

There was (surprisingly) no queue, so we used the machine at the front to order tonkotsu ramen. We had to specify if we wanted the noodles hard, medium, or soft, and I chose hard.

Ramen Motomaru, Shiba, Tokyo

The hot ramen was delivered just a few minutes later, with a whole soft-boiled egg which I had to cut in half with chopsticks. There was a slice of pork and also small chunks of pork belly in the broth with the noodles, and two sheets of nori.

Ramen Motomaru, Shiba, Tokyo

I added some kimchee from a condiment container. The whole thing was really good and very filling. Atsushi said that here you could get a noodle refill for free if you were still hungry, but I definitely didn’t need any more. After eating and swapping stories we headed back to the meeting for the afternoon session.

The meeting closed for the day at 17:30, and I walked back to the hotel in the twilight. The day was warmer than it has been the past few days, and didn’t feel too bad with a brisk walk. My co-travellers had returned on the shinkansen from Odawara after their Mount Fuji tour and were having a coffee at Blue Bottle when I messaged that I was about to leave the meeting. They spent some time browsing the shops in the hotel lobby area before coming up, so I actually beat them back to the room.

My in-laws decided to do their own thing together for dinner, leaving me and my wife to share a dinner by ourselves. I suggested we walk over to Gotanda, where there appear to be dozens of restaurants according to Google Maps. It was an easy 15 minute walk through areas we hadn’t explored before. Since randomly finding vegetarian Japanese for is next to impossible, we decided to try the Trattoria Arietta, which was one of the first places we came across. It looked very nice and had great reviews, and Italian is reliable for vegetarian options.

We entered and they had a table free in what could be used as a private room, but currently split between a party of four and us. The ambience was nice, with framed photos of Italian sights in black and white on one wall, and colour photos of the Amalfi coast on another. The menu was handwritten in Japanese and English and our waiter, a keen young man, spoke in halting English. The specials blackboard was only in Japanese, but he explained it in English for us. We ordered an insalata caprese as an appetiser, then my wife got the vegetable risotto while I chose the special second dish, which was braised beef cheeks in a red wine sauce. We also ordered a side of roasted vegetables, which the waiter recommended, although I’d already decided on them before he mentioned them. He brought a complimentary bread bowl, with two chunks of focaccia plus two thick slices of baguette.

Everything was delicious, and we washed it down with glasses of excellent red wine, first trying a medium-bodied red from Jura in France, and then a more robust Italian Montepulciano. One oddity was they brought the vegetables out after the salad, and our main dishes were nowhere to be seen. So we ate the vegetables, and the mains only appeared once we’d finished. The beef cheeks were truly excellent, falling apart with a fork they were so tender. My wife said the risotto was great too. The waiter asked if we wanted dessert as he cleared our plates, and we said yes. He reappeared with a large platter with six different mini-desserts on it and described them for us: pannacotta, tiramisu, a polenta cake, home made chocolates, cassata, and another type of gelato. Both of us thought that this was a sharing dessert platter that he’d automatically assumed we wanted when we said we’d have dessert, and were a bit disappointed when he explained further this was the menu and we were to choose desserts from the selection. We chose the pannacotta and cassata, and he took the delicious looking platter away. The actual desserts arrived, larger portions than on the menu display, and were both amazingly good.

It was a really delicious meal and good experience all round. The three men and one woman, dressed in business attire, at the table next to us appeared to be having a set menu banquet as they all had identical dishes in several courses, and were still having their dessert by the time we left. My wife gave our waiter a sticker of a surfing koala from her supply of gifts to give to helpful people, and he was delightfully surprised as he accepted it.

We walked back to our hotel via a slightly different route to see more of the neighbourhood. The area between Shinagawa Station and Gotanda was very quiet, with narrow streets and small houses. Some of the homes were very fancy and expensive looking, some in western architectural styles that didn’t look Japanese at all. It was also very hilly – we had to go up and down two quite steep hills, using steps that connected the roads. Back at the hotel, we retired for the night.

