Monday, August 3, 2009

What's Behind Japan's Love Affair with Robots?


'Miimu,' a HRP-4C robot, models a wedding dress by Japanese designer Yumi Katsura at Katsura's 2009 Paris Grand Collection in Osaka, Japan, on July 22, 2009

Source: TIME



If Japanese engineers had their way, we might soon be cheering on a robotic World Series. Every year or two, Japanese researchers roll out a new robotic invention — the latest to grab headlines earlier this month was a mechanized baseball duo of a batter and pitcher that can throw 90% of its pitches in the strike zone. And while the majority of Japanese robotic inventions — from the dazzling to the horrifying —have largely been unable to break into the mass market, Japanese scientists aren't likely to short-circuit their robotic ambitions anytime soon: Robotic technology plays a larger role in Japan than anywhere else in the world.

In the past several years, Japan has committed several tens of millions of dollars to an industry whose revenues it hopes could surge to nearly $70 billion by 2025. Japan already employs over a quarter of a million industrial robot workers —more than any other nation — in an effort to counter high labor costs and to support further mechanization of its industries, and would like to see that number go up to one million over the next 15 years. "Robotics is to be for the Japanese economy in the 21st century what automobiles were in the 20th," says Jennifer Robertson, a professor of anthropology at the University of Michigan.

After all, this is the land where salarymen pour over comic books on their way to work and where stay-at-home moms are also videogame afficionados. In many ways, robotics combines two of Japan's biggest cultural crushes: technology and animation. Some experts say the roots of the national love of robotics are in Japan's Shinto religion, which blurs the line between the inanimate and animate and in which followers believe that all things, including objects, can possess living spirits. "Robots have a long and friendly history in Japan, and humanoid robots are considered to be living things and even desirable members of families," says Robertson. While popular culture in the west often casts robots as forces of evil that pose a threat to world peace — or worse, job security — Japan "tends to see robots as a force for good," says Damien Thong, a technology analyst with Macquarie Securities in Tokyo.


I would agree with this article although using Shinto religion might be a stretch. I would also add that after WWII, Japan was stripped of everything and they needed something to get the workforce going again. Cars, gadgets and robotics were the solution. Once that got going, Japan strived to be #1 in those categories and hat is where we are now.

Gold from recycled electronics



That's amazing. Just look around your house, everything has precious metals in it. Gold, Silver, Zinc etc..

All worth something when taken to a factory!

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Tenga Egg Masturbators

Source: Kanojo Toys



I wonder if this works :)


Youtube Link


Youtube Link


Youtube Link

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Hello Kitty Star Trek

hello kitty star trek

Source: Hello Kitty Hell



hello kitty star trek

These are so cute! I want them :)

Monday, July 20, 2009

Tokyo Toy Show 2009


The golfer is really cute! You all know I'm a golf fan! :)

Source: CScout Japan



Once again, we made it out to the Tokyo Toy Show for its 2009 incarnation (see our coverage of 2007 and 2008) and weren’t disappointed. A bit different than what we expected, but economics and other factors are changing the market a bit perhaps. Some old favorites, some new surprises, but still a fun toy show with lots to see.

What’s clear is that there’s still a huge production trend of toys that are used for cooking real food. We used to call those “appliances” back in the day, but if you make them pink, small, and plastic enough they pass as toys apparently.

Below is this year’s video round-up



Youtube Link

Monday, July 13, 2009

Fondling Boobs At Your Fingertips


Source: Japanorama



Etsu Japan has partnered with CARNELIAN Sensei
and TONY Sensei to create these magnificent hand-painted keyboards. The artwork displays the manga masters' keen eye and vivid imagination to best advantage but you may wonder... why use a computer keyboard for a canvas?

The only answer I can think of is that your average anime otaku geek would do just about anything to get his hands on one of the cute cuties depicted... and for just 10,000 yen (about $105) each, they can!

.....more





If I walked into a boy's room and saw anime posters all over the walls, I'd leave. However I think this keyboard is pretty cool so I might stay :P

And what happens when the keyboard is dirty? We've all had crumbs and dirt in our keyboard. Do we just pick it up and shake her boobs?


