Buffalo – Portable battery “BSMPB08CA” for digital cameras – Capable of charging 3 digital cameras on a full charge

Buffalo - Portable battery "BSMPB08CA" for digital cameras - Capable of charging 3 digital cameras on a full charge

Buffalo is releasing the portable battery “BSMPB08CA” for digital cameras in late August.

3 regular digital cameras can be charged up with the 2,200mAh rechargeable lithium-ion battery built-in. Other than a digital camera, the portable battery is compatible with devices with a microB terminal such as a smartphone, iPod, game device etc.

Price: ¥3,465
Color: black, white, pink
Size: 72×25×30mm
Weight: 67g

Ever Green – Reasonable Bluetooth wireless portable speaker

Ever Green - Reasonable Bluetooth wireless portable speaker

A Reasonable Bluetooth wireless portable speaker was released at the Ever Green’s online store Shanghai Donya.

You can play music in iPhone, smartphone, tablet, and PC wirelessly via Bluetooth. With the built-in 800mAh lithium-ion battery, about 3 consecutive hours of playing time is available on a full charge.

It’s compact enough (H7 × W21 × D3cm, 200g) to take along anywhere you go.

Price: ¥4,990
Size: H7 × W21 × D3cm
Weight: 200g
Communication distance: 10m
Speaker: 40mm speaker x 2, 40mm passive sub woofer
Amplifier: 6W (3W x 2)
Power: lithium-ion battery

Japanese Science & Engineering: STEM Needs More Women, But Japan Needs More Children

Japanese Science & Engineering: The Vexing Conundrum of Women [WORKING]

Japan’s double-dip demographics debacle, a rapidly aging society combined with decades of low birth rates, has yet another layer of complication: Japanese women are woefully underrepresented in STEM fields, but addressing the latter could worsen the former. And the other way around, too.

• • •

Female Scientists in Japan: Lacking Number, Lacking Identity
Japan’s METI, the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, estimates that, while they comprise 43% of college students nationwide, women account for only 14% of those enrolled in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields (i.e., STEM; in this case, excluding social sciences). The percentage is slowly creeping up, but in the meantime, a large swath of the Japanese citizenry goes unrepresented in the scientific brain trust. Suffice it to say, women like Kanako Miura, tragically no longer with us, are among Japan’s rarest and most valuable social commodities.

Now, with next to no statistically significant exceptions, Japanese society is universally modern, 100% literate, and boasts an extremely affluent, dominant middle class. By no means is it a gender equality utopia, but on paper at least, most career options are reasonably open to all citizens regardless of sex. However, as is almost always the case, cultural traditions and long-accepted norms and mores rarely find perfect alignment with our highest ideals.

A few weeks back, the New York Times published an account of the stereotyping and understated yet powerful social stigma faced by Japanese women studying or working in STEM fields. Generally speaking, in Japanese pair bonding, science girls are considered less attractive and/or less amenable to traditional gender roles. Women pursuing STEM careers in Japan often feel out of place and struggle to maintain or even define a feminine identity. Plainly stated, sciencey Japanese women have a bit of a PR problem in the romance department – and yes, the problem lies equally with the men.

Changing Hearts & Minds… With a Catch
Anywhere in the world, the psyche of your average 14-20 year-old human is an awkward explosion of befuddled sexuality longing for validation. Naturally, these proto-citizens are desperate to minimize any factor that could jeopardize their chances for romance, and as the social hardships of the J-science girl are an easy to appreciate, easy to avoid barrier, exactly that happens – appreciation and avoidance. J-parents, being hip to this as well, have a tendency to push the proverbial Barbie into the hands of young J-girls who, if left to their own interests, might in greater numbers have self-selected a petri dish or microscope or particle accelerator – whatever represents the sciencey contrary to Barbie.

Aware of the problem, pro-science organizations in Japan are working to counter negative associations through a number of promotional programs, magazines, clubs, and even celebrity tours preaching the good news that: “Hey, dorky science girls are hott, too!” Not those exact words, but – you know. So good on them, and well done. Because in any civilized society, that it’s silly and immoral to argue against encouraging women toward STEM fields should be more than obvious.

Buuuuuut, the thing is, professional women with careers and such are less likely to have children, or if they do, less likely to have more than one or two. What the NYT piece doesn’t mention is that, if such pro-girl science recruitment programs are widely successful here in Japan, it adds interest to an already profoundly expensive social problem – a problem that might be vastly more dire than not enough ladies in lab coats.

Slowly, But Very Surely, the Japanese are Disappearing
First, without question many developed societies face a similar discrepancy between men and women in science, but few if any are simultaneously facing the sort of macro-scale social problem that’s bearing down upon all of Japan, and it’s a point that the Times, in their otherwise enjoyable coverage, sorta just drove right past.

