View Full Version : World's Best Geek Vacations: Akiba, Tokyo!


coldstar
July 26th, 2007, 02:18 PM
by Wired Magazine
The Best Geek Vacations:

1 Akihabara, Tokyo
Skip the pachinko parlors and fish market, and head straight to Akihabara — the ultimate red-light district for gadget fetishists. After that, take in either the Ghibli (dedicated to anime kings Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata) or Bandai museums. Don't forget to save a day for the Sega Joypolis!

2 Chernobyl, Ukraine
The highlight of the Chernobyl bus tour: Prypyat, a town whose 47,000 inhabitants had to split within 36 hours of the meltdown. While wandering abandoned schools and other buildings, keep an eye out for freaky mutant plant life and salty squatters who have taken up residence in the "exclusion zone."

3 Palo Alto, California
Silicon Valley's ground zero is within spitting distance of the most influential tech companies, from Apple to Yahoo. Other attractions: gawking at the famous Hewlett-Packard garage, touring the Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose, and sneaking into the Google cafeteria. And if you visit SF, feel free to admire Wired's offices... from the street.

4 CERN
Jet to Switzerland and watch artisanal physicists actually make their own antimatter (samples not available). Who knows, maybe you'll spot the subatomic Higgs boson while peering into the Large Hadron Collider — 17 miles of super conducting magnets! Word to the wise: Book at least four months ahead.

5 Mauna Kea Observatory
Hawaii doesn't have to be about boring activities like lying on the beach sipping mai tais. Instead, rent a 4x4 and trek to Mauna Kea, one of the most striking observatories on Earth. Stop at the visitors center, where you can view sunspots during daylight hours. Leave the surf shorts behind: At an altitude of nearly 14,000 feet, it can dip below freezing after dark.

6 Sidi Driss Hotel
Welcome to the underground dwellings that were Luke Skywalker's Tatooine home in Star Wars. They're in the burg of Matmata, Tunisia, and are now lodging geekotourists. What else is there to do? Day-trip over to the nearby town of Gabes, which — despite what you may have heard — is not a wretched hive of scum and villainy.

7 New Zealand
A tour of The Lord of the Rings' shot locations is as close as you're ever going to come to meeting Gandalf. Guides will show you Matamata (Hobbiton), Kaitoke Regional Park (Rivendell), and Mount Sunday (Edoras, home to the horse-lords of Rohan). Eight-foot broadswords sold separately.

8 The South Pole
It costs around $5,000 and can be damn cold (minus 76 degrees Fahrenheit in winter), but a cruise around Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station will warm any geek's heart. Alternatively, sign up for a working vacation at McMurdo Station. It has the bleak landscape and soul-numbing chill, but there are bars to go to at night!

source:
http://www.wired.com/culture/lifestyle/magazine/15-07/st_best

Top Gear
July 28th, 2007, 03:43 PM
no surprises there, I remember reading that in a dentist's office a month before.

SEED
July 28th, 2007, 06:58 PM
wow.. does that mean if u visit a bandai museum.. instantly ur considerd a geek? :uh: since im a gundam fan.. does that mean.. no! :uh:

Momo1435
July 29th, 2007, 10:56 AM
In Holland I've recently even seen Otaku trips to Akiba with trips to a maid cafe, the COMIKET and Para Para lessons.

But that's nothing for though, my trip will be "Wota" trip!

I mean, doesn't this look exciting!
S-H5S9O4iDY

And the original! Miki-sama - Romantic Ukare Mode!!
Bop2QQUdY0M

pierre-laurent
July 29th, 2007, 03:04 PM
me too, i like stuffs from japan, but not like these otakus...it's a bit scary.

what's a "maid café"? that sounds good.