Tokyo day 4: ISO meeting, Shinjuku

Tuesday 25 February

We woke up with the sunrise around 07:00 this morning. I ran down to the 7-11 to get some quick breakfast items: onigiri for me and a red bean paste bun for my wife She wanted a smooth paste bun, but they only had the coarse ones, so I got one of them and also grabbed a pack of “peanut cream” buns, thinking they’d be something like peanut butter inside. But she said they’d probably be some sort of peanut flavoured whipped cream, which on reflection I guessed was probably right.

She was going out with her mother and sister today to Ginza to look around at the shops and to attend their tea ceremony which we’d booked, at 11:00. I had the first day of my ISO Photography Standards meeting. I’d checked last night and discovered it was only two stops away on the train, but also only a 30-minute walk from our hotel. So I chose to walk there, rather than brave the rush hour trains for a five minute ride.

It was a pleasant walk, mostly through office areas. I noticed in front of several buildings were workers with plastic bags and long tongs, picking up tiny pieces of rubbish from the footpaths and surrounding areas. It looked like they got office workers to go out and do a few minutes of picking up stuff to clean the area around their building before heading in to start work for the day. I passed a primary school, where a man who looked like the principal, dressed in a suit, greeting all the kids and saying good morning (in Japanese) as they arrived. I took my time as I arrived and took a few photos of the canals that I walked over.

Yachiyo Bridge, Shibaura

I reached the CIPA office building in good time, and met Eric outside, who misremembered where the entrance was, but we found it and went up to the third floor for the meeting.

We started the meeting at 9:00, welcomed by our new convener, Katoh-san, who has taken over from Scott who ended his term in Sydney last October. There are free drinks here from a vending machine, and a huge array of sweet and savoury snacks.

Meeting room snacks

They’re not providing lunch though, but there are plenty of restaurants and convenience stores nearby to get food.

The morning session was administrative stuff and planning for future meetings. Dietmar from Germany is also running a perceptual experiment and asking meeting attendees to participate as observers. I was the first one to do the experiment in the first coffee break. He had three photos— one of sushi, one of a landscape (which looked like Scotland), one of three people’s faces—and was asking me to judge which image in a sequence of progressively more degraded images would be the last one I’d feel happy hanging on a wall as an artistic image. The degradations were chroma, exposure, noise, resolution, and texture. I’m very fussy with imperfections in photos intended for display, so I chose ones very early in the degradation series of ten levels, usually picking only level 1 or 2 as the last acceptable one, which prompted a comment from Dietmar that I was indeed very fussy with them.

At the lunch break I suggested to Atsushi-san that we could go get lunch together. He had invited us to dinner with his wife in Yokohama last time we were in Japan, and we had some email exchanges before this trip to try to organise something, but his wife ended up travelling this week, and then with my in-laws on this trip I organised some restaurant bookings for us, and so dinner with Atsushi kind of fell through. So I thought I better have lunch with him today! He took me a short way to Teuchi Soba Shibata, a small place that did soba and udon noodles. I did suggest ramen, and we passed two ramen places, but both had long queues out the door, whereas the soba place we got a table right away. The menu was in handwritten Japanese calligraphy, which he translated for me. There were only a few dishes, and I chose the hot udon noodles with curry, which turned out to be minced pork and some vegetables over rice. It was pretty good and inexpensive too.

Udon curry set

Back at the meeting, we had technical sessions on image stabilisation and vocabulary definitions. These were shorter than scheduled and we ended with an extra hour for a break before beginning work on machine vision image characterisation. During the extra break I went for a walk and explored some of the surrounding streets of Shibaura, in the area of restaurants on the island south of Tamachi Station. There are plenty of little restaurants around that look good for lunch over the next few days, but ordering without knowing Japanese may be a problem.

After this break we reassembled for the technical session on machine vision, the last session of the day. There was a social dinner function tonight for the meeting attendees, but I skipped it to walk back to the hotel and meet up with my family for our own dinner. T. was a bit worn out from spending the day shopping in Ginza, so decided to stay at the hotel and get dinner on her own, while the rest of us headed out to our booking at Kakekomi Gyoza in Shinjuku.