The thing is, Japan’s aging society & declining population situation, the 人口問題 (jeen-kō moan-die; literally, “Population Issue/Problem”),* is a lot more than a debacle; this slow-moving monster is going to mature into a virtually unstoppable, nation-scale existential crisis. Nutshelled, it breaks down like this:

A. Statistically, about 1.2 children are born to each Japanese woman. A rate of 2 is necessary for population stasis.

B. A post-war and post-post-war baby boom means contemporary Japan is full of elderly people who will soon pass.

C. The Japanese are not at all interested in large-scale immigration. Powerfully, very not at all interested.

Given current demographics, this virtually guarantees that Japan’s population will drop from approximately 127 million now to about 93 million by 2063. To be clear, this isn’t a warning of what could happen – barring a fantastically unlikely, epic-scale baby boom, it’s a forgone conclusion. Should the trend continue, by 2113 Japan’s population will drop to around 40 million.

Put another way, over his or her lifetime, a Japanese child born today could witness a 70% decrease in their nation’s population. Unaddressed, this would also result in the utter decimation of a massive, globally intertwined economy that’s hugely dependent on goods and services bought and sold domestically; it’s not at all complicated: if a business loses 70% of its customers, then game over.

The above projections exclude the near-term development of some kind of morally acceptable human cloning or guaranteed-triplets-every-time or technological immortality… which might sound kinda of far out, but such things are not entirely infeasible (Google: The Singularity; Transhumanism). It’s foolish to dismiss out of hand the potential impact of technologies we can’t yet imagine, but they’re far from something to bet on.

Human Development Equals Population Stability or Decline, but…
While Japan’s is a singular case, the nation is not alone in facing population decline. That feature comes standard with long-term, broadly distributed economic success and liberal, rule-of-law-based social structures. e.g., the majority of countries near the top of the United Nation’s Human Development Index have relatively stable or declining populations. In contrast, Afghanistan’s fertility rate, along with that of all the least developed African nations, is outrageously high at 5+ births per woman.

Like anywhere, Japan’s young, healthy women of childbearing age bearing as many children as possible is pretty much the only tool in the shed. But ideal childbearing age happens exactly when a woman would be preparing for and beginning a STEM career. Oh, and STEM work aside, these days Japanese women are really starting to enjoy more social autonomy and are becoming ever more present in the broader, non-scientific workforce.

So, realistically, the cat’s outta the bag, the ship’s sailed, it’s しょうがない (show gaw nye; “it can’t be helped”).* The Japanese are not going to forestall this trend through a sudden surge of reproduction. Japan’s population is going to plummet, and biologically neither women nor men can do a thing about it.

The Time to Beg for Babies is Over – Do Science!
Should Japan aggressively incentivize baby making, or aggressively incentivize STEM studies? Practically speaking, given that the time to begin a career in science and the prime time for reproduction are essentially the same, simultaneously encouraging both is basically tail-chasing, zero-sum gaming of the status quo.

“No complex social system can be rapidly changed without significant damage to or destruction of the system itself,” …goes the classic sociological aphorism – and we know that the inverse, i.e., complex systems too rigid even for gradual change, also invariably fail. It doesn’t mean that the complex system that is contemporary Japanese society, the status quo, is too big to change or destined to collapse, it just means that both rapid change and stagnation are equally destructive.

All things considered, it’s much more feasible to focus more on getting Japanese women into STEM fields and, with a simultaneous campaign, work toward gradually bringing men around. Rather than blithely hoping against hope for a population boom, Japan should instead count on the female population’s potential contributions toward things like Japan’s advanced social robotics programs, JAXA’s growing contribution to the ISS and other space endeavors, and, of the most immediate practicality, the bionics and cybernetics initiatives aimed at assisting Japan’s aging population.

Growing and expanding Japan’s technological infrastructure and bringing those advancements to the world market – something accomplished before – is eminently doable once again. Stemming their population decline is not. So really, what other choice is there?

And so, Japanese women, go for the science! Also a good idea to have a nice long talk with Japanese men about their preconceptions. Because come on guys, science can be sexy… if you just let it.

• • •

Addendum: The World Should Watch
In a utilitarian sense, one might argue that Japan’s problem is Japan’s problem, and it’s a bum deal, but they’ve just gotta adapt and do the best they can. That makes a certain sense, but we’d be well-served to bear in mind that, though often predisposed toward lumbering and at times myopic internal self-management, as an economic and political entity Japan is about as internationalized and internationally committed as a nation-state can be.

