chris.bracken.jp

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commit 59227d853a4e5f69ada8837af928f7bd7d3885bb
parent ee165f286a1cdfdd8062302d58be6e61fc73ffa3
Author: Chris Bracken <chris@bracken.jp>
Date:   Fri,  6 Aug 2021 19:16:46 -0700

Publish site

Diffstat:
M2001/08/chelem-yucatan-mexico/index.html | 5++---
M2001/08/merida-yucatan-mexico/index.html | 5++---
M2001/08/progreso-yucatan-mexico/index.html | 5++---
M2001/08/quest-for-a-hammock/index.html | 5++---
M2001/09/dzibilchaltun-yucatan-mexico/index.html | 10++++------
M2001/09/isla-mujeres-quintana-roo-mexico/index.html | 20++++++++------------
M2001/12/chichen-itza-yucatan-mexico/index.html | 10++++------
M2001/12/palenque-chiapas-mexico/index.html | 5++---
M2001/12/san-cristobal-de-las-casas-chiapas-mexico/index.html | 10++++------
M2001/12/tulum-quintana-roo-mexico/index.html | 5++---
M2001/12/valladolid-yucatan-mexico/index.html | 15++++++---------
M2002/03/la-habana/index.html | 20++++++++------------
M2002/03/trinidad-sancti-spiritus-cuba/index.html | 10++++------
M2003/08/biking-japan-2003/index.html | 20++++++++------------
M2004/11/apartment-hunting/index.html | 5++---
M2004/12/fresh-snow/index.html | 5++---
M2005/01/akemashite-omedetou/index.html | 5++---
M2005/03/huh/index.html | 5++---
M2005/04/sakura-fubuki/index.html | 5++---
M2007/05/google-reader/index.html | 5++---
M2007/06/pr6/index.html | 5++---
M2011/04/installing-mozc-on-ubuntu/index.html | 5++---
M2011/04/winter-sounds-in-japan/index.html | 10++++------
M2011/05/moving-to-us-letter-of-compliance/index.html | 5++---
Mabout/index.html | 2+-
Mcode/index.html | 1+
26 files changed, 82 insertions(+), 121 deletions(-)

diff --git a/2001/08/chelem-yucatan-mexico/index.html b/2001/08/chelem-yucatan-mexico/index.html @@ -43,9 +43,8 @@ by a bathing centre and the town of Chelem. Now right now I’m going to come straight out and say it: if someone ever tells you a story about the amazing beaches at Yucalpetén, just back away slowly and do not make any sudden moves—the person you are talking to has probably escaped from an asylum.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-08-31-chelem.jpg" - alt="Main street of Chelem"/> <figcaption> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-08-31-chelem.jpg" + alt="Main street of Chelem"/><figcaption> <h4>The main street of Chelem?</h4> </figcaption> </figure> diff --git a/2001/08/merida-yucatan-mexico/index.html b/2001/08/merida-yucatan-mexico/index.html @@ -41,9 +41,8 @@ ocean that the outside world refers to as Cancún. By the time the colectivo got to the bus station, it was 9 pm, so after checking out the schedule and booking tickets, there was just enough time to grab some dinner and get some sleep before heading off to Mérida first thing the next morning.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-08-17-cathedral.jpg" - alt="Façade of the Mérida cathedral in the evening light. Groups of pedestrians pass along the sidewalk in front as Volkswagen Beetles drive by."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-08-17-cathedral.jpg" + alt="Façade of the Mérida cathedral in the evening light. Groups of pedestrians pass along the sidewalk in front as Volkswagen Beetles drive by."/> </figure> <p>Sitting in a Mexican bus station is an activity in itself. Drenched in sweat diff --git a/2001/08/progreso-yucatan-mexico/index.html b/2001/08/progreso-yucatan-mexico/index.html @@ -39,9 +39,8 @@ gulf side of the peninsula, the water is still a beautiful turquoise-blue; it puts Canadian beaches to shame. On a hot weekend, Progreso makes a fun day trip. The wind keeps you cool, and as long as you keep ordering drinks, the food comes free at the palapa huts on the beach.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-08-31-palapa.jpg" - alt="Three beach chairs sit in the shade of a palm-thatched palapa on the beach overlooking the ocean. A small &#39;lancha&#39; boat is pulled up on the beach. On the left, Progreso&#39;s long pier extends over the water towards the horizon."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-08-31-palapa.jpg" + alt="Three beach chairs sit in the shade of a palm-thatched palapa on the beach overlooking the ocean. A small &#39;lancha&#39; boat is pulled up on the beach. On the left, Progreso&#39;s long pier extends over the water towards the horizon."