For using Japanese on Palm, "J-OS" by Yamada Tatsushi is the way to go. It works on US hardwares of Palm devices and allows you to input and display Japanese characters.
> It is not uncommon to see unknown artists having their latest single showcased at the music store.
As a native Japanese who has listened to Japanese pop music for more than 20 years, I think I can safely say that even the unsuccessful artists usually release an album anyway after a few singles. I don't know much about contract in music business, but I guess it's "Six singles and two albums in two years" or something like that.
Maybe. But remember that the music market in Japan is much smaller than in US. A third or a quarter, I guess. The smaller the market, the higher the price.
The point is, these are standard Python libs.
You don't need to install external third-party libraries for this app.
The subject says it all... what happens on 'chmod 000 /' ?
I'm surprised to find that Innocence is marketed in US as the GitS sequel. It is not in Japan, though they do have some connections.
Frequent backups or dump command might help you.
Some seasoned CVS users hack the RCS files to achieve file renaming. SVN users don't have to, because SVN supports that function.
For using Japanese on Palm, "J-OS" by Yamada Tatsushi is the way to go. It works on US hardwares of Palm devices and allows you to input and display Japanese characters.
> It is not uncommon to see unknown artists having their latest single showcased at the music store.
As a native Japanese who has listened to Japanese pop music for more than 20 years, I think I can safely say that even the unsuccessful artists usually release an album anyway after a few singles. I don't know much about contract in music business, but I guess it's "Six singles and two albums in two years" or something like that.
Maybe. But remember that the music market in Japan is much smaller than in US. A third or a quarter, I guess. The smaller the market, the higher the price.
> Python is cool to look at small bits of, but I think the "outline" syntax breaks down with larger chunks of code.
In other words, Python effectively discourages too deep nests and too long methods.
Actually, Japanese-dubbed version of Armitage III is available in Japan. http://sv.pldc.co.jp/plag/catalog/anime/sheet/piba 1007.htm (Japanese page)
I guess reverse-importing is a direct translation of a Japanese word gyaku-yunyuu, which means importing 'Japanese' things to Japan.