chronovore (
chronovore) wrote2007-01-09 03:26 pm
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I'm nearing Year Six here in Japan
I've been gone long enough that some of the basic operations expenses of living in the USA have changed and I can't really visualize them. Can someone fill me in on the status of common monthly entertainment and communication expenditures? Whenever I think about what people are paying in the USA, I always picture some massive heap of bills being paid just for regular stuff.
Here's what I picture:
While I'm asking, is it common for people to have their home phone line served through their internet provider? Or are people switching to mainly cellphone service now?
My wife and I both have cellphones; if my cellphone wasn't paid for by my work (and therefore not really mine), I think we'd ditch the home land line and just go all-cellular.
FWIW: When I last was in the USA, the cable in my area was delivered over TWO separate coaxial cables, and required a manual A/B switchbox on top of the machine to access each discrete line. If you wanted to VHS record anything, you had to make sure that the switchbox was on the correct setting for that particular channel and program. The last time I visited the USA, my sister was playing music through radio stations delivered through her cable service, and played through their home theater setup; direct service radio is still commonly used in Japan, and costs people about 7000 yen a month. Yikes! I've been trying to get some people to switch to internet radio.
- Cable/Satellite TV reception
- Internet provider (may be bundled with Cable)
- Phone/VOIP/Cellphone
- Tivo monthly charge (may be bundled with Cable/Satellite, if set-top box is installed
- NetFlix / Blockbuster and/or GameFly
- Xbox Live
- MMORPG fees, such as World of Warcraft, Everquest, etc.
- Satellite radio, or Rhapsody / Launch
While I'm asking, is it common for people to have their home phone line served through their internet provider? Or are people switching to mainly cellphone service now?
My wife and I both have cellphones; if my cellphone wasn't paid for by my work (and therefore not really mine), I think we'd ditch the home land line and just go all-cellular.
FWIW: When I last was in the USA, the cable in my area was delivered over TWO separate coaxial cables, and required a manual A/B switchbox on top of the machine to access each discrete line. If you wanted to VHS record anything, you had to make sure that the switchbox was on the correct setting for that particular channel and program. The last time I visited the USA, my sister was playing music through radio stations delivered through her cable service, and played through their home theater setup; direct service radio is still commonly used in Japan, and costs people about 7000 yen a month. Yikes! I've been trying to get some people to switch to internet radio.
Re: wow thassalotta stuff Uncle Bob!
I don't know about Pandora, but if it would let me create playlists and download them onto a shuffle, I would be all over that. I got a cute little iPod shuffle for xmas, and I haven't had the chance to figure out how to play with it yet, but I think Rhapsody is going to make me actually BUY the songs I listen to, in order to put them on my shuffle, and i don't wanna do that yet.
library. *love*. I also get TONS of books on dvd now and listen to them on my commute in the mornings and nights. I think I love that more than watching movies, to be honest. I just finished "pattern recognition" by William Gibson, and got that thing where you are both happy and sad when you get to the end. Listening to "Cold Mountain" now, as read by the author with a soft southern drawl. If I had to, I could get rid of internet and netflix and rhapsody (though I would VERY MUCH miss internet) as long as I could still have the library (although that's kind of cheating because I can use the internet AT the library).
As soon as we get free internet in SF, I will be one happy camper. Maybe free internet will tempt you guys to come back to SF for a few years? (I know, I know... *sigh*)
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iPod - If you have CDs that you like, rip them to your computer, then load them on your iPod. If you like, go to Last.fm and search for this username, and if you see anything you like, I'll burn CDs for you and send them your way. Alternately, I can make .zip files and put them on dropfile for you. Additionally, you can subscribe to podcasts of music you like, and those will load on your iPod as well. I've also found podcasts of old radio dramas, such as X Minus One and the Raymond Chandler stuff. Very keen. For me, my iPod is like a TiVO is used by other people. I find stuff I like, download, buy, rip it, and stick in in my iPod. BLISS.
Free internet in San Francisco does not compete with a soon-to-be-complete, custom built house in Osaka. Especially when many folks rather kindly run their own wireless LANs without any protection on them. Free internet by default.
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