/> </figure> <p>The one thing that is impossible to miss in Progreso is the pier. At its diff --git a/2001/08/quest-for-a-hammock/index.html b/2001/08/quest-for-a-hammock/index.html @@ -34,9 +34,8 @@ <article> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="https://chris.bracken.jp/2001/08/quest-for-a-hammock/">Quest for a Hammock</a></h2> 28 August 2001 -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-08-28-old-door.jpg" - alt="A worn-down wooden door lies framed by a crumbling building façade in Mérida. Traces of faded lettering remain where the paint has not flaked away."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-08-28-old-door.jpg" + alt="A worn-down wooden door lies framed by a crumbling building façade in Mérida. Traces of faded lettering remain where the paint has not flaked away."/> </figure> <p>In Mérida, most people sleep in hammocks. Walk down any residential street and diff --git a/2001/09/dzibilchaltun-yucatan-mexico/index.html b/2001/09/dzibilchaltun-yucatan-mexico/index.html @@ -37,9 +37,8 @@ <p>About halfway between Mérida and Progresso lie the ruins of Dzibilchaltún, an important centre in the ancient world of the Maya. The name means &lsquo;The place with writing on the stones.&rsquo;</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-09-11-munecas-door.jpg" - alt="View framed by the doorway of the of Templo de las Siete Muñecas looking out over the ruins of a stone building and four-sized stone stela on a raised platform. A path leads past the ruins, through the low jungle, and towards the horizon."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-09-11-munecas-door.jpg" + alt="View framed by the doorway of the of Templo de las Siete Muñecas looking out over the ruins of a stone building and four-sized stone stela on a raised platform. A path leads past the ruins, through the low jungle, and towards the horizon."/> </figure> <p>Dzibilchaltún covers an area of about 16 square kilometres, in which there are @@ -58,9 +57,8 @@ one end is the Temple of the Seven Dolls, named after seven ceramic dolls found there as offerings to the gods. At the other end is a courtyard, a pyramid, a ball court and the cenote, as well as an open chapel that was constructed during the Colonial era, in the late 16th and early 17th century.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-09-11-munecas-outside.jpg" - alt="View of the Templo de las Siete Muñecas from the path. In the foreground, a hiker walks toward a large worn stela on a raised platform."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-09-11-munecas-outside.jpg" + alt="View of the Templo de las Siete Muñecas from the path. In the foreground, a hiker walks toward a large worn stela on a raised platform."/> </figure> <p>The Temple of the Seven Dolls is probably the most interesting part of the diff --git a/2001/09/isla-mujeres-quintana-roo-mexico/index.html b/2001/09/isla-mujeres-quintana-roo-mexico/index.html @@ -34,9 +34,8 @@ <article> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="https://chris.bracken.jp/2001/09/isla-mujeres-quintana-roo-mexico/">Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo, México</a></h2> 06 September 2001 -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-09-06-lancha.jpg" - alt="A small &#39;lancha&#39; boat floats in the crystal-clear blue waters of the Caribbean, moored a few metres offshore a white sandy beach."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-09-06-lancha.jpg" + alt="A small &#39;lancha&#39; boat floats in the crystal-clear blue waters of the Caribbean, moored a few metres offshore a white sandy beach."/> </figure> <blockquote> @@ -73,9 +72,8 @@ Mujeres has a much more relaxed, laid back pace of life, and it hasn’t yet turned into a party town full of drunken gringos. The locals appear to want to keep it this way, and the local San Francisco store stops selling alcohol at 8:30 or 9:00 in the evenings.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-09-06-sunset.jpg" - alt="In the distance, the silhouette of a lancha passes through the shimmering reflection of the setting sun&#39;s light on the ocean."