By Ken Y-N (
May 22, 2007 at 22:46)
· Filed under Blogging, Business, Polls
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japan.internet.com recently reported on a survey conducted by JR Tokai Express Research into the matter of corporate blogs. This can be considered as a follow-up to the survey published yesterday on company-internal blogs and SNS.
Demographics
On the 17th of May 2007 JR Tokai Express Research gathered responses from 330 members of its online monitor group employed in private industry. 76.4% of the sample was male, 10.3% in their twenties, 40.6% in their thirties, 37.6% in their forties, 9.1% in their fifties, and 2.4% in their sixties.
My employer has neither a corporate blog nor a president’s blog. We get once a month press release-like messages from the prez, and at one time our division manager tried starting an internal blog, but the plan died horribly. I think people expressing opinions was the main issue that stifled any progress.
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Read more on: blog,
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By Ken Y-N (
May 22, 2007 at 12:55)
· Filed under Lifestyle, Polls, Silly
goo Ranking recently published another rather entertaining survey, this time on where people would least like to go on a first date to, with both male and female versions published.
As usual for goo Ranking, there is no demographic information available about the sample size, only that the votes were gathered between the 19th and 20th of April from members of the goo Research monitor group. The top voted location was awarded 100 points, and the others awarded a score representing the relative percentage of votes they got.
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Read more on: goo ranking,
love,
Silly
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By Ken Y-N (
May 22, 2007 at 02:51)
· Filed under Business, Internet, Polls
japan.internet.com recently published a summary of a survey conducted by JR Tokai Express Research on the topic of company internal blogs and Social Networking Services (SNS).
Demographics
330 members of JR Tokai Express Research’s online monitor group in salaried employment successfully completed a private internet-based survey between the 8th and 10th of May 2007. 69.7% of the group was male, 18.2% in their twenties, 44.8% in their thirties, 24.8% in their forties, 8.8% in their fifties, and 3.3% in their sixties.
I always find it difficult to comment on these sorts of surveys as I fear I might stray too far into criticism of my employer, so I’ll not bore you with my experiences with groupware activities at my place of work.
There will be a significant difference, I think, between the availability figures in Q1 and the actual usage figures by either the respondent or others at the company, but sadly that is not reported.
For reference, I previously translated goo Research’s more detailed look at company internal communication issues.
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Read more on: intranet,
jr tokai express research,
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By Ken Y-N (
May 21, 2007 at 14:21)
· Filed under Lifestyle, Polls, Rankings
Having previously looked with DIMSDRIVE Ranking at average sleep times, and more recently with goo Ranking on avoiding nodding off at the wheel, this time let’s look at drowsiness with DIMSDRIVE Ranking’s 115th survey – how often one feels drowsy, at what time of the day one feels drowsy, and what one does to counter drowsiness.
I get drowsy about 9pm or so most nights, but I just have to try to endure it until bed time, although looking at the survey it only deals with sleepiness during the day time. It’s quite amazing, however, that at least one colleague at least once per week falls asleep during meetings, or at least closes his eyes and appears to be lightly dozing. When there is mass meetings, mass snoozing is never far behind, although that might be due to the majority of speakers being deathly dull…
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Read more on: dimsdrive ranking,
sleep
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By Ken Y-N (
May 20, 2007 at 23:11)
· Filed under e-money, Polls
[part 1] [part 2]
Macromill Inc recently published the results of some research it conducted into electronic money, in particular nanaco and WAON.
Demographics
Between the 9th and 10th of April 2007 1,030 members of Macromill Monitor group resident in Tokyo or the three surrounding prefectures completed a private online survey. The group was split exactly 50:50 male and female in each of the five age bands: 20.0% in their teens (between 15 and 19), 20.0% in their twenties, 20.0% in their thirties, 20.0% in their forties, and 20.0% in their fifties.
My use of electronic money is very limited. I have a Suica, or to be correct an Icoca card, the Kansai equivalent of Suica, which holds my season ticket and also sometimes cash, although I’ve almost exclusively used it at railway ticket gates, and one time only in a cafe when I realised I hadn’t any money. Just like I was never keen on debit cards in the UK, giving away cash in advance is just not appealing to me.
My concern about the security aspect of electronic cash is not about personal loss or skimming-like attacks, but the fundamentals such as hackers working out how to add cash to a card. From what I know of RFID security it is actually theoretically straightforward to hack out passwords and keys from certain smart cards through side-channel attacks, but I don’t know what counter-measures have been taken by the manufacturers, or what protection there is on mobile-phone applications. Actually, this is the vague area where I work, so I better not speculate out loud in case my boss is listening…
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Read more on: e-money,
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By Ken Y-N (
May 20, 2007 at 23:09)
· Filed under e-money, Polls
[part 1] [part 2]
Macromill Inc recently published the results of some research it conducted into electronic money, in particular nanaco and WAON.
