Archive for Polls

Digital television on Japanese cell phones

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Does your cell phone have One Seg television functionality? graph of japanese statisticsRecently I’ve been seeing more and more people watching One Seg television broadcasts (digital terrestrial television) on their cell phones, particularly in trains. Whether this apparent increase in popularity is due to more One Seg-ready phones being sold, or whether it is a function of people now feeling comfortable watching television on the train, I don’t really know. To learn more about what the average person thinks regarding this matter, MyVoice conducted a survey on this topic of mobile phone One Seg functions.

Demographics

Over the first five days of August 2007 12,404 members of the MyVoice online community successfully completed an online survey. 54% of the sample was female, 2% in their teens, 17% in their twenties, 39% in their thirties, 28% in their forties, and 14% in their fifties.

As mentioned in the introduction, I see more people watching their phones, so I am beginning to want to do the same myself, not because I find Japanese television that interesting most of the time, it’s just that I feel somewhat left out these days! My next phone upgrade isn’t due until perhaps next Spring, and if I can’t get a suitable handset under 10,000 yen I’ll just not bother!

Oh, and what is One Seg anyway? I know that it is short for One Segment, but wait while I look up the detailed meaning… Ahh, here’s a good explanation from Pink Tentacle about what it really means.
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Just one in ten wants life in the slow lane

Do you have financial room to breath? graph of japanese statisticsJapan could do with more slow lifestyles and slow food, as the impression I get in my working life is that I myself barely get any time to breath, so I don’t know how my colleagues who are in the office far longer than I cope. To find out how the average person felt about their leisure or lack thereof, MyVoice performed a survey about lifestyles.

Demographics

Over the first five days of August 2007 12,308 members of the MyVoice online community successfully completed an online survey. 54% of the sample was female, 2% in their teens, 17% in their twenties, 39% in their thirties, 27% in their forties, and 15% in their fifties.

For the sake of this survey, Slow Life was explained as “even if it is inconvenient, live the natural life for yourself surrounded by nature”; Fast Life was “even if it takes money, live a luxurious and convenient life with all the city benefits in a gadget-rich environment”.

I’d love to see the breakdown of the answers in Q2 by type of employment. I feel I have little room to spare for me alone (although we have enough time as a couple) but I don’t know how my colleagues feel. I suspect (or worry) that they are resigned to week-days being written off, and the image of Japanese salarymen is that at weekends they more often than not do their own thing golfing, fishing, gambling or whatever.
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Most Japanese parents happy to let their children burn

Do you take ultraviolet protection measures for your child? graph of japanese statisticsPerhaps just because I come from more northern stock where skin is paler and more susceptible to not just burning but melanoma and skin cancer, but I feel that over-exposure to the sun is seen more a beauty rather than a health issue here in Japan, and indeed there seems to be a lot of folk wisdom that suggests a child cooked brown is a healthy child. In addition, given the apparent lack of parental care regarding second-hand smoke and child car seats, for instance, I lloked forward to seeing what results came from a recent survey by DIMSDRIVE Research on the topic of ultraviolet protection for children.

Demographics

Between the 20th and 29th of June 2007 DIMSDRIVE Research interviewed 7,121 members of its internet monitor pool by means of a private online questionnaire. 51.8% of the sample was female, 1.0% in their teens, 14.2% in their twenties, 34.0% in their thirties, 29.7% in their forties, 14.6% in their fifties, and 6.5% aged sixty or older. 66.0% were married, and 53.0% had children.

For myself, I wear a hat mostly, and avoid going out for too long in the summertime sun. Thinking about it, in the last few years I’ve actually had sunburn more often when abroad than in Japan, which is perhaps a reflection on Japan being far too hot meaning I have stay in air-conditioned space as much as possible.

I’ve done a bit of web research to find out what is the incidence of skin cancer in Japan, and surprisingly it looks like it is almost neglegible. It doesn’t merit its own separate category in the official cancer statistics of Japan (interestingly, by 2020 prostate cancer will be the second most common cancer in men, yet I’ve never ever seen it mentioned on any popular health program here, and I watch rather a lot of them), and a rather old TIME article suggests that Japanese in Kauai, Hawaii are 88 times more likely than Japanese in Japan to develop skin malignancy.
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Coffee’s role in everyday Japanese life

Ahh, coffee! I really love a good cup of coffee, but if I drink more than one cup a day the caffeine affects my sleep patterns. I can get away with many cups of tea, though; it’s just coffee’s (and dark chocolate’s, and gyokuro green tea’s) caffeine that does me in. Anyway, MyVoice took a look at the role of coffee in everyday life to see what the average Japanese thinks.

Demographics

Over the first five days of August 2007 12,126 members of the MyVoice online community successfully completed an online survey. 54% of the sample was female, 2% in their teens, 17% in their twenties, 39% in their thirties, 28% in their forties, and 14% in their fifties.

I’ve looked at coffee consumption before, but hopefully this survey sheds some new light on the subject. Note that Q1 describes the most often drunk type, so perhaps those who drink canned coffee on the way to work, for instance, also down instant or filter coffee at the office, thus resulting in the poor showing for canned coffee in the results?