Monday, July 6, 2009

G3 Network is Japan's New G-Spot

japan office sex
I'll show you a few tricks that I downloaded

Source: The Register



Japan's 3G network is taking a pounding from porn-hungry users, who are eagerly slurping up capacity to the point that service providers have been obliged to impose limits on abusers of "unlimited" net access packages.

According to Bloomberg, DoCoMo and KDDI Corp are feeling the heat, especially around midnight when “heavy users” spikes slow the $74bn network. A typical customer is 32-year-old Tokyo travel agent Takeshi, who coughs ¥6,300($66) a month for an unlimited deal, "allowing him to download adult movies on his mobile phone".

He said: “A mobile is far handier than a computer for internet access - I seldom use a PC outside the office."

Around 91 million of Takeshi's fellow citizens now surf via the 3G network, and Japan's online pornography business is growing at a rate of up to 1,000 new customers a day on the biggest sites, with some punters coughing ¥10,000 ($105) to sign up.

One such smutmonger, Soft On Demand, has seen revenues from its mobile site leap 40 per cent in the year to March 2009 to around ¥15m ($157,392) per month.

.....more





I love the word "smut" and "smutmonger". Good British words.

I understand people downloading porn and watching it at home. Maybe watch in the privacy of your own room, have porn on a laptop on the bed while having sex (that's hawt!).

But porn on the go? Why are people downloading porn using their G3 network to watch on a puny screen and where are they watching porn? On the metro? At work? At someone's house? Am I missing something?

Friday, July 3, 2009

Watch Your Teeth On TV!


Source: Japanorama




To Tell The Tooth, Mickey Mouth, Dr. Philling and Tarter Trek: The Search for Plaque can be yours, commercial-free and broadcast live! Admittedly, the scenes of oral exploration offered up by the Miharu Dental Intraoral Plaque Detection Camera are less than suspenseful - unless you're surprised by the size of that chive nestling along your upper gumline. So that's what your co-workers were giggling about!

The Miharu Dental Intraoral Plaque Detection Camera allows you to avoid such embarrassing exposures while in the process discovering how good (or lousy) a job you've been doing in the fight against plaque and the evil gingivitis. It accomplishes the latter by employing a simple one-touch mode changer that lights up plaque like a five-alarm fire.

Here's how to work it: pop in a pair of AAA batteries and plug the included 6ft. long cable into your TV's video input jack - it's plug & play. Put a disposable cover over the Miharu's lens and prepare to direct "Deep Throat: Electric Boogaloo" - starring you!

Along with the camera you get 125 disposable lens covers, an English instruction book and an "adapter lens for skin", which sounds kinda creepy. Not that the basic concept of a mouth-cam isn't, but each to his or her own, right? Betcha can't wait for the endoscope version!

Until then, you can order the Miharu Dental Intraoral Plaque Detection Camera online from Japan Trend Shop for $119 plus a worldwide express flat rate of $18. Lights, camera, salivation!



Hmm no thanks. I don't want to see my bleedin' gums in HIGH DEFINITION!

Monday, June 22, 2009

Geisha’s Dice for iPhone and iPodTouch



Source: Tokyo Digital News



Geisha's DICE is a very simple dice game. The Geisha dealer faces one to about 10 players from behind the tatami table.


Youtube Link


Youtube Link

Looks like a pretty cool game.

I wonder if it could match the greatest movie scene ever involving dice :D


Youtube Link

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Yubi-Poki, Virtual Dual Purpose Knuckle Cracker Toy


Source: Japanorama



"Stop doing that!!"... One of Mom's favorite and most frequent expressions (often followed by "You'll put your eye out!") can be provoked in so many ways, especially by cracking your knuckles. That slightly liquid sounding SNAP seems to rub the human pleasure center both ways - much like the stroke of fingernails
on either one's back, or one's blackboard.