Demographics
Between the 9th and 10th of April 2007 1,030 members of Macromill Monitor group resident in Tokyo or the three surrounding prefectures completed a private online survey. The group was split exactly 50:50 male and female in each of the five age bands: 20.0% in their teens (between 15 and 19), 20.0% in their twenties, 20.0% in their thirties, 20.0% in their forties, and 20.0% in their fifties.
Even though I have quite an interest in electronic money, I’d only vaguely heard of nanaco, and never of WAON, even though I often shop in their supermarkets. Perhaps the initial launch is limited to the Tokyo area, or perhaps my rather run-down supermarket in the suburbs is way down in the priority list!
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Read more on: e-money,
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nanaco,
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By Ken Y-N (
May 19, 2007 at 22:56)
· Filed under Mobile, Polls
infoPLANT recently reported on a survey they conducted into mobile wallpaper. This concerns images for the idle screen on a mobile phone, called 待ち受け画面, machi-uke gamen, in Japanese.
Demographics
Between the 17th and 24th of April 2007 infoPLANT gathered 5,941 respondents by means of a publicly-advertised questionnaire available through NTT DoCoMo’s iMode mobile phone menuing system. This self-selecting sample was 36.8% male, 63.2% female. As noted in an earlier survey, these infoPLANT surveys tend to attract a disproporionately high percentage of people on unlimited usage plans, and those on unlimited plans tend to use pay sites more.
I recently downloaded a cute Rilakkuma wallpaper from a promotion through the convenience store chain Lawson, but unfortunately that promotion has finished so I can’t pass on the URL. However, if you’re looking for some San-X wallpaper for your PC, or want to try scaling down the images to fit your mobile’s screen size, here’s their official web page containing a good number of images of Rilakkuma, Tare Panda, Monokuro Boo, and many others, with not just wallpaper, but also screen savers and calendars.
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Read more on: infoplant,
mobile phone,
wallpaper
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By Ken Y-N (
May 18, 2007 at 23:09)
· Filed under Entertainment, Hardware, Polls
japan.internet.com recently reported on a survey conducted by goo Research into digital camera storage issues.
Demographics
1,080 members of goo Research’s online monitor group successfully completed a private internet-based survey between the 20th and 21st of April 2007. 51.9% of the sample was male, 17.1% in their teens, 19.8% in their twenties, 17.8% in their thirties, 17.6% in their forties, 17.0% in their fifties, and 10.6% aged sixty or older.
My current photo store comes to around 10 gigabytes, with most of it backed up to CD. I was suprised by the large number of people using external hard disks, but with prices dropping I suppose it makes for rapid and flexible backup when compared to CDs or DVDs.
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Read more on: digital camera,
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By Ken Y-N (
May 17, 2007 at 20:30)
· Filed under Blogging, Internet, Polls
japan.internet.com recently published the results of a survey conducted by Cross Marketing Inc on one of the latest tools that has been causing something of a buzz around the English-language blogging world, namely Twitter. Twitter is an application that allows short messages to be posted to mini-blog and a group of listeners, perhaps a bit like a Web2.0 blog and RSS and instant messenger combined, with a bit of SMS thrown in for good measure.
Demographics
Over the 9th and 10th of May 2007 Cross Marketing interviewed 300 members of its internet monitor panel. The sample was split into regular sized groups: 20.0% in their teens, 20.0% in their twenties, 20.0% in their thirties, 20.0% in their forties, and 20.0% in their fifties. Each age group was also split evenly into 30 male and 30 female respondents.
I’ve not used Twitter and have no plans to myself, as my impression is that most of the users are people wedded to their internet connection posting about the trivial things in their daily lives with worryingly high frequency, perhaps like a grown-up version of MySpace.
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Read more on: cross marketing,
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By Ken Y-N (
May 16, 2007 at 22:51)
· Filed under Business, Polls
japan.internet.com recently reported on a survey conducted by JR Tokai Express Research into personel systems, in particular in this report, in how salaries are calculated.
Demographics
On the 30th of April 2007 JR Tokai Express Research questioned 330 members of their online monitor panel employed in either private or public enterprises. 67.3% were female, 15.2% in their twenties, 42.1% in their thirties, 31.2% in their forties, 9.4% in their fifties, and 2.1% in their sixties.
My salary is performance based with a horrendously complex evaluation system that changes almost every year. I’m just coming up to setting my targets for this year, which, as with the two 6-monthly reviews of progress towards these set goals, consists largely of horse-trading and inventing ratings so you don’t look either too good or too bad, and of course being foreign I don’t quite fit into the system, so more pointless tweaking takes place to make allowances. They have a box for TOEIC score, so instead I put down my Kanji Kentei targets, but “write like a Japanese middle-school student” is hardly a major achievement from a Japanese perspective! An ex-colleague had the right idea – he just refused to fill in any form that wasn’t in English.
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Read more on: jr tokai express research,
salary
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