Why Japan Gets the Cool Stuff 535
haahr writes "Good article about why the coolest electronics products are available first in Japan and may never make it to the U.S., in Slate."
"I'm not a god, I was misquoted." -- Lister, Red Dwarf
I don't like it. (Score:3, Funny)
Isn't it obvious? (Score:2, Insightful)
2. Japanese companies will give Japanese consumers what they want.
What's next on Slate? Articles telling us that Italians like pasta, Russians like vodka and Brazilians like football?
Re:Isn't it obvious? (Score:5, Insightful)
The company guy responded by driving him past the Yasukuni Shrine, a war memorial that corresponds roughly to the Tomb Of The Unknowns. In front of it stood an army of tourist families smiling cheerfully at an army of tripods manned by an army of phantom photographers. "In Japan," he said, "No self-timer, no sell camera."
rj
Re:Isn't it obvious? (Score:4, Insightful)
The gadgets Japanese have an obsession with are the ones that facilitate social life and personal correspondence.
Cel phones that can handle email are a godsend in this arena. This way it is possible to juggle work, family, and a potentially unlimited ammount of mistresses at once in secrecy.
Think I'm joking?
Re:Isn't it obvious? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Isn't it obvious? (Score:4, Funny)
They don't? How the hell did I get in?
Re:Isn't it obvious? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Isn't it obvious? (Score:3, Informative)
Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:4, Insightful)
OS X
iMac
iMac2
iBook
iPod
PowerBook
Handsprin
Newton
Palm Pilot
CrossPad
ViaVoice
Metal Gear Solid: Sons of Liberty
Spider-Man
Lord of the Rings
The Matrix
The Matrix:Revolution
VooDoo
VooDoo2
GeForce
GeFo
GeForce4
Quake3
Doom3
I'm sure there are more.
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:3, Insightful)
u SURE about that one?... Hideo Kojima made that one... IN JAPAN...
who needs an iPod for $400 when you can get a much better on at half the price in japan...
also they dont need palm pilots or handsprings or crosspads when they have CELL PHONES than can do the same thing...
unfortunatly for us in the USA the cell phone system of Aisa is WAY better than here... its a ground up implimentation and there is none of this patchwork BS that we have to put up with... its cheaper and i know from people who have told me out of personal experiance that they work EVERYWHERE... none of this roaming, analog zone, digital zone, BS...
face it in japan they get the same tech only sooner...
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:4, Interesting)
It seems to me that cellphones in America are so patchy is that they have been so slow to move to GSM. But then, they have a much larger area to organise. Also, analogue is more popular and local calls are cheap/free.
Hmm, this is a bit offtopic as the discussion is about Japan. Sorry.
Roaming (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps Japanese cell phones work in all of Japan and perhaps even at the same price. Japanese companies are pretty good about responding to what sells, so this would make sense.
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2, Insightful)
land?..................... nope
people?................... nope
cell phone quality........ nope
europe and aisa have better quality systems because companies are willing to risk large amount of capital to setup a good system... and its paying off... almost everyone can afford a cell phone so they now have several BILLION customers... any of you out there who work in a large company can answer this:
what would it be your your company to have several BILLION customers...
sorry but americans are too picky and competition to too hard for anyone to move in andd do a lot in america... and now cable companies dont even have to share their lines... American audio/video distribution is going down the shitter i fear but maybe we can take an example from where its working and fix this sometime soon...
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2)
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2)
Lucky bastard. You must be in Tokyo or thereabouts.
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2)
I'm not sure about US, but I'm using a cell phone talking to my friends while looking at his face. This little cute thing cost me about...US$576.
Is it too costly in term of US' standard? Are we buying stuffs by its features rather than its price? I don't know, but we all think US' electronics are more expensive with less features, but they are more reliable and with good brandname.
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2)
I meant video conferencing with our cellphones.
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2)
Now now, you can't go making blanket statements like that without backing them up. I'm sure there are many many people who read that and said 'WHAT?? HOW DO IT GET ONE?? RIGHT NOW!!'. Unfortunately I'm pretty sure you're exaggerating, unless you want to take your nomad jogging with you, I think the iPod is still tops, given that Toshiba is the only company making teeny tiny hard drives, and their attempt at an mp3 player is kind of lame.
