INTOUCH Magazine
Tagged under: Talking Heads
Japan’s Tech Troubles
In the 1970s and ’80s, Japan was regarded as a producer of cutting-edge technology like the VHS video standard, the CD and Sony’s Walkman.
Behind the scenes at many of the country’s companies, however, information technology is sorely outdated, shouldering part of the blame for the country’s poor productivity.
Read more...Recovery and Resurgence
In January 1975, the US ambassador to Japan, James Hodgson, congratulated the Club on the opening of its brand-new Azabudai facility.
“It is a handsome addition to the Tokyo landscape. More than this, the American Club offers a center for Americans to gather. The fact that so large a percentage of the members are not Americans is ample proof of the value and the interest of such an activity in Tokyo,” he wrote in a letter.
Japan’s Automated Future
Honda’s Asimo humanoid robot can dance, run and even play soccer. Sony’s now discontinued Aibo was a high-profile, poop-free replacement for man’s best friend. Paro the therapeutic seal has been designed as a companion for dementia patients and the elderly. The prototype Robear can lift and carry the infirm. Japan built its reputation as a global leader in robotics on such well-publicized machines.
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