Utamaro
July 29th, 2007, 04:03 PM
Akihabara Liberation Demo

Over the weekend, approximately 400 nerds descended on Akihabara. They weren't there by games and whatnot, but to protest against those who discriminate against otaku culture and reclaim Akiba as the dork "holy land." The 1.5km march was led by three groups: Revolutionary Otakuist Union, Revolutionary MOEnist League and Revolutionary Rejects Alliance. these kind of protest marches aren't totally uncommon in Japan, and this festival-like march seems like pomp and circumstance than anything else. But still, standing up to otaku discrimination? Otaku culture has been mainstream for a couple of years now — it was even considered "cool" a while back. Shame these folks couldn't spend their time any energy protesting actual real problems in Japan.
http://senei.finito.fc2.com/photo/top/top.jpg

Their fashion seem to be very queer nowadays. They mimic radical GAKUSEI UNDO style, wearing sunglasses, helmet, and towel mask.
http://www.akibablog.net/archives/img-mouse/2007-07-01-506.jpg
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo28.jpg
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo36.JPG

slogans
http://img411.imageshack.us/img411/6067/9553fy1.jpg
http://image.blog.livedoor.jp/papasans/imgs/0/1/01ecc323.jpg
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo13.JPG


railway otakus
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo22.JPG
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo24.JPG
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo11.JPG
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo93.JPG

http://www.ohmynews.co.jp/img01/news/12/12677/7032fa7d5b8376b3dedb_ll.jpg
http://www.ohmynews.co.jp/img01/news/12/12677/f94a6bb77cc4666a87fb_ll.JPG

coldstar
July 29th, 2007, 06:32 PM
me too, i like stuffs from japan, but not like these otakus...it's a bit scary.



I bet most of the Japanese are geeks. For example, in Japan males are railway buffs and the manias of electronic goods and optical equipments with no exceptions.
Basically Akiba used to be the town for such an ordinary geek, but it has turned into the venue for anime and computer games as well.

coldstar
July 29th, 2007, 06:35 PM
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo13.JPG
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo22.JPG
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo24.JPG
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo11.JPG
http://file.jabro.jp/070630akibademo93.JPG


:lol: :nuts:

Momo1435
July 29th, 2007, 10:22 PM
me too, i like stuffs from japan, but not like these otakus...it's a bit scary.

what's a "maid café"? that sounds good.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosplay_restaurant

You also got Maid cafes were the maids intentionally threat you very bad, only when you leave they become very sorry for their rude behavior.

POWER too the MOEnist!!

pierre-laurent
July 29th, 2007, 11:17 PM
i had also thought that must be that...but i just couldn't believe that really exists. wow, that must be great to have dinner with waiters in maid uniform as in anime...

south
July 30th, 2007, 08:36 AM
me too, i like stuffs from japan, but not like these otakus...it's a bit scary.

dude, you're hanging out on an internet forum devoted to skyscraper worship. nothing is scary here :)


ps: ヲタク!


SEED
July 30th, 2007, 10:14 AM
^^ :lol: r u sure.. im starting to worry abit.. those people looks like roadside workers in those costume..

castermaild55
July 30th, 2007, 04:47 PM
okeq0uuldy0

SEED
July 31st, 2007, 03:10 PM
^^ wow.. i like those dancers! they look cute! :cool: well not until the copers came in.. why d they do those dance anyway?

Blackraven
July 31st, 2007, 06:36 PM
The dispersal of the geek squad:lol:

A classic over there in Akihabara

south
August 1st, 2007, 03:39 AM
i've always wondered about that vid -- were the cops actually trying to break up the dancers, or did they just walk over to check out what was happening, and everyone ran away?

mrgazpacho
August 1st, 2007, 08:32 AM
why d they do those dance anyway?

It is the "Hare Hare Yukai" dance of the anime show Suzumiya Haruhi no Yuutsu :)

Blackraven
August 1st, 2007, 09:52 AM
Sounds like a lame dance to me. In our local language, we call such people as "baduy".

This is why the opening song of the anime program is neat yet the opposite applies to the ending song.

pierre-laurent
August 2nd, 2007, 01:33 AM
dude, you're hanging out on an internet forum devoted to skyscraper worship. nothing is scary here :)


ps: ヲタク!

☆but i don't dance as good as them...:D

after all...we're really happy only when we're ourseves. at least, these people have the gut to be and to show what they want to be.

Shawn
August 3rd, 2007, 04:40 AM
I just don't get it. I live close enough to Akiba to walk there in about 25-30 minutes, or I could just ride the Yamanote . . . and I even enjoy my Xbox360 and Gears of War after work a couple of nights a week, but I really don't like Akiba. It's expensive, the gawking tourists piss me off, my girlfriend harshly teases me whenever she finds out I went there, and oh yeah, IT'S EXPENSIVE.