November 2000 Issue

On the cover: Bright ideas stemming from a bright idea, with a little help from Photoshop.
By Andrew Pothecary

November 2000
No. 13


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November 2000 Issue

Features

  Cool Stuff
People around the world admire the creativity that goes into Japanese gadgets. We share some of our favorites, like the wonderborg, the Water Looper Mutsu, and the vibrating alarm bed.
 
 
  Luther!
His personal Web site led to the formation of one of Japan's top online brokers. But the securities industry here still has him pulling his hair out.
 
 
  Supplying New Ideas: Wireless Lights Up
In June we showed you the importance of Japan's wireless Web. This month we show you the startups that are making it happen.
 
 

Filter

  Robokoneko Set to Prowl
The researchers at Kyoto's Advanced Telecommunications Research Lab are working on an artificial brain that'll be faster than ours -- and now they've got a mascot.
 
 
  Hiring Headaches
Japan ranks last when it comes to the ease with which domestic companies can hire foreigners -- a bad sign for tech ventures.
 
 
  I Tron, You Tron, We All Tron
A 16-year-old collaboration between universities and industry -- mistakenly dismissed as a failure -- gains new relevance.
 
 
  Wireless Watch
A quick rundown of the more interesting strategies, developments, and applications in Japan's wireless Web.
 
 

People

  Mitsuaki Makino
His kakaku.com offers price comparisons on products sold in Akihabara, Tokyo's famous electronics district. And he no longer gets chased out of stores.
 
 
Yusuke Tanaka
This young fella is on the cutting edge of the wireless Web and looks destined to be a serial tech entrepreneur.
 
 
Takashi Yamamoto
Some of the best tech ideas in Japan are to be found in universities. He's making sure professors can profit from them.
 
 

Columns

  Joi's Diary
The bandwidth business is a lot like the drug business. You have to get people addicted before they realize they need m-m-m-more bandwidth.
 
 

Research

  Japan Studies
The perceptions of land as an asset are changing. Banks may now be willing to lend to startups on the basis of a business plan.
 
 
  Statistics
(PDF-formatted file, Acrobat 4.0 or later required)
On the biggest ISP in Japan(i-mode), B2C by categories, the online-trading explosion, and the rapid rise of m-commerce.
 
 

Investor

  Japan's B2B Universe
A bird's-eye view of one of the most promising sectors on earth: B2B ecommerce in Japan.
 
 
Disintermediating Death
Funerals in Japan are cumbersome and outrageously expensive. Net startup Polytech intends to make them less so.
 
 
On Our Radar Screen
Ventures we're keeping an eye on. This month: Yourstep, NeuroGrid, Campuspark.
 
 
Social Engineering
I-Chara is applying artificial intelligence to human networking. But only humans with cell phones, mind you.
 
 
Breaking Down the Barriers
B2B online marketplace TradeKu wants to simplify the import/export biz.
 
 
Not Content With Content
After success with a few mobile Net sites, ISP and content creator Nnet is selling the tools it used to make them.
 
 

In Parting

  Area: Akihabara
A reckless tromp through Akihabara, Tokyo's electronics shopping mecca.
 
 
  Art Department
Mitsuo Yamaguchi creates flower art that's unmistakably by computer and yet as simple -- and complex -- as the real thing.
 
 
  Blowfish
Japanese convenience stores have it all: beer, socks, game software, CD-Rs, french fries, and, now, high-interest loans. Want ketchup with that?
 
 

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Magazine:

Here We Are Now, Entertain Us

While Japan's cellular operators were targeting generation-Y types, Europe's WAP operators were going after serious business users. Who was being more serious?
by Renfield Kuroda

Enough Already! Cellphones Are Not Unwieldy

Let's get this straight: cellphone screens are not too small for Internet use, handset batteries are not too weak to be practical, and the tiny keypads are not too hard to type on.
Renfield Kuroda