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2)
I guess it also helps that Japan only has about 377,000 square kilometers to cover, whereas the United States has about 9,600,000 square kilometers to cover, eh?
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2)
Gee, you think that a movie that you haven't seen and won't see for another film is the height of cool? Boy, have I got a bridge for you.
OK, I'll acknowledge that the sequels to The Matrix will most likely be stunning but, unless you can see the future or are wearing blinkers, you've got to at least acknowledge that the sequels might turn out to be a pile of pants.
And before you scream "Never!" consider this evidence: Robocop 2 and 3, The Godfather Part III, Star Wars Episode I, Highlander 2, Rocky 2+, Police Academy 2+...
Just because the first film was fantastic it doesn't automatically follow that the next ones will be too.
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2)
Apologies. That obviously should have read:
Gee, you think that a movie that you haven't seen and won't see for another year is the height of cool? Boy, have I got a bridge for you.
Yet another reminder that the Preview button is your friend.
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:3, Insightful)
iMac
iMac2
iBook
iPod
PowerBook
Those things are the first on the list for a reason!
You forgot the Apple logo itself, though.
Switch [apple.com]
Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' (Score:2)
Being owned by your stuff. (Score:4, Insightful)
There are two things I'd like to mention that may just be personal opinion, but I have to wonder just how much of this is cultural vs. practical:
1. More features. Okay, when is enough, enough? I'm already suffering badly from information overload, and a ton of features I don't need on a plethora of items. When do I get to say, "Okay, you can turn off the fire hose now, I've had a big enough drink." What ever happened to working smarter by grouping more steps together in only one thing I have to think about?
2. Smaller is better - up to a point. I can think of a couple of examples where miniaturization reaches a point of diminishing returns. The first is: Losing expensive equipment BECAUSE it's small. Whether it's stolen, or just bounces out of a pocket unexpectedly, the smaller it is, the easier it is for me to lose it, or harm it. Secondly, I'm a touch typist that types at over 100 words per minute. Smaller keyboards on laptop computers have always turned me off because I'm forever scrunching my hands and fingers together to try to use them effectively. In this case, bigger _is_ faster.
Just some musings.
Advertisement? (Score:2, Insightful)
Obligatory Movie Quote (Score:2, Informative)
Sony. Because caucasians are too damn tall.
err thought that was obvious (Score:2, Insightful)
perhaps because they aahh make them. Same reason why mexico has the best mexican food, and aaah irland has the bast dark ale
eraserhead mouse (Score:5, Funny)
Since when did David Lynch [imdb.com]start making mice for laptops? I know I would pay extra for a dark and disturbing, surreal input device. I guess Japan really does get all the cool new stuff...
Left one out (Score:5, Insightful)
A minor point, but meetings don't make money, and middle managers don't build products.
Hence they've been in a recession for 20 years. (Score:2, Interesting)
The trend of the 80's for American companies to bring in Japanese consultants has been reversed. Japanese corporations are now bringing in American consultants to show them how to emulate American prosperity.
Re:Hence they've been in a recession for 20 years. (Score:2)
Yeah. Umpty thousand layoffs and MSCS Engineers bagging groceries.
Lots of prosperity there.
Re:Hence they've been in a recession for 20 years. (Score:2)
Businesses just find it more convenient to fire people to "artificially" prop up the stock price than to actually do real work, and that's wrong.
And it isn't just "tech." A wide cross-section of middle-class income-level jobs are being made unavailable by all of this.
It's funny you should mention that... (Score:3, Interesting)
But: I remember in 1990 discussing with an American friend of mine (I'm British) that an Economist article said that Japanese productivity growth was significantly lower than in the US.
He laughed, and told me (basically) that the US was doomed and that we would all be speaking Japanese in 10 years.
Oh how times change...