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-09-06-sunset.jpg" + alt="In the distance, the silhouette of a lancha passes through the shimmering reflection of the setting sun&#39;s light on the ocean."/> </figure> <p>From the downtown Cancún bus station, we grabbed the Route 13 bus north along @@ -108,9 +106,8 @@ cared for, then released back into the wild. There are no railings on the walkways above the huge walled off section of ocean where the largest of the turtles swim, and according to the guy who showed us around, if you fall in, &lsquo;te comen!&rsquo;, &lsquo;they eat you!&rsquo;.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-09-06-skeletons.jpg" - alt="Four small hand-carved wooden skeleton toys playing musical instruments and wearing sombreros sit on the step of a storefront with their feet on the sidewalk. A small wooden armadillo wanders by."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-09-06-skeletons.jpg" + alt="Four small hand-carved wooden skeleton toys playing musical instruments and wearing sombreros sit on the step of a storefront with their feet on the sidewalk. A small wooden armadillo wanders by."/> </figure> <p>The ruins of Mundaca’s fortress are in the central part of the island, and if @@ -138,9 +135,8 @@ spending an hour getting your head kicked in by screaming hoardes of life-jacket wearing, water spitting drowners. I did get rammed in the legs by a nurse shark though. It felt like sandpaper and was among the creepier sensations I have experienced in my life.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-09-06-nativity-scene.jpg" - alt="The gazebo at the centre of the Isla Mujeres plaza decorated in an underwater-themed nativity scene. The virgin mary stands at the centre, her hands in prayer. Fishing nets filled with starfish, tropical fish, and multi-coloured Christmas lights surround the gazebo."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-09-06-nativity-scene.jpg" + alt="The gazebo at the centre of the Isla Mujeres plaza decorated in an underwater-themed nativity scene. The virgin mary stands at the centre, her hands in prayer. Fishing nets filled with starfish, tropical fish, and multi-coloured Christmas lights surround the gazebo."/> </figure> <p>There are also some Mayan ruins at the south tip of the island, though there’s diff --git a/2001/12/chichen-itza-yucatan-mexico/index.html b/2001/12/chichen-itza-yucatan-mexico/index.html @@ -40,9 +40,8 @@ taking up 0.4 hectares. At 83 metres in length, the Ball Court is the largest in Meso-America. The close proximity of the ruins to Cancún and the size of some of the structures have made these the most famous Mayan ruins in the country.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-12-26-el-castillo.jpg" - alt="A view from the ground below the El Castillo pyramid at Chichen Itzá. Visitors climb the steep staircase leading up the centre of the face of the pyramid. A few people stand silhouetted at the top, looking down on the surrouding jungle."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-12-26-el-castillo.jpg" + alt="A view from the ground below the El Castillo pyramid at Chichen Itzá. Visitors climb the steep staircase leading up the centre of the face of the pyramid. A few people stand silhouetted at the top, looking down on the surrouding jungle."/> </figure> <p>The image that most people associate with Chichen Itzá is <em>El Castillo</em>. The @@ -67,9 +66,8 @@ runs up the side of another pyramid inside El Castillo. It’s narrow, cramped, hot and humid, not to mention dark, but the climb is worth it. Eventually, at the top of the staircase, if you’re lucky or pushy enough, you can catch a glimpse of a jewel-encrusted jaguar altar, used by the Maya for sacrifices.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-12-26-ball-court.jpg" - alt="The ball court at Chichen Itzá. Large, perfectly flat stone walls rise above the grass. Two stone hoops protrude, one from each wall, facing sideways. A crowd of people stands at the far end of the court."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-12-26-ball-court.jpg" + alt="The ball court at Chichen Itzá. Large, perfectly flat stone walls rise above the grass. Two stone hoops protrude, one from each wall, facing sideways. A crowd of people stands at the far end of the court."