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Jimbabwe, in What's some amazing technology they have in Japan that's very normal to them but would blow our minds here in the US and western world?

The bidets, of course. Ultra fast responsive vending machines for commuters on the go.

RainfallSonata,

I came into this thread expecting to see toilets all the way down.

KrakBamKrak,

That’s just the lid…usually the toilets are about knee high.

But I would never NOT have a bidet in my house ever again. And yes, I’m in the U.S.

DigitalTraveler42, in Can't we just start calling it "Formerly Twitter" instead?

Just call it Shitter, because that’s what it is.

derpgon,

Spelled “Xitter”

HootinNHollerin, (edited ) in Physicists of Lemmy, what is up?

spun af atm

gluons be trying to keep me at home when I really wanna go out and smash

Chefdano3,
@Chefdano3@lemm.ee avatar

What are you on about?

HootinNHollerin, (edited )

Subatomic particle physics I’d rather not ruin the joke by explaining it yet

Mango,

I’ll have two of what this guy has.

HootinNHollerin, in Physicists of Lemmy, what is up?
Mango,

Ah yeah I didn’t think they’d find this as amusing as others would.

FrickAndMortar, in Physicists of Lemmy, what is up?

The enemy gate is down, Ender!

Mango,

Oohh this makes an excellent point!

ItsYourBoyHalo, in Physicists of Lemmy, what is up?
@ItsYourBoyHalo@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t understand why people are downvoting this, but up, down, left, right all depend on your frame of reference.

Up in space is nowhere, but at the same time it is everywhere. Those are not physical concepts and they require necessarily a frame of reference to even make sense.

Mango,

Ok. Frame of reference is half way between here and Andromeda!

ItsYourBoyHalo,
@ItsYourBoyHalo@lemmy.world avatar

That doesn’t really tell me anything, haha

Mango,

And I’m facing South.

ItsYourBoyHalo,
@ItsYourBoyHalo@lemmy.world avatar

Dude, North, South, East and West are not real either. Again, you need a frame of reference. Those are 100% arbitrary.

Mango,

I can’t tell if you’re taking me seriously or not. 🤣

ItsYourBoyHalo,
@ItsYourBoyHalo@lemmy.world avatar

I am. “Halfway” is not a frame of reference. You need to arbitrarily define what up and down is. North and South is.

Mango,

Why would it be arbitrary there? It’s not arbitrary here.

solrize, in What's some amazing technology they have in Japan that's very normal to them but would blow our minds here in the US and western world?

Refrigerators that make way less noise than the ones we have here. Japanese more often live in small apartments so noise is a bigger nuisance. But, those refrigerators are ridiuclously expensive by our standards. I had been interested in buying one, oh well.

Witchfire,
@Witchfire@lemmy.world avatar

Japanese more often live in small apartments

Cries in NYC

PP_BOY_,
@PP_BOY_@lemmy.world avatar

An average apartment in Tokyo is less than 200sq. ft, less than a third of New York’s average apartment size of ~700sq. ft.

SkepticalButOpenMinded,

When I looked into it a few years ago, I found that, contrary to the stereotype, Japanese homes are surprisingly big. Smaller than the US or Canada, which are some of the biggest in the world, but actually bigger than most of Europe.

The result of a quick search: the average Tokyo apartment is 65.9 sq m (710 sq ft). The modal apartment size is 19.7 sq meters (212 sq ft), so maybe that’s what you’re referring to. But that’s only 21% of Tokyo apartments.

papertowels, (edited )

Another big difference is the apartments are actually very affordable. Two minimum wage earners could afford a 3 2 bedroom apartment in 6 of the 23 wards in Tokyo.

EDIT: 2 bedroom, not 3.

nbafantest,

Yeah that’s honestly insane.

firipu,

You do realize a 3 bedroom appt is like 40-60m2 over here right?

AngryCommieKender,

40m^2 seems small. 60m^2 is 645 sq ft, so a bit smaller than we’re used to, but not enough to make up the price difference.

