Is Japan Behind the U.S. and Europe?
I write often about how Japanese consider themselves to be a decade or so “behind” the U.S. and Europe, and almost take it for granted that their country is less advanced than the West.
For example, I’ve heard people here remark that no one from Japan could have created a company like YouTube, capable of serving videos to every point on the globe, because no one here could think on such a nakedly large scale.
Although it’s all too easy to judge Japan from my American point of view, there are some core areas that could be improved, starting with thinking about the web. Yahoo Japan’s video site would like to be #1 here, but it not only requires Windows 2000/XP/Vista to work, but you have to be using Internet Explorer, which is a real bummer for Linux, Mac and all Firefox users.
Japanese web companies don’t seem terribly interested in the outside world, either: Mixi.jp, the leading Facebook-like site in Japan, requires an email address with a Japanese ending (yahoo.co.jp as opposed to yahoo.com) to sign up.
Banks can be frustrating, too. Back in my single days, I went hitchhiking up to Hokkaido, being sure to bring my bank card so I could get money from the “cash corner” (ATM) when I needed it. Unfortunately, banks and their ATMs were closed for the Golden Week holidays back then, so I wasn’t able to get any cash out all week. (Banks have gotten better, but are still frustrating — it still costs $6 to send $50 to someone’s bank account, as there are no personal checks in Japan.)
In the past, many of the most innovative ideas flowed from Japan, like the Sony Walkman or the idea of putting a camera in a cell phone, but I don’t think something like Skype could ever have been invented here.
well,Peter, meet your New Boss…the new Napoleon..
http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Sarkozy
and his wife is a pop-star 2..
remora
September 14th, 2008 at 7:04 amThe Internet Explorer-only browsing is also getting on my nerves as well.
September 14th, 2008 at 8:44 amBoth Corean and Japanese sites depend on IE, and it seems like my browser crashes every 15 minutes for a script that doesn’t seem to exist on the source code.
It was weird, my host’s computer had some really old version of IE which was barely compatible with older sites but luckily I noticed that delicious Firefox icon sitting on the desktop and quickly switched over.
Isn’t skype gaining popularity in Japan? Woops, I just checked and it looked like Skype took down their skypecasting service which is too bad. There were a bunch of Japanese Skypecasts that I occasionally lurked in. The insular internet is a strange phenomenon considering most people cite the web as a global bridge but it’s really divided by language barriers. Youtube is really the only English based site that Japanese people seem to know about (besides localized google etc.).
September 14th, 2008 at 10:15 amYes, there’s a whole class of online games called Han-Games which work in a web browser but which stupidly somehow call Windows APIs and thus require Windows. The Japanese are so insular and so “sho ga nai” about things like a major website taking away their ability to use the browser they want. Sheesh.
September 14th, 2008 at 1:30 pmIt’s sort of comparing apples and oranges. Japan excels at what Japan does best. For example, bar codes. Japan has taken bar codes to the next level. Like putting bar codes on public advertisements and developing cell phone technology to read and transmit bar codes for discount coupons or authorizing air fare. As far as banking goes, Japan does what it does the Japanese way. Forget ATM’s in Japan (at least outside of big airports). Japanese banking is tied to its past. When in Rome do as the Romans do.
September 14th, 2008 at 8:53 pmppayne: Hangame and NetMarble originated from Corea, which then makes Corea at the fault here. Although I DO love Hangame and NetMarble games, since I have Corean IDENT
September 15th, 2008 at 12:10 amGood article, but unless Mixi recently change their rules, signing up with a dotcom email is fine. I know because I joined with a dotcom email.
True, Japanese still have a lot of trouble thinking internationally, unlike Indians or even Chinese. I think the comfortable Japanese economy has lulled the current generation into believing they can just ignore the rest of the world. When it gets painful enough, they will wake up.
September 15th, 2008 at 7:39 am