There’s a new advertisement out for Wonda Morning Shot canned coffee out now, so I tried my hand at uploading it to YouTube, so hopefully this works for you all. It features the famous director Akira Kurosawa, mounted samurai hordes, and a rush-hour train.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=49No_dO9i-4

Go here if you are having YouTube problems to see the original – it’s my first go at uploading anything to YouTube.
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Three times as many Japanese choose Yahoo! over Google

Which search service do you normally use the most? graph of japanese statisticsLast week we learnt that almost all Japanese net users used Google, and indeed almost 50% claimed to use it always, although Gen Kanai did alert me that the figures were most likely dud. To back up his claim, I now present a survey reported on by japan.internet.com, performed by Cross Marketing Inc, on search engine access.

Demographics

Over the 22nd and 23 of August 2007 300 members of the Cross Marketing Inc online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. As usual for Cross Marketing, the sample was evenly split; 50:50 male and female, and 25:25:25:25 from each of the age groups from twenties to fifties.

For myself, I am very rarely unfaithful to Google; whenever the need to access Yahoo! or MSN comes up, I search Google for the engine rather than have any bookmark at the ready. Wifey on the other hand has MSN Japan as her home page and has both Yahoo! and Google toolbars installed. I can’t say I’ve ever seen her use the Yahoo! bar, though, but that’s another matter altogether.

I’m not sure how to interpret the results in Q1SQ1 and Q1SQ2 – why do a larger percentage of Google users have other search engines bookmarked? Is it due to more knowledge of their tools, more power users, or is it that Google does not fully meet Japanese users’ needs?
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More on children and cell phones in Japan

With mobile phones becoming an essential item for parents to give their children, and with mobile phone companies advertising child-tracking services, it would be interesting to look at a recent article published by japan.internet.com on the results of a survey conducted by goo Research into children using mobile phones.

Demographics

Between the 16th and 20th of August 2007 1,077 members of goo Research online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 52.6% of the sample was male, 23.6% in their twenties, 22.0% in their thirties, 21.2% in their forties, 20.2% in their fifties, and 13.0% aged sixty or older.

I rather like the current au advertisement for their child-tracking service, so I present it here for your enjoyment.

http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=cZMSSsrr12M
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How Japanese cure that morning feeling

Here goes with a sort-of follow-up on my previous post on why people quit their jobs in Japan, this time it’s another goo Ranking on what people doing when they can’t face work in the morning. Just staying in bed or having a skive were not allowable options! The fieldwork for the survey was conducted between the 20th and 24th of July 2007 amongst an unspecifed number of members of the goo Research online monitor group.
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What spurs Japanese to quit their jobs

This is the second in a pair of separate but related surveys; this one being a lighter look at for what reasons do people change jobs by goo Ranking, with the previous by Yahoo! Japan Value Insight being a serious look at the job hunting market. Between the 20th and 24th of July 2007 an unspecified number of people who wanted to change jobs were asked the question.

I don’t really think there are too many differences between the reasons for dissatisfaction in Japan when compared to the West.
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Most Japanese look at job information, free magazines main source

Have you ever looked at job vacancy information? graph of japanese statisticsThis is the first in a pair of separate but related surveys; this one by Yahoo! Japan Value Insight is a serious look at the job hunting market, with the next being a lighter look at for what reasons do people change jobs by goo Ranking.

Demographics

Over two weeks from the 13th to 27th of July 2007 3,387 people chose to complete a public survey offered through the menus of NTT DoCoMo’s iMode mobile phone service. 58.9% of the sample was female, 3.8% in their teens, 29.8% in their twenties, 43.2% in their thirties, 20.4% in their forties, and 2.8% aged fifty or older.

I don’t know if it’s the self-selecting nature of the sample, but there seems to be a rather larger than expected percentage of the population interested in new jobs.

Where I mention “full-time, regular job”, I mean those currently unemployed, whether due to redundancy, re-entering the labour market, or those seeking their first job after leaving education.
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Cell phone camera modes

Does your cell phone camera have a macro or close-up mode? graph of japanese statisticsWith the megapixel count in mobile phone cameras getting ever higher and the functions available on the phones ever increasing, goo Research, as reported by japan.internet.com, performed a survey to find out about cell phone camera settings.

Demographics

Between the 24th and 27th of August 2007 1,088 members of goo Research’s online monitor panel completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 52.8% of the sample was male, 16.6% in their teens, 17.8% in their twenties, 21.4% in their thirties, 16.4% in their forties, 15.7% in their fifties, and 12.0% aged sixty or older.

I’d love to see more detailed figureson how the awareness and use of the macro mode, or close-up mode corresponds with use of QR Codes. As far as I am aware, many phones have a dedicated normal mode/close-up mode switch, and when one selects QR Code mode, a big message pops up reminding one to switch the camera into the correct mode. I’ve never understood why there has to be a switch for this or why the phone cannot automatically go into close-up mode when reading these barcodes. Perhaps the DoCoMo official specifications explicitly require such a feature, perhaps due to someone having patents they don’t want to licence regarding automation of this feature?
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