The others had had a traditional tea ceremony booked in Ginza for today, but my wife told me that there was a mix-up and they had prepared at the venue at Asakusa, not Ginza. The company offered to pay for a taxi to take them to Asakusa, but they declined, since they wanted to spend time in Ginza afterwards. The company sent my wife an apology email and said they’d refund their booking fee. But apart from that disappointment, they had a good day in Ginza.

We headed on the train to Shinjuku, a place I’ve never visited before in Tokyo. During the meeting I wanted to find the best station exit to get to our restaurant, and looked it up online, only to learn that Shinjuku is the busiest train station in the whole world, and has over 200 different exits! I assume most of those are different doors in connected shopping complexes with underground passages. I determined there are only about five main exits, and we wanted the East Exit. Navigating to the exit was a little tricky, but fortunately the signs were clear enough. From there, walking to the restaurant was very interesting, as the streets were alive with neon lights, video screens, and other illumination, and busy with thousands of people walking around.

The 3D cat, Shinjuku

We found the restaurant and entered. It was a small place with seating for maybe 12 people on the ground floor, and a tight wrought iron spiral staircase leading to an upper floor. The guy asked us immediately if we had a reservation, and showed us to a small table near the open kitchen area. Honestly, it would have been a very tight fit with my mother-in-law there as well, but with just three of us it was manageable.

Kakekomi Gyoza, Shinjuku

We browsed the iPad menu (in English) and selected a plate of vegan gyoza for my wife, one of traditional pan-fried gyoza, and one of deep-fried (karaage) gyoza for my sister-in-law and me. We also ordered drinks, as it was mandatory for everyone to order at least one drink. We used small dishes for dipping sauce and gobbled down the delicious gyozas. We decided on a small serve of honey mustard gyoza and a bowl of cabbage salad to completely fill us up. Everything was really good, including the experience and ambience, and it was incredibly cheap too, coming to only 4500 yen for the three of us.

Gyoza at Kakekomi Gyoza, Shinjuku

Finished with dinner, we walked back to Shinjuku Station via a different street and boarded a train back to Shibuya, to see the iconic crossing at night. We walked across and then went up into the Starbucks on the opposite corner to get a view from the first floor windows. We didn’t spend too long here, before returning to the station to get another train back to Shinagawa and our hotels.

my sister-in-law left us there, but my wife and I walked across to the wast side of the station and the food shops there. She got an Earl Grey scone for dessert from City Bakery, while I explored the place across the way, and ended up getting a cinnamon rugelach to take back to the hotel room for dessert. So supplied, we headed back and in for the night, stopping on the way to get some breakfast supplies from the 7-11, so we don’t have to buy them in the morning.

We have an early start tomorrow!

Tokyo day 3: Kawazu Sakura Festival

Monday 24 February

This morning we got up and prepared for our day trip to Kawazu, down the coast on the Izu peninsula. We met my sister- and mother-in-law in the hotel lobby just before 07:00 and walked across to Shinagawa Station, and to City Bakery. We sat at a table and ordered some breakfast. I had scrambled eggs on toast with smoked salmon, and a pain au chocolat. My wife just had a wholemeal croissant with cappuccino, but had bought a mixed berry scone to take with us for later. The eggs were good, but the pain au chocolat was a bit disappointing, being quite ready and not very flaky.

We headed to JR platform 12 for our train departing at 08:07 for Kawazu. It was a limited express service down the Izu Peninsula, stopping only a couple of times near Tokyo, but later in the journey stopping a bit more frequently at the larger towns dotted down the coast. We arrived at Kawazu at 10:30, with many others on the train disembarking there too. The station was decked out in pink sakura festival decorations and posters.

We walked south a couple of blocks to the river, along whose banks the sakura trees were just coming into bloom. It turned out we were probably a few days too early. There were some blossoms out in full bloom, but most of the buds on the trees had not yet opened. The route west along the river was busy with visitors, but not as crowded as I’d expected.

