Ask Dr. Fujita - Decoding the True JAPAN! copertina

Ask Dr. Fujita - Decoding the True JAPAN!

Ask Dr. Fujita - Decoding the True JAPAN!

Di: Hajime Fujita Ph.D.
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A proposito di questo titolo

Stop Sightseeing. Start Reverse-Engineering. Tired of clichés? Welcome to "Decoding Japan with Dr. Fujita." Hosted by Dr. Hajime Fujita, a Tokyo-based AI Consultant with a Ph.D. in Machine Learning, this podcast treats Japanese society as a highly optimized operating system. For the intellectually ambitious, Japan is an encrypted black box. Dr. Fujita applies systems architecture to decode its "True Japan" logic—from the Omakase algorithm to invisible business protocols. New episodes every Tue & Fri. Subscribe to upgrade your mental model of the G7’s most enigmatic nation.Hajime Fujita, Ph.D. Scienze sociali
  • #5 The Invisible Police: Why Laptops and Kids are Safe in Japan
    Jan 20 2026

    [Introduction] Leave a MacBook on a Starbucks table and go to the bathroom. In most countries, it vanishes in seconds. In Tokyo, it stays right there. Why? Is it honesty, or something else? From six-year-olds riding subways alone (like in Netflix's "Old Enough!") to orderly queues during disasters, Dr. Fujita decodes the invisible "OS" that controls Japanese behavior. Discover why Japan's safety is actually a calculated survival strategy based on Game Theory.


    [What You'll Learn]

    • The Starbucks Anomaly: Why a laptop acts as a "reservation token" rather than an expensive device.
    • Distributed Security: How society functions as a massive incubator for children commuting alone.
    • "Guilt" vs. "Shame": The difference between Western conscience and the Japanese concept of "Seken" (The Public Eye).
    • Game Theory of Disasters: Why looting is mathematically a "losing strategy" in Japan.
    • The Social Contract: The hidden trade-off between absolute safety and individual freedom.


    [About the Podcast] Dr. Fujita, an AI Consultant based in Tokyo, analyzes the logic behind Japanese business and culture. This isn't a sightseeing guide—it's an intellectual journey to decode the "True Japan."


    [Topics] Japan Safety, Crime Rate, Seken, Shame Culture, Game Theory, Old Enough, Disaster Response, Looting, Social Psychology, Tokyo Life, Murahachibu

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    8 min
  • #4 Robots, Toilets, and Fax Machines: The High-Tech Paradox of Japan
    Jan 16 2026

    [Introduction] Is Japan living in the future or the past? Travelers are often baffled by the "Japan Paradox." You encounter spaceship-like toilets with heated seats and washlets, yet walk into a corporate office to find fax machines buzzing and people stamping documents with red ink (Hanko). Why does a nation famous for robotics and efficiency cling to 1980s technology? Dr. Fujita decodes this mystery from an engineering perspective, explaining why excellent analog systems became a trap and how a new crisis is finally forcing a system reboot.


    [What You'll Learn]

    • The "Over-optimization" Trap: Why Japan's analog systems (trains, mail) were too perfect to justify a digital upgrade.
    • Galapagos Syndrome: Why Japan excels at isolated hardware evolution (like toilets and flip phones) but struggles with global software platforms.
    • The Hanko Logic: Viewing the personal seal not as a relic, but as a "physical authentication token" for responsibility.
    • The Fatal Bug: How the severe labor shortage and population decline are making manual analog systems impossible to maintain.
    • The Forced Update: Why the death of the fax machine is a survival strategy, not just a trend.


    [About the Podcast] Dr. Fujita, an AI Consultant based in Tokyo, analyzes the logic behind Japanese business and culture. This isn't a sightseeing guide—it's an intellectual journey to decode the "True Japan."


    [Topics] Japan Technology, High-Tech Paradox, Digital Transformation, DX, Fax Machine, Hanko, Galapagos Syndrome, Population Decline, Japanese Business Culture, Innovation, Robotics

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    7 min
  • #3 The Real Estate Paradox: Why Japan Has $0 Houses and Booming Tokyo
    Jan 13 2026

    [Introduction] Have you seen the viral videos claiming you can buy a house in Japan for $500, or even get one for free? It sounds too good to be true, but in rural Japan, the "Akiya" (abandoned house) phenomenon is real. Meanwhile, in central Tokyo, apartment prices are breaking historical records. Why does this extreme contrast exist? Dr. Fujita decodes the unique "algorithms" of Japanese real estate, explaining why a home in Japan is often treated not as an asset, but as a depreciating consumable like a car.


    [What You'll Learn]

    • The "22-Year Rule": How Japanese tax laws calculate the lifespan of wooden houses and drive values to zero.
    • Disposable Homes: Why earthquakes and a culture of "newness" make Japanese people prefer rebuilding over renovating.
    • The "Negative Price" Phenomenon: Why some owners will pay you to take their house.
    • The Tokyo Exception: Why the capital's real estate is booming despite the national population decline (Weak Yen & Concentration).
    • Two Operating Systems: Understanding the split between the "Depreciation OS" in the countryside and the "Financial Asset OS" in the city.


    [About the Podcast] Dr. Fujita, an AI Consultant based in Tokyo, analyzes the logic behind Japanese business and culture. This isn't a sightseeing guide—it's an intellectual journey to decode the "True Japan."


    [Topics] Akiya, Japan Real Estate, Tokyo Housing Market, Abandoned Houses, Japanese Economy, Depreciation, Weak Yen, Property Investment, Rural Japan, DIY Renovation

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    8 min
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