/> </figure> <p>The Ball Court is another feat of engineering. The walls are each approximately diff --git a/2001/12/palenque-chiapas-mexico/index.html b/2001/12/palenque-chiapas-mexico/index.html @@ -39,9 +39,8 @@ hour bus ride from Mérida. Although Chiapas has been a somewhat politically unstable state during the past 10 years, it is also home to some of the most incredible scenery, archaeological sites and indigenous culture in the country.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-12-18-temple-of-inscriptions.jpg" - alt="The Mayan ruins of the Temple of the Inscriptions at Palenque towering over a courtyard surrounded by jungle. A large staircase leads up the main face of the pyramid. Rain pours down in torrents."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-12-18-temple-of-inscriptions.jpg" + alt="The Mayan ruins of the Temple of the Inscriptions at Palenque towering over a courtyard surrounded by jungle. A large staircase leads up the main face of the pyramid. Rain pours down in torrents."/> </figure> <p>The town of Palenque sits only a few minutes by bike, foot or bus from the diff --git a/2001/12/san-cristobal-de-las-casas-chiapas-mexico/index.html b/2001/12/san-cristobal-de-las-casas-chiapas-mexico/index.html @@ -42,9 +42,8 @@ humidity, I was in heaven. San Cristóbal makes an ideal base from which to do day-trips to the surrounding villages of San Juan Chamula and Zinacantán—indigenous villages comprising the Tzotzil and Tzeltal indigenous groups respectively.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-12-21-plaza.jpg" - alt="The bright yellow façade of a catheral faces the main plaza in San Cristóbal de las Casas. Pedestrials mill about the square in groups."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-12-21-plaza.jpg" + alt="The bright yellow façade of a catheral faces the main plaza in San Cristóbal de las Casas. Pedestrials mill about the square in groups."/> </figure> <p>In town, we met a law student named Luís who took a group of us to the @@ -71,9 +70,8 @@ blankets, clothing, dolls, etc. The villagers take these to San Cristóbal to sell them at the markets and on the street. The textiles are all made from hand, from the thread, to hand-weaving and embroidering. Typically, a medium-sized blanket takes two to three weeks to produce.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-12-21-beans.jpg" - alt="Dozens of varieties of dried beans in many colours arrayed for sale in bins and large sacks for sale at the market"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-12-21-beans.jpg" + alt="Dozens of varieties of dried beans in many colours arrayed for sale in bins and large sacks for sale at the market"/> </figure> <p>Back in San Cristóbal, we spent a few days visiting the markets and wandering diff --git a/2001/12/tulum-quintana-roo-mexico/index.html b/2001/12/tulum-quintana-roo-mexico/index.html @@ -44,9 +44,8 @@ stops along a long, empty stretch of highway. We grabbed a plate of <em>huevos motuleños</em> and some coffee, which (I swear that I am not making this up) was blue. Sort of an off-grey blue. It tasted like milk mixed with dishwater.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-12-24-tulum.jpg" - alt="Mayan ruins sit on a bluff of rock covered with low scrub overlooking the Caribbean. Below, waves crash against the rocks."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-12-24-tulum.jpg" + alt="Mayan ruins sit on a bluff of rock covered with low scrub overlooking the Caribbean. Below, waves crash against the rocks."/> </figure> <p>The best time to see the ruins is, without a doubt, sunrise. The ruins at diff --git a/2001/12/valladolid-yucatan-mexico/index.html b/2001/12/valladolid-yucatan-mexico/index.html @@ -45,9 +45,8 @@ mix of Spanish and Maya influences. Maya from local pueblas and from the city sell traditional <em>huipiles</em> near the plaza downtown. The city is still roughly centered on the <em>Cenote Zací</em> that was the ceremonial centre of the original Mayan settlement.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-12-27-cenote.jpg" - alt="View of Cenote Zací. Stalactites and vines hang from above. A few swimmers can be seen near the edge of the pool. A path leads upwards through the trees."