Archived Magazine Contents

March 2003 Issue

Upfront

  Booming IP Telephony Challenges NTT's Telecom Empire
Did you know that NTT had held a de factor monopoly in the fixed phone business for the past 100 years?
 
 
Coming up next month
 
 
  To the Editor
What our readers have to say
 
 
  Shopping On The Small Screen
Girls Walker shows that young women will even use their keitai to shop till they drop.
 
 
  'Independence' That Counts
MBOs are becoming a viable tool for Japanese firms looking to break with foreign parents.
 
 
  So Much for Conventional Wisdom
Gregory Clark argues that the usual arguments about what ails the Japanese economy are off the mark.
 
 
  The Pulse 2
The best of J@pan Inc's newsletters
 
 
  Riding through the Tokyo Streets in Style
Getting around in Tokyo can be a hassle!!
 
 
  The Pulse - The word on the Street from the heart of Tokyo
- China pc market
- Secom, Chiba Police Use GPS Technology to Nail Stalkers
- Breaks to go to Investment funds
 
 
  Sony Tries to Revive Troubled Aiwa Brand
Hirauchi shows off Aiwa's Net MP3 Player
 
 
  Contributors
Gregory Clark, Stefan Whitwel and Robert Juppe
 
 
  From the Editor
Buying Land: The Inside Story - Mailmags Make Millions - What awaits the Ogasawaras?
 
 

Features

  Japan's Fight Clubs
Roland Kelts takes us into the heart of Japan's fight world, a big, bad, booming industry that is branching out overseas.
 
 
  Cash On The Table: An Expat's Tale
Real Estate Part 2
 
 
  Searching for the Bottom
Real Estate: Part 1 - This two-part feature brings you analysis of Japan's land prices from real estate expert Stefan Whitwell and a firsthand account of what it's like to buy land as a foreigner from Robert Juppe.
 
 
  Does Paradise Need a Parking Lot?
The Ogasawaras are Tokyo's farthest-flung suburbs and some of the world's most exotic islands. That's why developers have been toying with the idea of turning them into another Waikiki.
 
 

News & Info

  The Story of J@pan Inc
 
 

Investor

  Reflation and Gold Loom on the Horizon
Reflation and gold loom on the horizon, says analyst Darrel Whitten.
 
 

Blowfish

  Blowfish
Sleeper trains, the bowling fad, miso soup preferences, taxi mileage programs and calling the cops.
 
 

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