Koitanibashi
Koitanibashi (恋谷橋) is a 2011 Japanese film directed by Kōichi Gotō.[1]
Koitanibashi | |
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Directed by | Kōichi Gotō |
Starring | Takako Uehara Kensei Mikami |
Release date |
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Running time | 113 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Production
The film was shot in Misasa, Tottori.[2]
gollark: Probably. The main issue I can see is that you would have to rewrite the entire metadata block on changes, because start/end in XTMF are offsets from the metadata region's end.
gollark: I thought about that, but:- strings in a binary format will be about the same length- integers will have some space saving, but I don't think it's very significant- it would, in a custom one, be harder to represent complex objects and stuff, which some extensions may be use- you could get some savings by removing strings like "title" which XTMF repeats a lot, but at the cost of it no longer being self-describing, making extensions harder and making debugging more annoying- I am not convinced that metadata size is a significant issue
gollark: I mean, "XTMF with CBOR/msgpack and compression" was being considered as a hypothetical "XTMF2", but I'd definitely want something, well, self-describing.
gollark: Also also, why a binary format?
gollark: Also, XTMF can do runtime update, you just need to allocate, say, 4KB at the start of the tape, and write metadata to that. The offsets might be fiddly, though.
References
- 恋谷橋. Eiga.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 2011-11-13.
- HPriest (2011-11-12). "SPEED's Uehara Takako attends stage greeting for "Koitanibashi"". TokyoHive. Retrieved 2011-11-13.
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