Re:It's funny you should mention that... (Score:3, Interesting)
Indeed they do. With all it's problems, I think the basics of the Japanese economy are still sound. Japan still has a better work ethic, better education and higher levels of personal scruples than the US. Plus it still has strong steel, electronics, and manufacturing capacity. And don't forget that it lends far more money than it borrows.
So what if Japan can't survive forever as an exporter of electronic bric-brac to the US? I still think in the long term that it's in better shape than the US. Maybe a powerful China can be our new main trading partner.
Re:Hence they've been in a recession for 20 years. (Score:2)
Trust me, Japanese companies aren't lining up to hear the US's advice.
Especially not since last week.
Re:Hence they've been in a recession for 20 years. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hence they've been in a recession for 20 years. (Score:2)
Oh, and as to my natural density: I'm Japanese and work in a Japanese comapny, and work almost exclusively with other Japanese companies. So I'm speaking from experience, and from the experience and opinions of my friends and coworkers. What about you?
Re:Hence they've been in a recession for 20 years. (Score:2)
Nahh, it's: "if our stock price isn't high enough, they should be let go. Taking a person's career and home allows them to be freed up for more productive work, like trying to keep their family from starving."
Laying a person off should be the last resort just prior to Chapter 7. It should *not* be an everyday business "action item" like cleaning the #%*&@$)(*@$ whiteboards.
Re:Left one out (Score:5, Informative)
That, unfortunately, is why Japan has been in recession for the last 20 years. The Japanese have very tight relationships between banks, NGOs, government departments and corporations. Americans and Brits are outraged when corporations get to close to governments (and vice versa) but in Japan, the boundaries between the public and private sectors are much less clear. Government will frequently underwrite corporate financing, grant monopoly licences, engage in mercantilist protectionist policies, and government planners will work along side corporate strategists, it would be unthinkable for a Japanese corporation to undertake a large project without a nod from the government.
The basic problem with Japanese industry is that they have a massive, systemic overcapacity. In Britain or the US, there would have been mass layoffs, corporations would go bankrupt, and stock markets would plunge in a similar situation. But in the West, a recession typically lasts 12-18 months and is followed by a period of economic expansion: our boom-bust cycle is like a regular spring cleaning of the economy, on approximately a 10-year cycle. During the expansion, the stock market goes up, and the unemployed from the last bust are re-employed. But in Japan, the government will not permit banks to call in loans or write off bad debt. Corporations cannot raise capital to finance expansion, and investors cannot get a return on their capital. So the Japanese economy is held in limbo, it cannot expand, it cannot collapse, and is stuck in a permanent slow decline.
What Japan really needs is to bite the bullet: let the technically insolvent banks and corporations collapse, suck up the pain of a Western-style recession, then Japan can get back on the track of economic expansion that was once the envy of the world.
Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:5, Informative)
They will fill out a little card, put a stamp on it, and staple it into your passport. When you exit the country, they will take the little card out of your passport.
Some of the the electronics stuff is labelled to run on 100V AC, but it works fine over here. And remember, don't buy a DVD player unless you really want the region 3 encoding!
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:2)
Incorrect. Duty-free stores are unnecessary. Almost all the big electronics store have the proper forms, and it's not a licensing issue. I've bought goods from Yodobashi and Sakura using the no-tax forms, and neither of them is a duty-free shop.
LAOX is a crappy place to shop, particularly the Akihabara stores. Prices are not good. Prices in Nishishinjuku are much better. And even then, prices in Japan may not be cheaper than the US. I remember when the Canon Ixy came out, it cost the Yen-equivalent of US$450, and it was out of stock everywhere. I got back to the US and the same model was selling for $299.
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:2)
Take a short trip down to Hong Kong they're selling region Free DVD players. XD
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:2)
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:2)
Hehehe.
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:2)
Newark rulez.. Not! Glad I'm not there anymore..
Just about only positive things were the lack of sales tax and decent weather.. YMMV.
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:2)
this is DANGEROUS. A lot of electronics are not rated to run at 120V, and don't have compensation circuitry. In other words, they will simply run hot until they die. this is true esp of small stuff like MD players and recorders. buy a converter, they are cheap.