Pringles,

Doesn’t anyone check the dB an appliance makes? It’s one of the first things I check, as I hate loud devices.

snausagesinablanket, in What's some amazing technology they have in Japan that's very normal to them but would blow our minds here in the US and western world?
@snausagesinablanket@lemmy.world avatar

Japan’s current fiber-optic commercial internet connections use optical fiber transmission windows known as L and C multi-core fiber (MCF) bands to transport data long distances at record speeds. Meanwhile we (USA) have fiber back to copper and Cat3 for the last few hundred feet in most cities at best making the entire idea into a bottle neck.

key,
@key@lemmy.keychat.org avatar

Cat3? As in most cities in the US are limited to 10mbps?

lazylion_ca, (edited )

Cat 3 isnt actually a thing, but people call house phone wiring that. Runs DSL quite well.

dgriffith,

Cat 3 is a thing and is basically unshielded twisted pair. You can abuse it quite a bit from its voice grade days to cram a few hundred megabits of VDSL over it if it’s only from your house to the curb.

Potatisen,

Sweden is also quite well connected with fiber.

themurphy,

Yes, but nowhere compared to the Netherlands and Denmark

Ofc the size of the countries makes it easier.

SkybreakerEngineer, in What's some amazing technology they have in Japan that's very normal to them but would blow our minds here in the US and western world?

Good livestock conditions so that food is actually edible raw

odium, in What's some amazing technology they have in Japan that's very normal to them but would blow our minds here in the US and western world?

On the flipside, something most developed countries consider normal but would blow Japanese minds is the ability to do all “paperwork” on your phone or laptop without any paper ever being printed anywhere. Japan is somehow still a country of fax.

WhatsHerBucket,
@WhatsHerBucket@lemmy.world avatar

I was there in the last few years and couldn’t believe how much of the country was still cash only!

9715698,

Germany is very much the same way, in terms of paperwork and cash only.

PeterLossGeorgeWall,

Germany is the same as Japan in more ways than i could have thought.

fidodo,

And when it isn’t cash only it’s a completely random grab bag between credit cards, transit cards, QR codes, app payment and e money. Just hope you have the supported option of like 20 options.

imkali,

I’m there right now from Australia, which is often considered one of the most cashless societies and yeah, it’s really a shock.

To be honest I kind of like it, and the way they manage it.

Ucalegon,

Here in the Netherlands you can pay practically everywhere electronically (even the door to door collectors for charities carry a qrcode in addition to their collection box) , but if you go next door to Germany you’d better bring cash if you want to buy anything.

thrawn,

They’ve made a stunning amount of progress in accepting credit cards in the past couple years though. I’m there pretty regularly and the shift has been wild. By spring 2023 I didn’t really need cash anymore. By fall, I used cash maybe twice.

There was one thing I was sure I’d need cash for— nope, the hotel paid them and added it to my tab. Back in the day, that mostly happened only if you skipped out on a reservation and the restaurant wanted to collect the cancellation fee. Which has never happened to me so I guess I’m not sure it worked exactly like that.

I know a lot of people here hate credit cards and only use cash, but it’s honestly a pretty large hassle to get cash in every country you visit. Using the same card everywhere is way more convenient and cheaper (exchange fee + no % back like with a credit card)

RainfallSonata,

You can fax at your local public library. It was only about six months ago that my state’s social services dept. stopped requiring faxes.

EinfachUnersetzlich,

Are you talking about Japan here?

RainfallSonata,

No, Indiana.

EinfachUnersetzlich,

Oh, that’s in the US isn’t it?

odium, (edited )

Ja

bionicjoey,

Isn’t this because of those special stamps they use in Japan to notorize documents? I heard about them on a podcast: 99percentinvisible.org/episode/hanko/

clay_pidgin,

Love that show.

ferralcat,

I’ve heard it’s just more of a burocracy thing. A friend there once told me he always puts the date wrong on the top of documents because there is a person who’s job is to double check your work. They’re judged on how often they find mistakes, so it’s easier to put something blatantly wrong at the top that easily fixed so they can quickly find it and he can move on.

FrickAndMortar, in What's some amazing technology they have in Japan that's very normal to them but would blow our minds here in the US and western world?