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-12-27-cenote.jpg" + alt="View of Cenote Zací. Stalactites and vines hang from above. A few swimmers can be seen near the edge of the pool. A path leads upwards through the trees."/> </figure> <p>The cenote is one of the most beautiful I’ve ever seen. To get to it, you hike @@ -69,9 +68,8 @@ The streets downtown are kept immaculately clean by a crew of street cleaners who run through the streets every morning at 5 am. The government of Spain has apparently deemed Valladolid to be one of the most Spanish cities in the Americas, and donates money to help in its preservation.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-12-27-cenote-top.jpg" - alt="View from above, looking down into Cenote Zací. Vines hang down to the water from above. A stone staircase leads up from the dark blue-green waters. A few scattered fallen leaves litter the surface of the water."/> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-12-27-cenote-top.jpg" + alt="View from above, looking down into Cenote Zací. Vines hang down to the water from above. A stone staircase leads up from the dark blue-green waters. A few scattered fallen leaves litter the surface of the water."/> </figure> <p>Probably the most exciting thing that happened while we were there was the @@ -106,9 +104,8 @@ June of 1910 helped to spark the Mexican Revolution that erupted in the rest of the country that November when Francisco Madero flew across the border into Piedras Negras, Coahuila. The revolution wasn’t over until 1920; but as they say, the opening chapters were written in blood, here in Valladolid.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2001-12-27-truck.jpg" - alt="The rusted carcass of a truck parked on the side of the street. Painted across the front: Duele mas andar a pie (it hurts more to walk). On the bent and twisted remains of the bumper: Asi como me vez te veras (one day, you&#39;ll look like this too)."/> <figcaption> +<figure><img src="/post/2001-12-27-truck.jpg" + alt="The rusted carcass of a truck parked on the side of the street. Painted across the front: Duele mas andar a pie (it hurts more to walk). On the bent and twisted remains of the bumper: Asi como me vez te veras (one day, you&#39;ll look like this too)."/><figcaption> <h4>&#39;It hurts more to walk&#39;</h4> </figcaption> </figure> diff --git a/2002/03/la-habana/index.html b/2002/03/la-habana/index.html @@ -38,9 +38,8 @@ beautiful and most run down cities in the world. It’s hard to imagine how things could be any worse, or any better given the Cuba’s political past and present.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2002-03-19-old-havana-street.jpg" - alt="Run-down street in Old Havana"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2002-03-19-old-havana-street.jpg" + alt="Run-down street in Old Havana"/> </figure> <p>Havana, along with the rest of Cuba, is the way it is almost purely because of @@ -98,9 +97,8 @@ a look at <a href="http://www.historyofcuba.com/">A History of Cuba</a>. If you depth, specifically focusing on US-Cuban relations, the multi-volume set <em>A History of Cuba and its relations with The United States</em> by Philip S. Foner is excellent.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2002-03-19-old-havana-door.jpg" - alt="Crumbling doorway in Old Havana"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2002-03-19-old-havana-door.jpg" + alt="Crumbling doorway in Old Havana"/> </figure> <h3 id="arrival-in-havana">Arrival in Havana</h3> @@ -144,9 +142,8 @@ bands makes a pretty decent baseball, and we saw a lot of kids who could hit some amazing runs with a broom handle baseball bat. If you visit Cuba, something that’ll make any kid’s day is a baseball. Pencils and pens make nice gifts too.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2002-03-19-vintage-american-cars.jpg" - alt="Vintage American cars"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2002-03-19-vintage-american-cars.jpg" + alt="Vintage American cars"/> </figure> <h3 id="dollars-and-pesos">Dollars and Pesos</h3> @@ -179,9 +176,8 @@ food staples such as beans and rice are part of your government supplied rations, and can be obtained with your ration card at certain shops. When you can find it, food sold on the street is usually in pesos. Food in paladares¹, hotels, and touristy places is almost universally in dollars.