100V != 120V (Score:2)
With the voltage conversions transformers so cheap you just have to watch out for the possible 50Hz gear.
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:2)
Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara (Score:2)
Oh please... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm still waiting for the concept of office LAN's, firewalls, and relational databases to really catch on here.
Re:Oh please... (Score:2)
America the Chauvenistic (Score:2)
Not very in depth (Score:3, Informative)
We have too many conglomerates that won't spend to produce "cool" gizmos unless they can make huge returns.
They aren't interested in providing a service because it would be useful, rather only to make money.
Re:Not very in depth (Score:2)
Re:Not very in depth (Score:2)
Re:Not very in depth (Score:2)
By that rationale there should be no Atari, Nintendo, Apple Computer, Microsoft, HP, Dell...
Albeit those markets were much larger than a mom and pop grocery stores target consumer, but today if your marketing department says you probably won't sell 10 billion units in a week (gross exageration to make a point) expensive propositions will be left on the drawing room floor.
Open Source/Free Software is a risky business venture because it's
A friend of mine once told me about.. (Score:2)
He had some interesting stories:
You would get your check in USD and stand in front of the bank line waiting for a favorable exchange rate between USD and YEN. Then when the numbers were right, the tellers would be mobbed.
There was this huge gomi pile of abandoned electronics that were almost brand new but no longer wanted; because there was a new model that just came out that had more gee wiz features.
If money falls on the street in Japan, it will usually lie there till it rots or is cleaned up and thrown away; he said it was beneath Japanese to pick up money or objects that have fallen on the ground.
People walk into a sushi/food bar and pick from freshly prepared items on a conveyor that moves past the patron. You pay on the way out.
People regularly sleep in what seems like morgue cabinets. Complete with miniature amenities.
What an interesting place!
Re: A friend of mine once told me about.. (Score:2, Insightful)
You would get your check in USD and stand in front of the bank line waiting for a favorable exchange rate between USD and YEN. Then when the numbers were right, the tellers would be mobbed.
When was your friend in Japan? Banks generally give an average rate for the day, unless you happen to be a corporate investor.
There was this huge gomi pile of abandoned electronics that were almost brand new but no longer wanted; because there was a new model that just came out that had more gee wiz features.
No, it's because in Japan the manufacturers have made it so expensive to have an item out of warranty repaired that you might as well buy a new one.
If money falls on the street in Japan, it will usually lie there till it rots or is cleaned up and thrown away; he said it was beneath Japanese to pick up money or objects that have fallen on the ground.
Yeah, right. And in the US, if a penny hits the ground, everyone within a hundred-metre radius comes running. Next unsubstantiated 'fact', please...
People walk into a sushi/food bar and pick from freshly prepared items on a conveyor that moves past the patron. You pay on the way out.
How is this any different to a McDonalds, except that in McDonalds the conveyer belt is hidden and you pay in advance? I go to kaiten-zushi regularly, and it's just basically the Japanese version of fast food.
People regularly sleep in what seems like morgue cabinets. Complete with miniature amenities.
They're called capsule hotels, and in twelve years in Japan I have yet to meet anyone who's actually stayed in one. They're generally for older male businessmen that didn't make the last train home (as the trains usually finish between midnight and 1am in Tokyo).
Re: A friend of mine once told me about.. (Score:2)
>When was your friend in Japan? Banks generally give
>an average rate for the day, unless you happen to
>be a corporate investor.
Did you say generally?
>No, it's because in Japan the manufacturers have
>made it so expensive to have an item out of
>warranty repaired that you might as well buy a new
>one.
Either way, there is a gomi pile ain't there? I'm sure if the items had some percieved value someone would want it right? At any rate, even partly working items wouldn't last 10 minutes in a public place in the US.
>Yeah, right. And in the US, if a penny hits the
>ground, everyone within a hundred-metre radius
>comes running. Next unsubstantiated 'fact',
>please..
I don't know about you but... I don't see many pennies laying on the ground in the US.
