Bride and Groom
Kinosaki Manhole Cover
In the hills above Matsuyama
Kyoto, JR Station
Me & friends
Big in Japan
Rockin' in Matsuyama
KFC Japan style
Sipping with friends
Safe Crossing
Loose poses
Himeji Castle 4 years ago
Himeji Castle now
Inside now
Jogu Tenmangu Shrine, Takatsuki, Japan
Sketching partners
Looking down at Kinosaki
& this is.....
Kawaii!
Started out as dancers but...
I'm gone for a few days and
Carnaval!
Speaking of Dandelions...
Tokushima from the mountaintop
Monday's Solar Eclipse
Guardian at the gate
Lunch in Shigaraki
With these guys watching over her...
The wheel keeps turning
Well dressed gentleman in Kinosaki
Early Japanese Typewriter
Shinto Shrine on a misty morning
another manhole cover
Obasan and Sakura
Matsuyama Manhole cover near Toon City
Manhole cover
fire hydrant below
Sakura in Senrioka
Sakura
Today
early 1940s
Back in the day
Girls sharing a secret
Once upon a time in Malaysia
Just waiting for summer
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Ain't seen nuttin quite like this before!


The other day I was visiting with a lady running a coffee/antique shop near here in Toon City, Ehime, Shikoku Island, Japan and saw this!
Yes it's an abacus (soroban, I believe, in Japanese) but but but it counts in roman, not arabic, numerals! Note the "I" or one in the first, lower row, the "V" or five in the second, etc.
A basic problem with roman numerals, before we adopted the arabic (decimal) system, was to add numbers one needed an addition table written down or memorized such as the multiplication tables we use today. For example II + II = IV, II+IV=VI, etc.
However addition and subtraction using roman numerals is quite simple with an abacus such as this!
Yes it's an abacus (soroban, I believe, in Japanese) but but but it counts in roman, not arabic, numerals! Note the "I" or one in the first, lower row, the "V" or five in the second, etc.
A basic problem with roman numerals, before we adopted the arabic (decimal) system, was to add numbers one needed an addition table written down or memorized such as the multiplication tables we use today. For example II + II = IV, II+IV=VI, etc.
However addition and subtraction using roman numerals is quite simple with an abacus such as this!
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