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2002-03-19-camelo.jpg" - alt="Camelo bus"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2002-03-19-camelo.jpg" + alt="Camelo bus"/> </figure> <h3 id="the-rich-and-the-poor">The Rich and the Poor</h3> diff --git a/2002/03/trinidad-sancti-spiritus-cuba/index.html b/2002/03/trinidad-sancti-spiritus-cuba/index.html @@ -42,9 +42,8 @@ explorers and trading ships travelling to and from México. During the 17th and pirates. The buildings are in incredibly good shape for their age, most of which are at least two centuries old. It’s not too tough to see why Trinidad is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2002-03-21-trinidad-street.jpg" - alt="Street in Trinidad, Cuba"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2002-03-21-trinidad-street.jpg" + alt="Street in Trinidad, Cuba"/> </figure> <p>Trinidad is about five hours from Havana by bus, and as with everything in @@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ little courtyard off to the side of the house, spend the mornings wandering the cobblestone streets in search of pizza, and the evenings falling asleep to the sound of Cuban salsas, merengues, and cha cha chas drifting through the window from La Casa de la Trova across the street.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2002-03-21-horse-cart.jpg" - alt="Horse-drawn cart driven by man and boy in Trinidad street"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2002-03-21-horse-cart.jpg" + alt="Horse-drawn cart driven by man and boy in Trinidad street"/> </figure> <p>While most of the old town is centered around the main plaza, cathedral, and diff --git a/2003/08/biking-japan-2003/index.html b/2003/08/biking-japan-2003/index.html @@ -34,9 +34,8 @@ <article> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="https://chris.bracken.jp/2003/08/biking-japan-2003/">Biking Japan 2003</a></h2> 17 August 2003 -<figure> - <img src="/post/2003-08-17-cycling-in-japan.jpg" - alt="Brodie bike parked beside vending machines in front of restaurant"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2003-08-17-cycling-in-japan.jpg" + alt="Brodie bike parked beside vending machines in front of restaurant"/> </figure> <p>The plan was to travel from Osaka north to the Japan Sea, northeast along the @@ -71,9 +70,8 @@ and trashing both my leg and pannier on the pavement in the process. Pretty sure my leg was broken, I lay there for a few minutes contemplating the resounding success of my bike trip thusfar while the last of the Poccari Sweat drained out of my water bottles into my shoes.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2003-08-17-fireworks-in-fukui.jpg" - alt="Fireworks in Fukui"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2003-08-17-fireworks-in-fukui.jpg" + alt="Fireworks in Fukui"/> </figure> <p>Suffice to say that the rest of the day went uphill from there (both literally @@ -118,9 +116,8 @@ something to drink, a look at their road maps, and some encouragement in Kansai-dialect. This was reinforced over and over throughout my ride by children hanging out of car windows waving and shouting &ldquo;ganbare!&rdquo; at the top of their lungs.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2003-08-17-lining-up-for-okonomiyaki.jpg" - alt="Lining up for okonomiyaki"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2003-08-17-lining-up-for-okonomiyaki.jpg" + alt="Lining up for okonomiyaki"/> </figure> <p>Eventually, I wound my way up through the mountains to Fukui, where I almost @@ -164,9 +161,8 @@ shakes and rattles, then you’re swept away down the tunnels again.</p> takes just about two hours. The train tore through the edge of the hurricane at breakneck speed and we were in Tokyo on schedule to the minute. You can’t help but love the Japanese train system.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2003-08-17-akasaka.jpg" - alt="Akasaka at night"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2003-08-17-akasaka.jpg" + alt="Akasaka at night"/> </figure> <p>Met up with Yasuko in Tokyo, and we spent the week bumming around town and diff --git a/2004/11/apartment-hunting/index.html b/2004/11/apartment-hunting/index.html @@ -41,9 +41,8 @@ weekend of the 27th. In the meantime, to placate people asking for pictures, here’s the view from my balcony here in Ebisu. The upside is that Ebisu is an incredibly central location in Tokyo with a ton of great restaurants; the downside is that tea costs 735 yen at the coffee shop across the way.