By Ken Y-N (
March 31, 2009 at 23:02)
· Filed under Entertainment, Internet, Polls
With tomorrow being April Fools’ Day, what would be more appropriate than a look with iShare at virtual April Fools.
Demographics
Between the 10th and 13th of March 2009 380 mobile phone-owning members of the CLUB BBQ free email forwarding service completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 53.4% of the sample were male, 37.4% in their twenties, 27.4% in their thirties, and 35.3% in their forties.
April Fools’ Day is I feel not widely known in Japan, although that wasn’t one of the questions asked in this survey. I always keep thinking I ought to do an April Fool here, but I never come up with a good idea. Or am I just saying that to try to catch you off your guard? Or did I just state that in order to confuse you? You’ll just have to wait until tomorrow!
For reference, the JIAFA, Japan Internet April Fool Association, mentioned in Q3 has its website here, although it is rather a barren place. It might be a bit more lively tomorrow, however.
Have you ever been April Fooled on the internet?
Read the rest of this entry »
Read more on: april fool,
club bbq,
ishare
Permalink
By Ken Y-N (
March 31, 2009 at 00:51)
· Filed under Site News
Inspired by Japan Probe’s many posts on Nocchi and other bad Obama lookalikes, and with a large bit of help from Shane at Nihon Sun with the logo, I proudly present Obama or Not.
Have fun!
Read more on:
Permalink
Trackbacks / Pingbacks (2)
By Ken Y-N (
March 31, 2009 at 00:14)
· Filed under Hardware, Lifestyle, Polls
The one thing that isn’t a dishwasher in Japan is the average husband (a suspiciously-optimistic figure of one in four wash them) and it’s the third most hated job for wives, so with that in mind, this survey from MyVoice looked at how dishwashers are used in Japan.
Demographics
Over the first five days of March 2009 15,395 members of the MyVoice internet community completed a private online questionnaire. 54% of the sample were female, 2% in their teens, 15% in their twenties, 36% in their thirties, 29% in their forties, and 18% aged fifty or older.
We once bought a counter-top dishwasher, but it was too slow and not reliable at cleaning, so we only ever used it half a dozen times. We tried to palm it off to the parents-in-law, but they were similarly unimpressed and sent it back! It’s now gathering dust (and rust, no doubt) in the back of our trunk room.
I do the evening washing up all the time, so if we actually had a dishwasher I’d be seen to be not pulling my weight with the housework, therefore no dishwasher actually helps maintain domestic harmony! I do actually enjoy (well, not actively dislike) doing them, which does help.
Read the rest of this entry »
Read more on: dishwasher,
myvoice
Permalink
Trackback / Pingback (1)
By Ken Y-N (
March 29, 2009 at 13:19)
· Filed under Polls, Rankings
The twin topics of this recent pair of surveys from goo Ranking was what women think they cannot get men to understand and what men find difficult to understand about women.
Demographics
Between the 18th and 2nd of February 2009 1,076 members of the goo Research monitor group completed a private online questionnaire. 51.1% of the sample were male, 7.2% in their teens, 15.8% in their twenties, 29.4% in their thirties, 25.2% in their forties, 11.1% in their fifties, and 11.3% aged sixty or older. Note that the score in the results refers to the relative number of votes for each option, not a percentage of the total sample.
Listening (or at least pretending to do so!) to women and not being silent, even if it is just a grunt in reply, is one thing that I cannot really get my head around. When I’m annoyed, I just talk to myself just to get it all out, so I don’t understand why they can’t just do the same!
I used to wonder about why my wife used so much toilet paper, but I recently saw a program that suggested both male and female Japanese roll up about five to ten metres of the stuff whereas I was taught to use just five to eight sheets, fold the top over once or twice, and off you go. I wonder how washlet toilets and the resultant wet bum results in excessive toilet paper usage? We (well, she…) go through almost a roll per day!
Read the rest of this entry »
Read more on: gender,
goo ranking
Permalink
Trackbacks / Pingbacks (3)
By Ken Y-N (
March 29, 2009 at 01:17)
· Filed under Business, Polls, Rankings
Today’s sideways look at Japanese society is courtesy of goo Ranking as usual, where they investigated what, outside of directly work-related issues, new starts in the office would ask their seniors, for both men and women.
Demographics
Between the 18th and 2nd of February 2009 1,076 members of the goo Research monitor group completed a private online questionnaire. 51.1% of the sample were male, 7.2% in their teens, 15.8% in their twenties, 29.4% in their thirties, 25.2% in their forties, 11.1% in their fifties, and 11.3% aged sixty or older. Note that the score in the results refers to the relative number of votes for each option, not a percentage of the total sample.
The use of “senior” is one of these difficult words to translate from Japanese. The usual translation of 先輩, sempai, is just “senior”, but in this one small word there are elements of respect and a big brother-little brother relationship. “Mentor” would be too formal and narrow a role, and it’s a much more long-term relationship than “the guy who showed me around when I started.”