>How is this any different to a McDonalds, except
>that in McDonalds the conveyer belt is hidden and
>you pay in advance? I go to kaiten-zushi
>regularly, and it's just basically the Japanese
>version of fast food.
So, essentially, what is wrong with what I said?
>They're called capsule hotels, and in twelve
>years in Japan I have yet to meet anyone who's
>actually stayed in one. They're generally for
>older male businessmen that didn't make the last
>train home (as the trains usually finish between
>midnight and 1am in Tokyo).
I guess the people who are in business to provide these accomodations have made a poor investment in both space and capitol.
Oh well, my point was that Japan is facinating and different. At least we both like sushi.
The average American is pretty happy already... (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't use cell phones, since it's easier to cheat free calls from a payphone than clone a phone. (just kidding)
Re:The average American is pretty happy already... (Score:2)
Oh, and MIDI for your ringer is a thing of the past. We're up to FM synthesis now.
Accoding to the article ... (Score:2, Troll)
Lessons from History. (Score:3, Insightful)
Firstly, there must be political condusive environment somewhere. The stagnation of the Catholic world in the Renaissance, compared to the Protestant north, and the Isolationist of China and Japan, are due to a culture that inhibited diversity.
There must be several tracks available to allow an idea to succeed. Colombus went shopping for a sponsor for his route west to the Indies. Such would not be possible in a monoculture. In the same vein, the spread of Open Source in places like Peru and Germany are also examples. This is a point lost on overmanaged companies with a single research path, and a thinned out middle management.
Ideas tend to take root in the area where they are formed. Since a lot of Japanese market is still feircely competitive, innovation is rife.
The computer market is nowhere near as competitive as it was in the days when QEMM, Lotus 123 and WP ruled the world.
Balderdash (Score:5, Informative)
Japan has a different system of product development. It dates back to ancient methods of production of artworks like lacquerware. Specialists in certain production methodologies allow the tasks to be separated. Many specialists were hereditary lineages, some families had practiced and continuously improved their techniques over hundreds of years.
And THAT is kaizen. Each product builds on the strengths of the previous generation, and eliminates weaknesses (or at least tries another approach). The Western approach is to build a product (or the packaging, at least) from scratch each time. Kaizen products are frequently updated, with minor incremental improvements. In many ways, it is a predecessor to Open Source methods like "release early and often" or "many eyes make bugs transparent."
The other factor is the short lifetime of fads in Japan. Fads like the Tamagotchi build to hysterical intensity in mere weeks. I still have an ad from the Asahi Shimbun with an apology from the President of Bandai. He apologizes at the inadequate supply of Tamagotchi, and promises Bandai is building new plants and within 2 months they will be able to produce 2million units a month. Unfortunately the fad was over long before the plants got up to speed, and Bandai ended up with millions of units they couldn't even give away. Bandai lost billions of yen and the President had to resign. So you've got to be nimble to keep up with quick-moving fads.
So anyway, how come complete idiots with NO knowledge of Japan get paid to write crap like that article? Jeez, the stuff I just wrote is far more informative than Slate's rubbish. I wonder if the author has evern BEEN to Japan.
Re:Balderdash (Score:2)
Funny, I never thought of OSS as similar to kaizen.
+1, insightful.
Re:Balderdash (Score:2)
Re:Balderdash (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason Japan has those things and we don't is exactly like the man said, they don't export it to the US because we wouldn't buy it.
Re:Balderdash (Score:2)
Re:Balderdash (Score:3, Informative)
Kaizen does not just mean "improvement," although most dictionaries only have that simple definition. Kaizen is a process of continuous incremental refinement. It incorporates many similar philosophies, such as Drucker's Quality Circles. Kaizen is widely enough known as a philosophy, many books have been written on this subject, so it is common to use just the term kaizen instead of getting into all this stuff.
Kaizen has nothing to do with fundamental innovation, as has been commented by you and others. Kaizen is merely a system of putting those innovations into the market. The best example I can think of is GPSS. The US put up the satellites, but consumer GPSS devices appeared in Japan long before the USA.
ah, good ole msn slate (Score:2)
hehe. only on msn will you find journalism like that.
