News matching: japan
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This Kamameter from Japan turns your PC's ordinary 5-inch front panel into a red/green/blue/purple/yellow set of meters and dials straight from the set of Tokyo Drift. With the knobs, you can control fan speed, and volume, and from the meters you can monitor just how hot your PC is getting.
To demonstrate its prowess for producing electronic equipment, Japan's
TurboSonic is a dedicated boom box store, specializing in 70's and 80's vintage models. Our fav in their stock? The vinyl-playing, bright red, Sharp VZ-V20 you see on the top left. Thanks Roger.
Japanese cellphone users have been able to purchase darn near everything with their cellphones for a little while now and now they can add Coca-Cola to that list. By the end of 2008, Coke will have modified its 200,000 vending machines in Japan to accept Felicia, which is the method of cellphone payment developed by the major players in the Japanese cellphone industry. 


Although it has a deserved reputation for being an effortlessly clean place, Japan sometimes stinks to high heaven, especially in those packed commuter trains clichéd movies like Lost in Translation go to town on (metaphorically, y'know?).


This Fujitsu laptop has a giant touchwheel on top that lets the notebook function as a digital turntable. It'll even connect wirelessly to an iPod for its music. You really can't have this one, though. Not only is it a Japanese CEATEC unveilling, but its a prototype. Humbug, anyhow. Who the hell wants to scratch on a digital turntable that makes you close the lid on your lappie? 