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2004-11-04-balcony.jpg" - alt="Tokyo Tower viewed from Ebisu Garden Place"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2004-11-04-balcony.jpg" + alt="Tokyo Tower viewed from Ebisu Garden Place"/> </figure></article> </main> diff --git a/2004/12/fresh-snow/index.html b/2004/12/fresh-snow/index.html @@ -34,9 +34,8 @@ <article> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="https://chris.bracken.jp/2004/12/fresh-snow/">Fresh Snow</a></h2> 30 December 2004 -<figure> - <img src="/post/2004-12-30-fuji.jpg" - alt="View of Mt. Fuji from Ebisu Garden Place"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2004-12-30-fuji.jpg" + alt="View of Mt. Fuji from Ebisu Garden Place"/> </figure> <p>I came into work to a nice surprise this morning. Sipping on hot green tea, we diff --git a/2005/01/akemashite-omedetou/index.html b/2005/01/akemashite-omedetou/index.html @@ -34,9 +34,8 @@ <article> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="https://chris.bracken.jp/2005/01/akemashite-omedetou/">明けましておめでとうございます!</a></h2> 05 January 2005 -<figure> - <img src="/post/2005-01-05-yasaka.jpg" - alt="Buddhist monk ringing bell"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2005-01-05-yasaka.jpg" + alt="Buddhist monk ringing bell"/> </figure> <p>今年も宜しくお願いします!Jumped on the Nozomi Shinkansen from Shin-Yokohama diff --git a/2005/03/huh/index.html b/2005/03/huh/index.html @@ -41,9 +41,8 @@ standing on the roof of a building alongside the track, dressed in a red cape and wearing a giant fish on his head, wailing away on a guitar.</p> <p>He was gone from my view before I was able to catch a second glance, though.</p> <p><em>Update (2008-03-20):</em> I’m glad he’s <a href="http://jiyugaoka.keizai.biz/headline/171/">not just a figment of my imagination</a>.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2005-03-29-gakugeidai.jpg" - alt="Man with fish on head playing guitar"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2005-03-29-gakugeidai.jpg" + alt="Man with fish on head playing guitar"/> </figure> <p><em>Update (2011-04-27):</em> Found a <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DbvxgmEAtE">YouTube video</a>.</p></article> diff --git a/2005/04/sakura-fubuki/index.html b/2005/04/sakura-fubuki/index.html @@ -38,9 +38,8 @@ days, the cherry blossom trees erupted into bloom. The Japanese take this opportunity to throw impromptu picnics, dinners, and random sake-drinking events under <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherry_blossom">sakura</a> trees all across the country.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2005-04-09-sakura.jpg" - alt="Cherry blossoms near Naka-Meguro"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2005-04-09-sakura.jpg" + alt="Cherry blossoms near Naka-Meguro"/> </figure> <p>The street behind my building is lined with sakura for as far as you can walk, diff --git a/2007/05/google-reader/index.html b/2007/05/google-reader/index.html @@ -51,9 +51,8 @@ desktop. It was only when I launched NetNewsWire today and saw 290 unread items, that it hit me I hadn&rsquo;t used it in almost a month. So while I look forward to <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/hicksdesign/210309912/">NetNewsWire 3</a>, I&rsquo;m sticking to Google Reader for the time being.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2007-05-30-google-reader.png" - alt="Google reader graph of usage by hour of day"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2007-05-30-google-reader.png" + alt="Google reader graph of usage by hour of day"/> </figure> <p>I also discovered that my prime news reading hours are apparently 6:30am to diff --git a/2007/06/pr6/index.html b/2007/06/pr6/index.html @@ -53,9 +53,8 @@ limit of its reach.</p> <p>Anyway, in celebration of the Apple ][&rsquo;s 30th birthday, I recommend grabbing your nearest <a href="https://www.scullinsteel.com/apple2/#dos33master">emulator</a>, and banging in a <code>call -151</code> for old time&rsquo;s sake.