Well.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually it's a big question. We are afraid to test the waters and move forward. While we pioneered these technologies Japan will put a semiconductor in anything - at least once.
America is quite like the fall of the Victorian Empire. She has become a nation afraid of progress and if something doesn't change she won't stay towards the top of the heap.
Off-topic, somewhat:
There is more, that is actually on topic, but I can't find the page now. I don't want to misquote either. Basically we pioneered that technology, invented the PC but the majority of parts aren't even made here - and I don't mean assembly - I mean the companies who own the RAM factories etc.
This is just a preview of things to come.
Re:People have been saying this for years. (Score:2)
But it's really been happening since the 70's. Read the book.
Why is the phrase "Japanese Innovation" nearly an oxymoron?
Innovation is one thing, making money and controlling the markets is important also.
Test Markets (Score:2, Informative)
Certain lines, or models, or even entire formats get a testdrive at the larger military stores. They have a captive, technoid, consumer group. if it flies there, you may see it in BestBuy.
Anyone remember the ElCassette? Mid '70's cross between a cassette deck, and a reel to reel. Fidelity of a reel, with the pop-in convienience of a cassette. I had a Technics model. Of course, they didn't sell that well, so it never showed up in the States.
$2000 killer app (Score:4, Insightful)
Wow, that "feature" alone makes me wish I had $2k to dump into a product like that. At work I have a 15" monitor and PC next to my 15" Dell (L)Attitude screen, just so I can have my email up all the time. Email is becoming enough of a killer app for some people where it is worth paying for a device like this which really is a PC, not some crippled appliance to fufill solely that function.
This may be an emerging market segment. I believe the whole Japanesse only thing has to do with the culture of the companies. Car companies are the same way, just look at the Nissan Skyline, Subaru WRX (now here), Mitsubishi Lancer (an not the crap they are selling in the US now), etc. Electronics companies are no differrent.
-Pete
Re:$2000 killer app (Score:3, Insightful)
The US suffers from a huge NIH chip on its collective shoulder; look at what happens whenever a
The US leads in a number of areas, but like all big, important nations, its citizens tend to stick their heads up their arses in the areas it trails - not unline that class of Pom who keeps reminiscing about 1966 and the Battle of Britain whenever a German wanders into earshot.
Re:$2000 killer app (Score:4, Funny)
And that's something to be proud of? (Score:2)
Is that something to celebrate about?
The most important decision for one should be cost-effectiveness, overall. That doesn't necessarily mean just the purchase price, but everything considered.
I'm sitting in front of a 19" monitor. It is big; it takes up a lot of room in all dimensions. It costed me about 300 dollars. Now, I could have spent and extra 300 dollars or so and gotten a flat-screen monitor.
That would definately be smaller and cooler.
But would it be worth it to me?
Well, NO.
I have plenty of space, so size is not an issue. I also value resolution and monitor integrity, so the flat-screen would blow. Flat screens have poor resolution (ever tried reading fine text on a flat-screen?), and their colors change depending on the angle you view them from. Also, I find the edges of flat-screen monitors to be very annoying.
Oh the irony, it burns (Score:4, Insightful)
To here an American say that. May I welcome you to a place known as the rest of the world.
Re:Oh the irony, it burns (Score:2, Funny)
Here, hear matey.
America caters to the mainstream (Score:4, Insightful)
In Japan, they release just about anything that their minds and conjure up. Surely they have the same economic business sense as those in the USA, but perhaps their consumer market is much more willing to risk buying innovative stuff (this is basically what the article seems to conclude). Also, maybe because of Japan's small size, companies don't have to spend very much money on initial production runs?
The real answer (Score:5, Funny)
Regulations (Score:2)
I can't help but think that a lot of what keeps stuff out of the US sooner are the regulations that go into a lot of electronic products.
I can think of quite a few things. I think of Celphones (any Nokia phone takes forever to get approval here), pieces of Video Equipment with low pass filters that the FCC puts on to protect other things from being interfered.
