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Dr. NakaMats Is the World's Most Prolific Inventor

MMBK writes to share an interesting look at Dr. "NakaMats" Nakamatsu, mastermind behind a world-record 3,000 patents. The 81-year-old scientist has inventions like the "PyonPyon" spring shoes, the karaoke machine, and others. He's also at least partly to blame for things like the digital watch, the floppy disk, and CDs. "Dr. Nakamatsu harbors other ambitions too: in 2007, he took his penchant for political campaigning to a new level, becoming a candidate in the gubernatorial election in Tokyo, and the election for the Upper House. Although he failed to get a seat, Dr. NakaMats has other tricks up his sleeve. In 2005 he was awarded the Ig Nobel prize for Nutrition, for photographing and retrospectively analyzing every meal he has consumed during a period of 34 years (and counting). By the time he dies at the age of 144 (a goal he maintains with an elaborate daily ritual that rejuvenates his body and triggers his creative process), he intends to patent 6,000 inventions."

19 of 194 comments (clear)

  1. He also invented the first post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    [Removed for patent infringement]

  2. Hamburger Earmuffs by Will2k_is_here · · Score: 4, Funny

    I don't think he's invented Hamburger Earmuffs (TM) yet. He's likely still struggling with the pickle matrix.

    1. Re:Hamburger Earmuffs by Nick+Number · · Score: 4, Funny

      I don't think he's invented Hamburger Earmuffs (TM) yet. He's likely still struggling with the pickle matrix.

      I hate this place. This zoo. This prison. This reality, whatever you want to call it, I can't stand it any longer. It's the smell, if there is such a thing. I feel saturated by it. I can taste your pickle and every time I do, I fear that I've somehow been infected by it.

      --
      Promote proofreading. Don't mod up sloppy posts.
    2. Re:Hamburger Earmuffs by derGoldstein · · Score: 3, Funny

      I feel this way about /. too sometimes...

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
  3. TFA is a video. by bughunter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Warning: TFA is a video with a summary that's got little more than what's in the submission: Naka is obsessive about his food, and wants to run for office.

    I know I'm not the only one who doesn't have patience for video articles. It's like sitting in class waiting for the teacher to explain every concept at the speed of the slowest learner in class. I can read a written article in 1/5th the time it takes me to watch a video.

    Besides. Video is so twentieth century.

    (My lawn. You're standing on it.)

    --
    I can see the fnords!
  4. Quit with the fucking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    starting sentences in your subject line the continuing them in your post. Damn is that irritating.

  5. Most prolific? I doubt it. by ffflala · · Score: 4, Informative

    He's got nothing on Shampoo.

  6. Correction by bit01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He is not necessarily the world's most prolific inventor but simply the one with the most patents. They are not the same thing despite what the patent lobby would have you believe.

    ---

    Creating simple artificial scarcity with copyright and patents on things that can be copied billions of times at minimal cost is a fundamentally stupid economic idea.

  7. More info about his lifestyle by y4ku · · Score: 4, Informative

    I found an article detailing this daily regiment of his. I don't know how good sleeping only 4 hours a night and getting nourishment from a powder composed of 55 essential nutrients is. Here it is: http://www.brainsturbator.com/articles/yoshiro_nakamatsu_we_salute_you/ Fascinating man.

    1. Re:More info about his lifestyle by nido · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's a very interesting article - thanks for sharing.

      There were two parts that I think are very important. The first is about his inventive process:

      Inventing is a Dangerous Business

      What really sold me on Dr. Nakamats was when I came across the following passage from some German interview. The question was one the author has probably asked hundreds of times--"so, where do you get your ideas?"--and Nakamatsu has the last answer anyone but him would ever suspect:

      (picture of person holding their breath underwater)
      Is there a secret to becoming an inventor? How do you come up with new ideas?

              I am teaching philosophy at the University of Tokyo. The base for everything is a strong spirit, followed by a strong body, hard studies, experience and finally leads to a "trigger" experience. You "trigger" a bullet which contains spirit, body, study and experience - and finally that releases the actual invention.

      How do you "trigger" an invention?

              A lack of oxygen is very important.

      A lack? Isn't that dangerous?

              It's very dangerous. I get that Flash just 0.5 sec before death. I remain under the surface until this trigger comes up and I write it down with a special waterproof plexiglas writing pad I invented.

      Do you do that a lot? Putting yourself in that kind of situation to come up with a new invention?