Funny how something that provides so much pleasure to one can cause so much annoyance to another... such is the case with cracking your knuckles. The Yubi-Poki virtual knuckle cracker will keep on cracking even after you've run out of knuckles.

.....more





holy! They only thing more annoying then someone cracking knuckles is a fake knuckle-cracker!

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Japan's earthquake rescue robot

Source: BBC



Earthquakes are a fact of life in Japan and so is a fascination with robotics.

At the Tokyo Institute of Technology, Professor Shigeo Hirose is developing a robot that could help rescue survivors after an earthquake.

The BBC's Richard Black took the opportunity to take a look at the robot and some of the professor's other creations.




This would be very cool. The saddest things I hear during earthquakes are victims who aer buried alive and aren't saved for 4-5 days! Having these little snake-like robots would help rescuers alot! Especially since they are often afraid to go deep into the rubble for fear more could collapse!

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Japanese 'Buddha phone'


Source: Crave



The Odin 99 has landed on the streets of Japan, and a single tap of the phone's dedicated lotus-leaf button will load a private, customisable, animated altar.

The idea is to allow Buddhists to perform their dedications and rituals conveniently when away from home. You can simulate incense burning, purification rites and play music to help you meditate wherever you happen to be.

As far as our knowledge goes of inventions that seamlessly converge religion with phone calls, this takes the gold medal. Gold paint has been taken to the phone too, encrusting the otherwise conventional-looking device. Also interesting is that it comes with a metal Buddhist charm to be carried by the user, and two batteries -- the extra one considered 'a gift'.



That's pretty cool to be able to listen to chants at anytime. It could calm a person down uring the times they get really pissed off!

Of course I'm never sure what they're chanting. Sounds like "a la ba la a la ba uuuuummm" to me :)

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Scared Off Of Your Toilet Seat!








Source: Japanorama



Patterned toilet paper is nothing new, there have been comic toilet tissue rolls, Sudoku puzzle patterns, even Hello Kitty tissue rolls but this may be the first time an entire novel has been given the TP treatment. We can thank Koji Suzuki for agreeing to subject his work to a fate worse than the most savage review and Shizuoka-based Hayashi Paper for convincing Suzuki to go along with their crappy idea.

Suzuki's no hack writer by the way - his previous credits include horror novels Ring and Spiral, both later made into popular Japanese horror films. His latest endeavor, Drop, is a nine-chapter horror story that happens to be set in a public bathroom
.

According to Hayashi Paper, reading Suzuki's novel in a similar setting will invest what should be a relaxing experience with "psychological fright".

.....more



I'm amazed people still read in the bathroom. I never did. Once a relative of mine was watching something on his blackberry, took it into the bathroom and accidently dropped it into the toilet.

Reading off the same paper you're going to wipe with is weird. And I don't want to be reading horror and being scared while I'm sitting on the toilet!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

LG Display Unveils 'Thinnest' LCD TV Panel








Source: Tech On



LG Display Co Ltd has developed what it claims are the world's thinnest 42- and 47-inch LCD TV panels. Employing the company's edge-lit LED (light emitting diode) backlight system, these LCD TV panels realize a panel thickness of 5.9mm.

The company's proprietary LGS (light guide sheet) technology enabled the company to reduce the thickness of the light guide plate (LGP) by more than half. LGP changes the direction of light beams. In addition, the 42- and 47-inch LCD TV panels weigh in at a mere 6.1kg and 7.3kg each, about 50% lighter than the same size of conventional CCFL-backlit product.

The displays can reproduce a rich range of natural-looking colors with color saturation level of 80% (NTSC). The panels feature the company's 120Hz technology with a motion picture response time (MPRT) of 8ms, eliminating motion blur and boasting full HD (1920 x 1080) resolution.


A) I'm not sure I want a tv that thin. It might break!

B) They finally made a tv thinner than the "Bimbo du jour" presenting it.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Japanese robot has iPod Touch brain

Source: The Raw Feed




Youtube Link


A robot called Robochan, built by an enthusiast in Japan, uses an Apple iPod Touch as it's head, face and brain.


