Mar 21 2024
NONA REEVES and Why I Hate Region Locking
Since the magical year of 2020, I have been listening to the J-Pop band NONA REEVES. While their music might seem generic to some, I still really enjoy it, and it’s a welcome and catchy break from the other types of music I listen to. However, this post won’t be about NONA REEVES themselves, as much as it will be about cases of availability similar to the music of NONA REEVES.
You see, the band doesn’t seem to be particularly popular outside of Japan. Beyond that one Parappa anime remix of one of their songs, their catalog seems to be really obscure and hard to find in the west, especially their post-2001 output. I recently found out that all of their newer music IS in fact available on services like Spotify and YouTube Music, but it is nearly impossible to listen to if you’re not in Japan. As someone who extensively uses Spotify and YouTube for music on the go, this was really disappointing and frustrating to me, to the point where I uploaded some of their albums to the wider YouTube sphere, for my own convenience and for other people to find and listen to.
It isn’t just NONA REEVES however that suffers from being unavailable beyond it’s origin country. Games and some of the more obscure media of the movie and music variety have been somewhat difficult to access for decades before the Internet age, and even a period during said age. And I always hated this practice.
Games were more understandable back when analog TVs were the norm and varying frequencies of equipment would result in an unviewable image. However, this practice continued well into the 7th generation of gaming, when digital TVs that could handle both 50/60hz becoming more widely available, with the Xbox 360 and Wii being the prime examples of this. Hell, the main motivator for the development of the Xbox 360 emulator Xenia was the creator not being able to play imported titles on his consoles. The PS3 was region free in the same generation, so there really was no genuine reason to region lock consoles anymore, other than having total control, which corporations would seemingly never give up a sliver of when it comes to their consoles.
Movies and music however? Less excusable, technologically speaking. Culturally, some culture-specific media would be difficult for other audiences to engage with back in the day, but they didn’t even give those audiences the option to engage with it. Whether that’s out of ignorance, greed, lack of budget, or biases, the initial reason varies, but the end result is the same. Less media for the people. And it sucks.
Thankfully, region locking isn’t nearly as prevalent of an issue as it used to be. The internet has allowed greater access to content from other regions, and companies have done much better jobs with allowing others to engage with media that didn’t release in their region for one reason or another. And that only makes it sting more, when some labels or companies still have their head up their ass in the name of “tradition” and STILL do this kind of bullshit.
One particular country that still seems to be fond of region locking is Japan. I already named the NONA REEVES example, but one other example I’m thinking of at the moment is the internet radio service Radiko, which is flat-out unavailable outside of Japan, unless you use a VPN or a browser extension to bypass the draconian restrictions. Normally some obscure service being unavailable wouldn’t be that bothersome, but Radiko, if I remember correctly, is the main service of Japanese internet radios, with only a small handful of globally available stations. So if you grew a liking to, or are interested in, Japanese internet radio, then you’re basically screwed and can’t access the vast majority of that space, because some asshole thought it would be brilliant if people were shown the door for not being in the correct country. (Not even really that effective when you can bypass it with a FUCKING BROWSER EXTENSION.)
Thinking about region locking has given me another brilliant example of Gaben’s “Piracy is a service problem” quote being eternally correct. If the consumer is given no choice in accessing the media they’re interested in, why should people shed a tear for your product or service being inevitably pirated? If you genuinely care, put in the effort to make your stuff available, and I’ll pay up. Games and movies have both made strides in being more accessible, either with availability or streaming, and therefore, for the time being, reducing the amount of piracy done on them. Of course, pirates will always exist, whether that’s due to lack of money or some other form of inaccessibility, but that’s a more complex topic than corporations would like you to believe. However, I don’t remember the last time I pirated a game unless I had a good reason to. I’m more compelled to give money where it’s due because of how easy it is to access what I want. And the more noticeable lack of region locking in the present has also done it’s part in this downtrend.
However, with streaming services being more compelled to become the internet version of cable TV, and older games being more and more unavailable as time goes on, one has to wonder if this downtrend will go back up in due time. And while region locking isn’t really comparable, it is funny and scary at the same time to wonder if it’s going to go through a similar fracture process. Probably not, but you never know. For now, I’m just happy that I can access more stuff legally whenever I want. NONA REEVES’ music notwithstanding.
May 2 2025
The Other Yoshibox Part 2: Bloaty Bloaty Bloat Bloat
It’s been a hot minute since I wrote anything for the blog, I’ll admit. I have plenty of dead drafts sitting on my WordPress dashboard that I never finished, and I struggle to really motivate myself to write anything for the blog. But I might as well write some more about my XP PC while I’m here.
You may be familiar with my XP PC if you read my previous post about it. While I haven’t exactly used it much since then, it is still a source of coziness I occasionally return to, mostly just to play Bejeweled 3 or something. I enjoy tinkering with it and installing new software on it every now and then, most of it being games I find on archive.org and think I might play.
That being said, I never really delved into the technical side of it, nor have I provided a single update on it since a year ago when the previous post on it was published. So here it is in all its glory.
For the technically minded, the specs of my XP PC are:
– CPU: AMD Athlon II X3 445
– Motherboard: ASUS M4A785-M
– RAM: Kingston HyperX 4GB (2x2GB) DDR2-800
– GPU: ATI Radeon HD 4850
– Sound Card: Creative Labs Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium (SB0880)
– Power Supply: Corsair CX450
It’s pretty funny to me that this PC (and by extension my first ever PC, as a lot of the components are shared) happens to have a tri-core CPU. It’s always been a bit of an interesting curiosity to me in recent years, but back when I actually used it as a daily driver as a kid, I never cared or paid much attention to it (except for it being slower than I’d like around the time it was replaced). Some other interesting parts (though not originally in my first PC) include a 250 GB HP Enterprise hard drive as the main HDD and a DVD-RAM optical drive mostly used for regular CD/DVD reading. No clue where my dad got those enterprise-tier parts but sure.
Of course, the other highlight of the build is the sound card (at least, in my opinion). It’s actually an upgrade that I literally installed today, mostly for hardware accelerated EAX on the supported games. I lucked out on getting the final X-Fi card that is compatible with XP while still being very up-to-date for my purposes. Honestly, considering I have a good pair of cans to justify it, I should look into getting a DAC/Amp for my main PC or even a newer sound card. We’ll see if that ever turns into anything. But for now, I get to enjoy higher quality output from my XP computer to my TV’s internal speakers, lol.
As for the updates: most of it is just more software/games installed, to the point where the hard drive is slowly but surely getting filled. I actually thought about formatting it and reinstalling XP for a cleaner and more focused system, but I find it hard to part with installs that I’ve had for years, so I won’t do that for now. Here’s the desktop in its current iteration:
That is it for now. I may or may not properly get into the swing of things and write more for this dead blog that like 2 people read at any point in time, but for now, enjoy this small bundle of XP-focused joy written up by yours truly.
By yoshi • Nonsense • 0