Read the rest of this entry »
Read more on: gender,
goo ranking,
work
Permalink
By Ken Y-N (
March 28, 2009 at 22:39)
· Filed under JBMatsuri

It’s my turn at the controls, and after an entertaining Fast Times in Japan hosted by freedomvw/THEGHOST. As a few people perhaps had trouble thinking about what to write, let’s try the opposite in April:
Slow Times in Japan
How do you kick back and relax? A favourite hiking spot, a quiet bar, bonsai? For those of you not in Japan, choose something Japan-related. Submit stories through the widget below or email me directly.
Just to spread the link love, here’s the entries from March again:
Billy at Tune In Tokyo offers up a interesting tale of being mistaken for trying to smuggle a little pot into the land of the raising sun.
Shane at The Nihon Sun shares a slightly painful experience of trying to talk a Japanese taxi driver into stopping at the right place.
Loco at Loco In Yokohama reveals an experience on the train involving some dirty pervert and a school girl.
McAlpine from the Soul of Japan shares with us all his love of being a bully to just about anyone. Even if they did nothing to him at all.
Nick over at the long countdown offers up a collection of off beat experiences he has had over the years in Japan.
John Turningpin at Mad Tokyo shares the oddity of a night out on the bar scene.
Kanmuri from Turning Iwatean had the pleasure of being asked Does this ramen have human flesh in it?
Read more on: matsuri
Permalink
Trackbacks / Pingbacks (8)
By Ken Y-N (
March 28, 2009 at 22:00)
· Filed under Lifestyle, Polls
Due to the lack of vegetarian options I never actually eaten an instant ramen cup noodle here in Japan, but according to this recent survey from MyVoice into cup noodles (their second time, the first having been in December 2006) I’m very much in the minority as usual.
Demographics
Over the first five days of March 2009 15,584 members of the MyVoice internet community completed a private online questionnaire. 54% of the sample were female, 1% in their teens, 14% in their twenties, 37% in their thirties, 29% in their forties, and 19% aged fifty or older.
I live just two stops up the tracks from the Momofuku Ando Instant Ramen Museum, but despite that I am still to visit! One fun feature is that you can make your own original cup which they present to you sealed in an over-large air-filled pillow, so every time I see one on the train I am reminded of my failure to travel just 10 minutes to see the place!
Read the rest of this entry »
Read more on: food,
myvoice,
noodles
Permalink
By Ken Y-N (
March 27, 2009 at 23:24)
· Filed under Internet, Polls, Security
Although I was at a loss to explain why a previous survey was young women only, it is quite obvious why this survey from iBridge Research Plus, reported on by japan.internet.com, on online shopping payment methods focused on the fairer sex.
Demographics
On the 16th of March 2009 300 female members of the iBridge research monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 21.3% of the sample were in their twenties, 41.7% in their thirties, 25.7% in their forties, 9.0% in their fifties, and 2.3% in their sixties.
One of the more popular payment methods in the west is surely PayPal, so from my point of view the omission is glaring. Yahoo! Wallet is available in the USA also, and it seems to be mostly a proxy for your own credit card, so your credit card information is held only by Yahoo!, not the merchants and shops that support Yahoo! Wallet, so it should be more secure.
Read the rest of this entry »
Read more on: ibridge research plus,
shopping,
yahoo! wallet
Permalink
By Ken Y-N (
March 26, 2009 at 23:46)
· Filed under Internet, Polls, Society
The title of this post is me being rather creative (read “outright lying”) regarding the results of Q2, but regardless, this survey conducted by Marsh Inc and reported on by japan.internet.com into internet scariness finds the average Japanese web user quite the tim’rous beastie.
Demographics
Between the 18th and 23rd of March 2009 300 members of the Marsh monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 50.0% of the sample were female, 20.0% in their twenties, 20.0% in their thirties, 20.0% in their forties, 20.0% in their fifties, and 20.0% aged sixty or older.
If you don’t know what goatse.cx is, think yourself lucky, and do NOT, I repeat NOT, just look it up to see what I am on about! You have been warned.
I personally don’t find the internet scary at all; irritating in places, but not scary.
For reference, in December of 2007 a similar survey was conducted.
Read the rest of this entry »
Read more on: marsh,
scary
Permalink
By Ken Y-N (
March 25, 2009 at 23:00)
· Filed under Internet, Polls
Why this survey focused only on the young woman demographic is a bit of mystery to me, but that’s what iBridge Research Plus did in this survey reported on by japan.internet.com into web email.
Demographics
On the 9th of March 2009 300 female members of the iBridge research monitor group completed an internet-based questionnaire. 21.3% of the sample were in their twenties, 46.3% in their thirties, and 32.3% in their forties.
With some of the services described below, the email address comes as part of a package – au one Mail is an external mailbox for mobile phones, and to create a livedoor blog you need to create a livedoor email address, a process I have done myself, but both the blog and mailbox lie unused.
Read the rest of this entry »
Read more on: email,
ibridge research plus
Permalink
Trackback / Pingback (1)