Can I stick an iTouch on boyfriend and control him? :)

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Japanese Engineer Builds Full Metal Rubberband Gun, Includes Laser Sight







gun

Source: TechEBlog



That's right, a Japanese engineer decided that the standard rubberband guns on the market today just weren't cool enough, so he built one using stainless steel. Features include: bright LEDs and a laser sight. Continue reading for more pictures and a video.

.....more



Japanese men kneeling for a number one?







peeing

Source: Tokyo Times



When it comes to weeing, I will personally admit that after one too many lagers my aim can be a bit awry to say the least. And, judging by the often liberally sprayed floors of public lavatories, I’m not alone when it comes to the odd poorly aimed pee. Yet that said, surely no man’s misses can be that badly directed or bring about such a deluge that he be subjected to the indignity of this device.

A contraption that rather comically is called the Angel Lap Pillow (天使のひざ枕), and while it helps stop splashes from a rather lax leak, it also prevents spillage from even a pinpoint piddle.

.....more





I'm thinking... wouldn't be easier for guys just to sit down and pee rather than do this!?

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Geek/Tech News; Cube B52HD







china model

Source: Akibahara News



Haven't done this in awhile :)

Geek: This is the B52HD, the latest 720p friendly PMP from China. With basic PMP features, this 5” (480x272) touchscreen will only allow you to enjoy 720p videos once plugged into an HD TV. If you own 720p video it will downscale them for viewing on its 5” screen. The B52HD supports RM, RMVB, MPEG, AVI, FLV video, MP3, WMA, WAV, APE, FLAC, OGG audio files, and has an FM radio tuner and 8GB of internal memory. It's being sold in China for less than $80USD.

Non-Geek: Good lord, she's got a healthy set of, erm, lungs.

china model

Monday, April 13, 2009

Guests Rest Best on Pillowy Breasts


Source: Japanorama



Soft, rounded and oh so touchable... the billowy, bosomy Oppai Pillow is the stuff wet dreams are made of.

Every geek worth his figurine collection dreams of snuggling up to a real live girl before drifting off to slumberland. The Oppai Pillow is the next breast thing... er, next BEST thing. Not only is it soft, rounded and comfortable, owning one ensures any real live girls will stay far, far away from your bedroom.

"Oppai" means "breasts" in Japanese, in case you haven't figured that out yet and perhaps not surprisingly it's not the only pillow available in Japan that resembles some part of the female anatomy. Obviously there's a market for such things - either that, or there's a shortage of Japanese women willing to lend a hand (or something).


I don't know if it will send real girls running away. I kind of like it. It's a subtle substitute for a full inflatable doll!

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Hello Kitty Mini Fan, Designed to Look (and Be ) Cool


Source: Japanorama



Among the abundance of Hello Kitty branded products, a few stand on their own as demonstrations of creative design. The Hello Kitty Mini Fan is one such design triumph.

It's good to know Sanrio, creator and owner of the mega-successful Hello Kitty brand, isn't simply laying back, slapping an HK sticker on any old product, and collecting their licensing fee. Not that they NEVER do that, but with the Hello Kitty Mini Fan they at least appear to have made a conscious effort to bring something original and appealing to the table.



The fan cage has been shaped into the form of Hello Kitty's face - which in itself much have required significant investment in tooling for such a niche product.

Applying colored plastic eyes, nose and trademark red hair bow completes the classic HK look. It should be noted that there is NOTHING pink anywhere on the fan but the lack doesn't detract from the tried & tested Hello Kitty charm.

More design creativity comes into play down below, where a pair of cat feet support the fan and include a mechanism that allows you to change the angle of the fan as desired.

The Hello Kitty Mini Fan is a plug-in (100 volts) appliance, not battery powered which in this writer's opinion may be a mistake.

According to the official Sanrio press release, the fan weighs 270 grams (about 9.5 ounces), measures 6.5" wide x 4.5" tall x 6" in depth, and is sticker priced at 2,625 yen or around $26 - use your Hello Kitty credit card



That's SO CUTE! I could use one as summer is coming up and it will get very hot!