High-speed rail

bappity,
@bappity@lemmy.world avatar

don’t tell America. pretend it’s multiple automobiles welded together and they’ll like it

ICastFist,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar

pretend it’s multiple pickup trucks welded together

Fixed for 'murican tastes

reallyzen, (edited )
@reallyzen@lemmy.ml avatar

Duh, we have high-speed rail in Morocco. It’s called Al Boraq and is the best way to blast from Casablanca to Tangier.

And it is not overpriced like in France, where the tgv is more expensive than a taxi to the airport, your plane ticket, and then another taxi.

seliaste,
@seliaste@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Tgv is awesome but I do agree that it is quite expensive

Resol,
@Resol@lemmy.world avatar

I thought I was the only Moroccan on Lemmy.

I also live in an area that doesn’t get served by the Al Boraq. We don’t have trains in general over here and I am jealous.

I also learned about the Al Boraq’s existence the hard way, because in the summer of 2022, my family had to drive me from Casablanca to Tangier and back by car, which took us like 3 hours on one trip.

shalafi,

I’d kill for a fast track to New Orleans, Atlanta, Little Rock, Tulsa, Nashville, all that. Ply me with cheap beer, let me chill and ride. What a dream.

AngryCommieKender,

Private sleeping room. I’d never fly inside the US again.

Azal,

Kansas city… what I’d kill for a fast track to Chicago, St Louis, Denver and the like…

I mean fuck, at least we have Amtrak to Chicago and one to St Louis… however only runs once a day, takes as long as driving as long as the priority that goes to freight trains doesn’t delay too much.

Professorozone,

Don’t quote me on the exact time but I heard somewhere that they run so close to schedule that a bullet train arrived something like 18 seconds late and the company apologized for the delay. ( might have been a minute or two but I recall it was really, really short. )

NeoNachtwaechter,

Confirm. That’s Japan. The driver is in trouble when it’s a minute or more

Wodge,
@Wodge@lemmy.world avatar

We’re doing fine with that in Switzerland thanks.

themurphy,

Also, the EU just launched a new plan for railroads all across Europe! Ofc Switzerland won’t get any additional upgrades, but they are still somewhat connected because of the proximity.

Link to picture of railroad plan.

JimmyMcGill,

Switzerland doesn’t really have a high speed rail network. In fact they design against it. Indeed the country is very small so it’s not a huge deal but then again there are flights between Geneva and Zürich so it’s large enough for that.

Their rail system is by far the best in Europe though and one of the best in the world only surpassed by the likes of Japan. They just aren’t really know for high speed rail.

sapetoku,

Switzerland is very mountainous and has pretty fast trains too, although not Shinkansen-fast. Swiss trains are expensive and comfortable and the vista is pretty much always great.

KuraiWolfGaming, (edited )

Would love to be able to take a sleeper train to the border with Canada, then have one of my friends from Toronto pick me up so I can visit them.

MrJameGumb, in What's some amazing technology they have in Japan that's very normal to them but would blow our minds here in the US and western world?
@MrJameGumb@lemmy.world avatar

Those crazy toilets

Old_Jimmy_Twodicks,
@Old_Jimmy_Twodicks@sh.itjust.works avatar

New band name

Trainguyrom, in How Many Streaming Services Do You Have?

I presently have 4ish:

  • Netflix because there’s always something we want to watch
  • Disney+ (in the Disney+Hulu bundle with no ads in either. I’ll be dropping hulu soon for lack of content) for the kids to get their Disney movie fix, plus it also has quite a few movies/shows we generally want to watch
  • Nebula because it costs very little and directly supports creators I already watch
  • Amazon Prime because I order just enough on Amazon to be worth keeping Prime around for plus the video service.
  • SiriusXM because I live in a rural area with crap cell service and I don’t like country music so AM/FM radio isn’t a option
mvirts, in What do normal people look at on their phones?

I’m not qualified to answer that

Waluigis_Talking_Buttplug, in How Many Streaming Services Do You Have?

Prime because I work in a remote area and buy a lot of Amazon, and HBO Max because one day my cell phone carrier decided to give it to me for no extra charge on my plan.

I use Jellyfin and torrents for the rest.

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