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2007-06-06-happy_birthday.png" - alt="AppleSoft BASIC program"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2007-06-06-happy_birthday.png" + alt="AppleSoft BASIC program"/> </figure></article> </main> diff --git a/2011/04/installing-mozc-on-ubuntu/index.html b/2011/04/installing-mozc-on-ubuntu/index.html @@ -53,9 +53,8 @@ thousands of Kanji, each with multiple readings. Clearly a full keyboard is impractical, so a mapping is required.</p> <p>Input happens in two steps. First, you input the text phonetically, then you convert it to a mix of kanji and kana.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2011-04-22-henkan.png" - alt="Japanese IME completion menu"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2011-04-22-henkan.png" + alt="Japanese IME completion menu"/> </figure> <p>Over the years, two main mechanisms evolved to input kana. The first was common diff --git a/2011/04/winter-sounds-in-japan/index.html b/2011/04/winter-sounds-in-japan/index.html @@ -41,9 +41,8 @@ dark, empty streets between dinner and bedtime.</p> Canadian winters is how drafty Japanese houses tend to be, and the distinct lack of central heating. All across the country the appearance of convenience store oden and yaki-imo wagons mark the arrival of winter.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2011-04-25-yakiimo.jpg" - alt="Yaki-imo wagon"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2011-04-25-yakiimo.jpg" + alt="Yaki-imo wagon"/> </figure> <p>Yaki-imo are sweet potatoes roasted over flames in wood fired ovens in small @@ -52,9 +51,8 @@ only delicious, but keep your hands warm too.  But the most distinctive thing about yaki-imo is that the sellers sing a very distinct <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4P9yctE9_hQ">yaki-imo song</a>. They typically make the rounds until just after dinner time, and I always found their song a bit eerie drifting though the dark streets.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2011-04-25-hinoyoujin.jpg" - alt="Hi no Yōjin"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2011-04-25-hinoyoujin.jpg" + alt="Hi no Yōjin"/> </figure> <p>Central heating is near non-existent in Japan, one result of which is the diff --git a/2011/05/moving-to-us-letter-of-compliance/index.html b/2011/05/moving-to-us-letter-of-compliance/index.html @@ -39,9 +39,8 @@ this time, I&rsquo;ve got a lot more stuff. One of those things is a recent-vint Nissan. Faced with the prospect of selling my car and buying a new one, I chose instead to import the one I know and love. Here is my story. But be forewarned, it is not for the faint of heart.</p> -<figure> - <img src="/post/2011-05-10-futile.jpg" - alt="Scrawny kid vs sumo wrestler"/> +<figure><img src="/post/2011-05-10-futile.jpg" + alt="Scrawny kid vs sumo wrestler"/> </figure> <p>To import a vehicle to the US from Canada, you need to undertake a series of diff --git a/about/index.html b/about/index.html @@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ kids. I&rsquo;ve spent the time since working on a variety of projects ranging from equities trading systems, the Dart programming language, the Flutter app SDK, and the Fuchsia operating system. I currently work at Google.</p> -<p>You can drop me a line anytime at <a href="mailto:chris@bracken.jp">chris@bracken.jp</a>. (🇬🇧🇫🇷🇯🇵)</p> +<p>You can drop me a line anytime at <a href="mailto:chris@bracken.jp">chris@bracken.jp</a>. (en, fr, ja)</p> <h2 id="about-this-site">About this site</h2> <p>This site contains no tracking, no cookies, and no JavaScript. It should work well with screen-readers and text-mode browsers. My web skills are diff --git a/code/index.html b/code/index.html @@ -36,6 +36,7 @@ <p>You can find most of the public code I contribute to hosted at one of the following sites:</p> <ul> +<li><a href="https://git.bracken.jp/">git.bracken.jp</a>: My self-hosted git repos.</li> <li><a href="https://github.com/cbracken/">GitHub</a>: The most popular source code hosting solution and where most of my public contributions lie.</li> <li><a href="https://gitlab.com/cbracken/">GitLab</a>: Better features and UI than