To wit, though only 1.8% of the human population, Japan has the world’s 3rd largest economy, is globally 5th for both import expenditures and export revenue, is the largest trading partner of the world’s 2nd largest economy, and unbeknownst to many, is the #2 source of funding for the United Nations. If Japan slides, a lot of the world will slide with it. So, keep an eye on things over here, and if anyone’s got any good ideas, just, you know, let Japan know.

• • •

Reno J. Tibke is the founder and operator of Anthrobotic.com and a contributor at the non-profit Robohub.org.

VIA: NYT Global; CIA World Factbook

Image: Wikimedia

*Yep, these are non-standard romanizations of Japanese. Go ahead and type it out using one of the standardized systems and see how many non-students of the language pronounce it correctly. Go ahead. Try. Do it!

Sharp – AQUOS PHONE SERIE SHL22 – 4.9 inch IGZO LCD and 3,080mAh battery built-in smartphone for au by KDDI

Sharp - AQUOS PHONE SERIE SHL22 - 4.9 inch IGZO LCD and 3,080mAh battery built-in smartphone for au by KDDI

A smartphone “AQUOS PHONE SERIE SHL22″ , manufactured by Sharp, will be released by au by KDDI on July 12. It has 4.9 inch IGZO LCD and high-capacity 3,080mAh battery built-in.

You can read the detail of the smartphone in the article about au 2013 summer new collection press conference that took place in last May.

Elecom – Memory Card Reader Writer – New 4 models including USB3.0 compliant model and round-shaped model in bright colors

Elecom - Memory Card Reader Writer - New 4 models including USB3.0 compliant model and round-shaped model in bright colors

Elecom is releasing new 4 models of their memory card reader writer in mid July.

MR3-K005 series:

“MR3-K005 series” is an USB3.0 compliant model that allows high-speed transfer of large-volume data. It’s compatible with 26 different kinds of media including microSD memory card.

Price: ¥4,063
Compatible device: Windows 8/7/Vista/XP, Mac OS X (10.6~10.6.8, 10.7~10.7.5, 10.8~10.8.2)
Color: black, red, white
Interface: USB3.0/2.0
Power source: USB bus power
Length of cable: 32mm
Size: 77x12x40mm
Weight: 26g

MRS-MB05BK:

“MRS-MB05BK” is a memory card reader writer for tablets and smartphones. Without extra adapter, it’s compatible with 44 different kinds of media.

Price: ¥1,743
OS: Android 4.0 or later
Interface: USB2.0
Power source: USB bus power
Length of cable: 70mm
Size: 63x24x12mm
Weight: 18g

MRS-MB07BK:

“MRS-MB07BK” has both of USB microB connector and USB A connector built-in so that it can be used for smartphones, tablets and PCs. Without extra adapter, it’s compatible with 31 different kinds of media.

Price: ¥3,528
Compatible device: Tablet or smartphone that have USB microB connecter, USB2.0 compliant Windows PC or Mac
OS: Android 4.0 or later smartphone/tablet, Windows8/7/Vista/XP, Mac OS X (10.6~10.6.8, 10.7~10.7.5, 10.8~10.8.2)
Interface: USB2.0
Power source: USB bus power
Size: 65x40x21mm
Weight: 40g

MRS-MB06 series:

Round shaped “MRS-MB06 series” includes a cute face designed model and models in bright colors. Without extra adapter, it’s compatible with 27 different kinds of media.

Price: ¥2,278
Compatible device: Tablet/smartphone with USB microB connecter
OS: Android 4.0 or later
Color: black, green, pink, face (white)
Interface: USB2.0
Power source: USB bus power
Length of cable: 44mm
Size: 47x29x47
Weight: 20g

Sony – Action Cam “HDR-AS15″ – Chosen as the official camera of The Isle of Man TT Race 2013 – Released a dynamic video taken with “HDR-AS15″ on Youtube

Sony - Action Cam "HDR-AS15" - Chosen as the official camera of The Isle of Man TT Race 2013 - Released a dynamic video taken with "HDR-AS15" on Youtube

Sony’s Action Cam digital video camera recorder “HDR-AS15″ was chosen as the official camera of The Isle of Man TT Race 2013, which is a famous international motorcycling event, and Sony just released a video that was taken during the race with “HDR-AS15″ on Youtube.

Action Cam digital video camera recorder “HDR-AS15″ was released on last October. It has a small, lightweight body (90g, 24.5mmx47mmx82mm), and it’s a waterproof, dustproof, and shockproof camera with built-in image stabilization, which makes it the best to use for outdoor activities.

Because of Sony’s Exmor R CMOS image sensor (total pixels: 16.8 mega pixel) and the ultra-wide angel Carl Zeiss Tessar lens built-in, “HDR-AS15″ is capable of shooting clear full HD video in dark situations.

