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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."

13 of 517 comments (clear)

  1. eraserhead mouse by swankypimp · · Score: 5, Funny
    if you hate the "eraserhead" mouse-substitute then you'll hate this one too.

    Since when did David Lynch 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...

    --

    --All your stolen base are belong to Rickey Henderson
  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.

    1. Re:Left one out by sql*kitten · · Score: 5, Informative

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

      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.

  3. Don't pay sales tax when shopping in Akihabara by marhar · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you take a trip to Japan and buy some electroncs, etc, be sure and carry your passport with you to the store and you will be exempted from paying the 5% sales tax.

    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!

    1. 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.

  4. Oh please... by Squeeze+Truck · · Score: 5, Funny

    The only stuff that comes first to Japan is the stuff that is made in Japan. Everything else gets here way late, or never gets here at all.

    I'm still waiting for the concept of office LAN's, firewalls, and relational databases to really catch on here.

    --

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

  5. 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

  6. Re:Racist and demeaning by Cryptnotic · · Score: 5, Funny

    I agree that those statements are offensive. It is a good thing that they were not included in the article referenced, or I really would have been angry.

    --
    My other first post is car post.
  7. Balderdash by sakusha · · Score: 5, Informative

    The reasons for Japan's preeminence in consumer electronics is simple, and completely absent from this article. The major reason is plain: kaizen.
    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.

    1. 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

      --
      Sigs are awesome huh?
  8. 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.

  9. The real answer by Torgo's+Pizza · · Score: 5, Funny

    I would think that the obvious answer to why Japan gets things first is that they are closest to the International Date Line. It always gives Japan a huge jump on the rest of the world. ;-)

  10. Re:Military spending by JimPooley · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hah! You wait until Sony and Honda's giant robot armies come sweeping in from the sea, bristling with missiles and flashing laser beams from their eyes...

    --

    "Information wants to be paid"