In 1970, I was born in Koga, Ibaraki, Japan, which is 60 km north of Tokyo. After I graduated from an elementary school in Ibaraki, I entered a prestigious private junior high school, Kaisei Junior High School in Tokyo. I didn't adapt to the school life there so I quit after 2 years. After I graduated from a public junior high school in Kawasaki, I went back to Ibaraki to enter a public high school.
In 1989, I was accepted into Japan's most prestigious university, the University of Tokyo. I studied economics.
My dream then was to become an academic economist. Although I passed the entrance exam for the graduate school of economics in the University of Tokyo, I declined the acceptance. I thought that just studying the economic theories seemed boring and I would rather look at the real economy. That's why I got a job at the Bank of Tokyo (currently, the Bank of Mitsubishi Tokyo UFJ). However, I didn't like its conservative atmosphere and quit 6 months later.
I was a part-time worker for a year and experienced different kinds of jobs as such an office clerk at a community center, an assembly worker at a bus manufacturing factory, a salesperson for photocopiers and a security guard at a roadwork site. It was fun and each experience broadened my views.
In 1996, I found a job at a small software company in Kichijoji, Tokyo. This was the time when I became a professional software engineer. It was easy for me to master the technologies because I did a lot of programming when I was a junior high school student. I worked for cutting-edge companies including Rimnet and Tenartni.
In 1999, I moved to Canada. After I attended ESL schools in Toronto for 4 months, I became a regular student at the University of Victoria in British Columbia, Canada. I took computer science courses, which turned out to be uninteresting. Although I got straight As, I felt bored so quit the college. I went back to Toronto.
Once I got permanent residency in Canada, I started working in a small software company run by Canadians. It was most thrilling when I worked with the media company Sound Source.
In 2003 , I went to Korea and studied Korean, and in 2004, Mandarin in China. I got the level 5 certificate(National Korean Proficiency Exam) for Korean and level 7(HSK) for Chinese. These grades are good enough to enable the holder to be accepted to universities in the respective countries.
In 2004, I worked as a bridge engineer for an Indian software company, Patni Computer. I was based in Tokyo to help Indian engineers working in Japan.
In 2005, I became a full-time stock trader. I didn't work for a company; I stayed home and traded online. Although I made one million yen at the beginning, I lost it all when the stock market crashed at the beginning of 2006.
In 2006, I started my own software company, Softculture. I worked for a lot of projects including http://go-jimbou.info/ and http://commonsmarker.com/.
In 2008, I moved to Vietnam. I studied Vietnamese in college language schools. Although I tried to set up a software company for offshore development, I could not make it due to some problems.
In 2010, I braved US CPA exam. After studying 6 months, I passed all the 4 sections of the exam. Although I tried hard to find a job at big 4 accounting firms in Vietnam, I was unsuccessful.
In 2011, I had a job interview with Twitter at its San Francisco headquarters. Unfortunately, I was not accepted. I started http://shohyoj.in. Its tag line is "A book review site that lets you know how attractive the reviewers are".
I was married for 2 years between 2006 and 2008. I have no children.
My IT skills include programming, web development and server administration. When it comes to programming skills, I am the best at Ruby. I am also good at PHP / C / C++ / Java. Currently, I am also studying web design.
Language skills include English, Korean, Vietnamese and Chinese. My TOEIC(an English proficiency test) score is 965.
I am very active in social media. My Japanese blog(http://d.hatena.ne.jp/elm200) has attracted about 4 million page views in the past 5 years. I have more than 11500 followers at Twitter(@elm200) as of Feb 2012.
Sunday, February 19, 2012
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6 comments:
-in Japan's most prestigious university.
-I took
-studied Korea? or Korean
wow eiji-san.. i think your life has been and will continue to be more interesting..you're well traveled and not to mention intelligent..you could have became president with that economics degree..hehehe :D
Thank you for your corrections, Mara. My dictionary suggested me using "into" after "accepted", so I decided to go with "into" here.
Nice to meet you. My name is Ryo.
When I read this article, I felt admiration for your way of life and your talent! At the same time, I'm very interested in your way.
By the way, I am studying English to go abroad to study. But I'm not good at speaking English^^;
Would you possibly tell me a knack to speak English?
Hey Eiji! It's great that you're blogging in English now too. Keep it up!
Nha-Thy
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Thanks for the blog, Its good and valuable information.
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