Price: ¥29,800

ROA International – Portable cubic projector “INNOCUBE” – Turn your room into a home theater eaisly

ROA International - Cubic portable projector "INNOCUBE" - Turn your room into a home theater easily

ROA International just released a portable cubic projector “INNOCUBE”, which you can project your smartphone’s screen on a wall and enjoy movies, internet contents, photos etc displayed on your smartphone.

This small cubic projector (45x45x46mm) is compatible with MHL/HDMI compliant smartphone, tablet, iPhone/iPad, and laptop.

With the accompanying tripod stand (extendable from 127mm to 202mm), why don’t you turn your room into a home theater and enjoy a movie with your friends or family members?

Price: ¥37,620 (including tax)
Projector distance: from 20cm to 300cm
Resolution: VGA (640×480)
Aspect ratio: 4:3
Size: 45mmx45mmx46mm
Weight: 129g
Battery life: 120 minutes

Realtime restaurant status app means you’ll never have to wait in line again

This system, developed for restaurant chains, collects restaurant status data in real time, and shows app users which restaurants have seating available. The RealtimeManager software from Science Works’ was released in November 2012.

Most POS systems collect data when customers are ready to pay their bill, but this system accumulates data as the customers are ordering, allowing the restaurant manager or chain headquarters to provide smartphone users with seating availability information in real time based on the situation. This system can be integrated into the top three order entry systems in Japan, which are used by 90% of the market.

“RealtimeManager is our solution that collects data from handheld order entry systems in restaurants. This data is then tabulated to produce a ratio of available seating. A list is generated of eateries with available seats, and these eateries are listed in Yahoo search results. For users of the Hot Pepper restaurant guide website, information on the percentage of available seats is presented, so based on this data information on how many customers can be accommodated at that time is provided.”

This service, which does not require any extra work by restaurant employees, analyzes information chronologically such as order frequency, enabling chain headquarters to issue instructions to restaurants that will lead to increased orders and sales. It is also possible to have special discount coupons redeemable when there are empty seats.

“On weekend evenings, many eateries and especially Japanese-style pubs are completely full. If a customer knows beforehand which have available seating and which do not, naturally he or she will avoid ones that are full. This solution is very convenient because customers won’t have to go to one establishment after another only to be told that they are full. For restaurants, this means that customers will come when there is available seating, and they won’t come when it’s crowded. Restaurants have no option but to turn down customers if they are crowded, so this way they can inform customers beforehand, and at the same time attract customers when they have available space.”

This service is currently offered at approximately 400 restaurants in metropolitan areas in Japan, and Science Works is aiming to increase this to 1,000 establishments within the next year.

This content is provided by DigInfo.tv, AkihabaraNews Official Partner.

Via:
Science Works

Giken – ECO Cycle – Futuristic underground bicycle parking system in Shinagawa, Tokyo

Giken - ECO Cycle - Futuristic underground bicycle parking system in Shinagawa, Tokyo

In Japan, bicycles are a popular mode of transportation and are great for a place like metropolitan Tokyo because they don’t need much space, don’t cost money to keep, they don’t pollute the air, unlike automobiles.

You will see a lot of bicycles parked everywhere here. Since there are many bikes, there are also various problems including a lack of bicycle parking spaces and bicycle theft. Also, especially during the morning commute, bicycle parking lots near stations get really crowded so that you need to line up to park your bicycle and it will take a lot of time. If you choose to park it on the street, it will be towed because it’s illegal.

To solve these issues, Giken invented a secure, smooth, space-saving underground bicycle parking system called ECO Cycle.

With ECO Cycle, what you need to do for parking your bicycle is set a device with a tag with an IC chip in it to your bicycle’s wheel beforehand, and set the bicycle and press the Start button at the entrance of ECO Cycle, and then it will be taken to the underground area. To get your bicycle back, hold your own IC card over the card reader at the entrance. Your bicycle will show up in front of you in about 13 seconds.

Please check out the video from Culture Japan:

Via:
GIKEN Giken Seisakusho Co., Ltd.
Culture Japan

Mixwave unleashed new portable Supertooth Disco2 Twin Bluetooth Speakers in Japan

Mixwave unleashed Supertooth Disco2 Twin Bluetooth Speakers in Japan

Mixwave announced last week in Japan the new portable Disco2 Twin Bluetooth speakers. Announced at 16,900 Yen and available in Black, Red, Blue, Green, White and Pink comes with Bluetooth 4.0 and offer up to 10hrs of continuous play time at average volume, 3 to 4 hours at maximum volume, 1,500hrs in standby and only need 2hrs max in order to be fully charged!

The Supertooth Disco2 Twin Bluetooth Speakers support A2DP, AVRCP and aptX codec with a total output of 16W for a size of 108x70x180mm for 552.7g!