It's the way that things work in america. With the FCC, with the FDA, anything like that. America isn't bleeding edge like Japan, but we do it for a reason. It prevents us from putting out headache medicines that cause birth defects in children, and Cell-phones that disrupt pacemakers.
That's life.
Who got paid? (Score:2, Informative)
So the Japanese are a trendy people in a crowded country? That's news? Here's some more news: Americans are big cowboy-looking folks, constantly pioneering the next frontier. Brits keep a stiff upper lip, and they have to, too, because their food is so horrid! Germans are big on punctuality and order....
Here's some more news: you read Slate, so clearly you're not up to buying a laptop in Japan or on eBay, and figuring out where to get the right drivers! Oh no! You read Slate, you use Microsoft OSes, and you need your hand held when it comes to those daunting techie questions!
That's why it's so much MORE cost effective for you to PAY 30% ABOVE RETAIL for Dynamism.com to take care of it for you. After all, those trendy Japanese will pay almost anything to get it one inch smaller! Aren't YOU that trendy? You're not a LOSER are you? Prove it by giving Dynamism.com $500 bucks for installing an OS and shipping Airmail from Japan. Did we mention that all the cool kids get their toys at Dynamism.com?
By the way, it's Dynamism.com. Did we mention Dynamism.com?
Admittedly, the author concludes he won't pay the mark-up, so I'm probably going overboard. But I don't buy the pop-sociology, and it still reads like an infomercial.
Re:Racist and demeaning (Score:5, Funny)
100 times on the blackboard, young man! (Score:4, Funny)
And clean the brushes when you're done!
Not inciting hate (Score:2, Interesting)
Then they came for the Japanese, but I didn't watch anime, so I didn't care...
Statements like "The Japanese are a close-minded, insular people without any of the warm, loving characteristics of Europeans." is not only false, it is dangerously close to Nazism.
Re:Apple (Score:2, Interesting)
I'd guess they've lost market share as Windows has improved and offered improved i18n support, as well as cooler hardware from Sony and Toshiba.
Re:Apple (Score:2)
iMac Girl [toyboxarts.com]
However, there, as with everywhere else, you must contend with the Micros~1 OS monopoly. None of my Japanese games are Mac compatible, I don't know how big that market is, to say nothing of Office software.
Re:article all hype (Score:2)
The cool stuff is in the dark wet alleys between the department stores, where you can buy "parts" -- surplus chips and cables and circuit boards and random pieces of bizarre hardware that the big computer companys dump there.
Oh, and it's the only place in Japan you can buy uncensored porn, forgot to mention that.
incentive to cooperate as well (Score:2)
Re:We have funded Japan's Defense force since WWII (Score:2)
Re:Another important reason.... (Score:2)
> cars, and insurance than the Japanese do.
Nice theory, but not likely. Have you seen typical Japanese rents? For that matter, even the average European apartment rent is higher than the average American mortgage. Cars maybe, but not apartments. Even so, cars might not sell well in large Japanses cities, but overall Japan is still one of the largest automobile consumers in the world, so someone must be buying them.
Re:aesthetic value (Score:2)
The other day, I saw one of those cube-shaped watermelons in Shibuya for about a hundred bucks.
$15 apples are not uncommon, too.
Of course, nobody buys them to take home and eat - they are gifts for very special occasions.
One reason for the idea of fruit as a valued gift is that they have a very limited lifespan - they are consumables. If you give somebody a vase or a picture frame, then visit them 6 months later, you will expect to see it somewhere around their house. Not so with an apple or a melon. People don't have the space for useless crap here the way they do in America. (Though people often reserve some space in their house for useless old crap from grandparents...)
If you think about it, it's not so different than other countries - I've seen $1500 bottles of wine, which are basically just bottles of old grape juice.
Cheers,
Jim in Tokyo
Re:aesthetic value (Score:2)
Re:here is my theroy (Score:2)
All but one handled extremely well! (The one that
handled just "well" was a '59 vette, which handles like a bel-air).
It's no Saab, but I would call it "poor" handling ever.
Re:To quote: (Score:2)
Nice effort, however.
Re:Military spending (Score:5, Funny)