              Of course. This is the Dr. Nakamatsu method.

      U.S. Creativity expert Win Wenger, PhD talks about the mammalian diving response as a way for anyone to increase blood flow to the brain, thereby increasing one's intelligence. When the Co2 concentration in a mammal's blood rises, arteries to the brain open up so that the brain doesn't starve to death. With repetition, the arteries become permanently enlarged.

      I myself have spent some time holding my breath underwater at the pool. I haven't done the full 30-day protocol, but at one point I built up to over 2 minutes underwater. This is not a lot (the record for free diving is over 19 minutes), but many people can only hold their breath for 15 seconds...

      Furthermore, we had a pool in our backyard when I was a kid (before I turned 5), and I remember doing held-breath underwater swimming then. I'd dive down to pick stuff up off the bottom of the pool, and swim through underwater rings.

      Furthermore, I had a VHS copy of Star Trek IV, and I repeatedly tried to hold my breath for the entire time that Captain Kirk (or was it Mr. Spock?) held his breath to release the whales, after the bird of prey crashed into San Francisco Bay... I was never able to do it, but I now think the effort was good for something.

      I don't know that I'm a genius now, but I think I do pretty well.

      According to Dr. NakaMats' research, the unhealthy body has a poor blood circulation to extremities resulting cold feet. This is the same state with the stressed body in which your sympathetic nervous system took over parasympathetic nervous system. Sympathetic nervous system anticipates your body for "fight-or-flight" situation.

      My hands were cold as ice for a long time... Then I built a "radial appliance", which is said to balance the body's parasympathetic nervous system. My hands are now warm.

      I think my website (above) links to the radial appliance stuff... This is kooky esoteric shit, so don't bother clicking if you just want to scoff...

      Anyways, thanks again for the link!

      --
      Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
      www.teslabox.com
    2. Re:More info about his lifestyle by Thing+1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This is actually very interesting! I had friends in college who could smoke a prodigious amount of dope, holding the hits for super-long times, and they excelled in their classes. I wonder if part of it was training their vessels and capillaries to be wider, by increasing the CO2 concentration? That's ... pretty far out.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  8. Re:Bah by frosty_tsm · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm feeling vitriolic, so I'll start the trolling thread: Having a sheer amount of parents simply means that he's a frequent flier at the the parent office.

    I don't think that's how it works; 2 is the max. However, having a sheer amount of children means he's a frequent flier of something else and not a fan of protection. :-)

  9. Please mod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    this guy way up. I hate that too.

    It's called a "title bar", not a "start your sentence here bar".

  10. Re:Unless he's invented by Gerafix · · Score: 3, Funny

    He's Japanese, just give him some used electronics, a paper clip, and some used panties and he'll whip up a Super Fun Time Telomere Re-Raveler.

  11. Stop whining -- it cou by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ld be a lot worse.

  12. I will never forgive him by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 3, Funny

    I believe there's a special place in hell reserved for the inventor of the karaoke machine. I'm pretty sure it was even mentioned in Dante's Inferno - he walked past a "reserved for..." sign just before seeing Brutus, Cassius, and Judas Iscariot.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  13. Call me skeptical by osgeek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Okay, the guy is 81. I hate to rip on him too much, but it really seems like he's mostly known for submitting patents.

    None of the floppy disk history that I looked up mentioned anything about him except that IBM has some deal with him to prevent a "conflict". Patent troll? The CD history I glanced through didn't mention him either. At best, I think he could say that he made some minor contribution to the CD - not that he had invented it. The video showed a bunch of his other inventions, like a magical chair that makes you more creative or something. He mentioned that a US cancer patient wanted to sit in it. And that proves what? Quack quack quack.

    Then he's ragging on Edison in the video... a guy who actually invented useful shit.

    Seems like a bit of a whack job with an image of himself out of proportion to what he's actually accomplished.

    1. Re:Call me skeptical by gad_zuki! · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Thank you for this post. This guy's been making the rounds again, and everytime he's been shown to be a borderline nut and a chronic patent applyer. Getting a patent is simply a matter of money, not ability, talent, or creativity. Apple has patents on sliding your finger across a touch screen and Amazon has its infamous one-click patent. Companies like Tivo find it more profitable to sue over patents than to actually sell a product.

      This guy represents nothing but the lax process of getting a patent mixed in with some medical quackery.

  14. You m by ean+li · · Score: 5, Funny

    ke this?