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Japan warming to cheap foreign gadgets amid slump

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  • GG2141 at 01:33 PM JST - 31st March

    At the end of the day an electronic gadget generally lasts for 6 years before it breaks down /becomes obsolete be it is a Sony or a Acer or a Flying Pigeon Electronics Group brand.

    Why pay more for something that lasts the same time and probably has many of the same components??

    Unless you care about the name............

  • Nessie at 01:36 PM JST - 31st March

    Japanese products = electronics Foreign produtcts = gadjets

    Nice editorializing in the headline, JT.

  • wanderlust at 01:40 PM JST - 31st March

    Not much difference as many of the Japanese products are made in China... with the same components. With the well-known phenomenon of "Sony time", the claim of better quality control and design of a branded product is reduced to an expensive logo....

  • GW at 02:10 PM JST - 31st March

    Japan, a small country(although somewhat long) & lots of people SHUD have been able to keep transport & distribution costs down & enjoy a competitive advantage with the world, but built toll roads to everywhere & nowhere, oil/gas heavily taxed, very inefficient distrubution & voila what shud have been a competitive advantage is now & has been for a long time a massive cost for the country & its exports, its going to get worse

  • dennis0bauer at 03:14 PM JST - 31st March

    toasters to laptops carry increasingly similar components and special features

    So i can internet with my toaster? Japanese products have a zillion features which you don't use anyway.

  • Bungleer at 05:06 PM JST - 31st March

    Yes Seiyu is owned by Wal-mart now, but it was bought in. You could as well have said a few years ago "at Chrysler - as Mercedes-Benz is called in the US"... or Get the gist? This is just plain wrong, just because one company has bought another one it doesn't make the two all the same.

  • BurakuminDes at 08:34 PM JST - 31st March

    Not much difference as many of the Japanese products are made in China... with the same components. With the well-known phenomenon of "Sony time", the claim of better quality control and design of a branded product is reduced to an expensive logo....

    Exactly, wanderlust. I just checked some of my stuff: Hitachi shaver and cellphone, Panasonic Camera (all made in China) and Casio watch (made in Thailand). There is not much Japanese stuff out there, and I couldnt afford it anyway!

  • Triple888 at 09:34 PM JST - 31st March

    "ASUS lesser known in Japan" makes me wonder how isolated Japan is and how their attitudes are towards outside brands.

  • thethudelh at 10:23 PM JST - 31st March

    They have Wal Mart in Japan?! Is nothing sacred from those people?

  • space_monkey at 10:23 PM JST - 31st March

    What makes walmart competitive is their computer management system. Once an item is bought in a store a message is sent straight to the supplier where ever they are in the world so that they can manage inventory at the lowest cost solution. This is turn allows walmart to be a discounter and offer the lowest prices. They bought 10% of Woolworths in Australia and implemented their system making Woolworths extremely profitable in the process. I am guess they are doing the same with seiyu.

  • zaichik at 04:40 AM JST - 1st April

    ASUS certainly wasn't unknown in Japan 4 years ago, when Mr Zaichik bought Asus components to build our PCs.

  • PaulieWalnuts at 09:51 AM JST - 1st April

    I love my Panasoonik.

  • Tahoochi at 09:35 AM JST - 2nd April

    Everything is market-driven. Supply and demand. Products are priced at whatever the consumers are willing to pay for it, not how much they cost to make or distribute. There are pros and cons to this, but that's what all of the comments from sales clerks to analysts in this article are telling me, is that in the midst of this global recession, they are just waiting to see what sells and what doesn't, and whatever does sell, that will be the trend for the next year or 2. This is the case for almost ALL markets right now. We all have the power as consumers to decide the future markets and trends... be cautious in whatever you buy!

  • archiebald at 11:57 AM JST - 2nd April

    I've been using ASUS motherboards and graphic cards bought from Yamada Denki, Laox and Akihabara in home built computers for over 10 years, but it is true that ASUS notebooks have not been imported (under their own name at least) until recently.

  • sf2k at 02:39 PM JST - 4th April

    we'd be awash in OEM versions of the same products all with the same components bidding for the lowest dollar on volume discounts if the likes of sony and others would finally drop the pretense of some of their products. Transferability is also a cost cutter. ie: SecureDigital versus hated Memory stick.

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