Kawazu Sakura Festival

The way was also lined with dozens of food stalls serving various snacks and meals: grilled skewers of meats and seafood, skewers of mochi balls, dango, takoyaki, noodles, fried potato things, sausages, and much more. There was also a lot of pink food with sakura flavour, including sakura much, sakura udon noodles, and sakura latte drinks.

Kawazu Sakura Festival

We walked about halfway up the riverside sakura area, past a small park where some people were sitting and soaking their bare feet in steaming hot water under a roof shelter. The air was very cold, and when some grey cloud came in it started snowing! It wasn’t very much, and the pellets of snow melted as soon as they landed on most things, but we saw small bits of ice collected on our coats and hats. It was never more than a light sprinkle and didn’t last long either, but continued on and off at intervals through the day. Still, I was pretty excited as it’s the first time I’ve ever seen snow falling in my life.

Kawazu Sakura Festival

I bought some takoyaki to eat, but they were a bit disappointing – not made fresh to order, but as I discovered pre-made and taken from the heated display. My wife bought us some sakura mochi, wrapped in shiso leaf and grilled until just a bit crisp on the outside. That was very pink tasting, but pretty good and warming in the cold weather. She also got herself a sakura milk latte, which she said was very sweet. And I ate a breadstick which my wife had bought for me at breakfast, with chocolate chips, ginger, and lime – an interesting combination of flavours, but which worked very well.

Kawazu Sakura Festival

We wandered off the river bank towards the main street of the town to find a cafe to sit inside and for the others to have some coffee. We ran across Cafe Ailana, a tiny cafe built onto the front of the owner’s house, with only four tables and eight seats inside. We were about to pass it in search of somewhere that made tea, but when I searched Google Maps for nearby cafes it showed that Ailana had the best rated coffee in town, which was enough to convince my co-travellers to try it. It was cosy, and had a turntable and dozens fo jazz albums on vinyl, although the jazz that was playing seemed to come from some other source. The menu was entirely in Japanese and I used Google Translate to determine it was essentially half a dozen different blends of coffees, plus a glass of freshly squeezed mandarin juice, as the only drink options. They also has chiffon cake slices and small scones. The others all ordered the “most popular” coffee blend, while I got the juice. The owner prepared the coffee intricately using a hand-poured drip filter. They all declared that it was indeed extremely good coffee. My juice was very good too.

We separated, my in-laws heading down the street back to the station to take it easy and look at some shops before meeting me and my wife back at the station for our return train. We, on the other hand, trekked further up the river to the original Kawazu Zakura tree, still standing in the front yard of Mr. Katsumi Iida’s house, where he planted it some time around 1955, from a seedling he found. This tree turned out to be a mutant cultivar which bloomed very early, and was propagated to produce the early blooming sakura trees of Kawazu. This tree, it turned out, was indeed in full bloom, perhaps thanks to a sunny and warm position unlike the slightly slower ones lining the river banks.

Kawazu Sakura Festival

Having seen this, we headed back to town via a footpath that led through small fields planted with vegetables and fruit trees, with an occasional flowering sakura here and there. This was a great walk, showing us a more rural lifestyle and landscape.

We met up with my in-laws at the station, where we waited for our return train to Shinagawa, departing at 15:44. It was bang on time, and we settled in for the journey back. The sun went down as we approached Yokohama, rendering the sky and the sea coast beautiful with muted pink colours.

Once back at the hotel, we agreed to meet at 19:00 for dinner at the nearby Obica restaurant just a short walk away. This is a restaurant that originated in Rome, where my wife and I had dined on a previous trip. We ordered a couple of pizzas to share, one simple tomato, buffalo mozzarella, and basil leaves, and one with prosciutto and piled high with mixed spinach and rocket leaves. After finishing these, I had a slice of a chocolate almond cake, while T. ate the accompanying cherry gelato that came with it.

Then we retired back to our rooms for the night. Tomorrow, I have to begin my work section of the trip!