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Why Japan Gets the Cool Stuff

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."

15 of 517 comments (clear)

  1. Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Look at...

    OS X
    iMac
    iMac2
    iBook
    iPod
    PowerBook
    Handspring
    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
    GeFor ce3
    GeForce4
    Quake3
    Doom3

    I'm sure there are more.

    1. Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' by packeteer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Metal Gear Solid: Sons of Liberty
      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...

      --
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    2. Re:Japan doesn't have a monopoly on 'cool stuff' by hbmartin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      OS X
      iMac
      iMac2
      iBook
      iPod
      PowerBook


      Those things are the first on the list for a reason!
      You forgot the Apple logo itself, though.
      Switch

      --
      Karma: Bizzare (mostly affected by varying internal caffeine levels.)
  2. Left one out by The+Cat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Japanese companies keep their staff employed for more than six months at a time.

    A minor point, but meetings don't make money, and middle managers don't build products.

  3. Re:Isn't it obvious? by Deadstick · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Eons ago I read an article in a photo magazine, relating the author's tour of the Nikon factory. He remarked to the company honcho that of all features on a camera, the self-timer (the gadget that lets you photograph yourself) is the least likely ever to be used, and yet every Japanese camera has one...why was that?

    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

  4. Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara by Cryptnotic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Japan is region 2, not region 3. This is because Japan is culturally a part of Europe (Region 2), and not part of Asia (Region 3).

    --
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  5. Re:Isn't it obvious? by Squeeze+Truck · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1. The Japanese have a national obsession with gadgets. They just can't get enough of them.

    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?

    --

    "Reactionaries must be deprived of the right to voice their opinions; only the people have that right." - Mao

  6. Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara by Mooset · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Only certain stores will do this, because it requires special licensing. Be sure to go to the "Duty Free" stores. They are easy to find in any big shopping area and usually have English speakers to help out if you have questions about the gadgets. Laox in Akihabara is a good one.

  7. Well.... by ImaLamer · · Score: 5, Insightful
    First like they say in Crazy People they are closer to the chips.

    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:
    Space could provide a new rain of resources, or it could bankrupt us. But its habitation does offer two other advantages.
    The first: internation cooperation. No single nation can afford the price of extraterrestial development. To turn the wastelands of asteroids and planets into lands of plenty would involve consortia including Russia, Europe, and Japan. Those partnerships are already under development, though too often we are not involved in them. ... ... ...
    -Howard Bloom, The Lucifer Principle (Chapter:Tennis Time And The Mental Clock)


    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.

  8. Re:Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara by BJH · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, the DVD Consortium organized it that way so that Japanese consumers would not be able to play cheap imports from Taiwan and Hong Kong on their Region 2 players.

  9. $2000 killer app by peterdaly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What makes the Libretto so great is that it takes up very little space. At 10.5 inches wide by 6.6 inches deep, it actually sits between the keyboard and monitor of my desktop, allowing me to check mail on one machine while running Photoshop full-screen on the other.

    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

    1. Re:$2000 killer app by rodgerd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's the culture of the US, not Japan. Here in New Zealand (1/100th the size of the US market...), we've had the Legacy RS Turbo, the Impreza WRX and STi, the Skyline GT-R, full-spec Type-R 200ZX/SX, Evos, and all the rest since day one; the only top end Japanese sports car I'm aware of not having was the "Batmobile" RX-7, which flooded in as a second hand import until Mazda realised they screwed up by not bringing it in themselves.

      The US suffers from a huge NIH chip on its collective shoulder; look at what happens whenever a /. article appears suggesting the US trails some other part of the world in technology - cell phones, for example, bring out a horde of dickheads who argue (against all facts) that the reason the US has terrible cellular infrastructure is because the rest of the world has a third world phone system, and anyway, who cares about cell phones.

      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.

  10. Oh the irony, it burns by hayden · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It was frustrating and almost insulting--why don't we deserve the best too?

    To here an American say that. May I welcome you to a place known as the rest of the world.

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  11. America caters to the mainstream by infiniti99 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think the reason Japan has so much cooler stuff is that they are willing to take risks. In the USA, if a particular device or software/game is not going to "make millions" by attracting mainstream buyers, then there is little chance it would ever make it to the market. Publishers and manufacturers here want to take only the safest bets. Ever wonder why the USA is full of so many crappy movies, games, and me-too products? Why take a risk when you can copy something proven?

    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?

  12. Re:Balderdash by jidar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hah! If you stopped patting yourself on the back long enough you might realize that your argument only works if Japan and the US are seperate entities that make their own items and don't export to each other. It's a global market and how things are manufactured in Japan as compared to the US has nothign at all to do with what is available on our market since anything they make they can sell here if there is a market for it.
    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. :P

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