• EstraDoll [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    5 days ago

    Japan really is living in the future though. Every night when I go to bed on the US west coast, those guys are already waking up for their day tomorrow wtf???

    • ☭CommieWolf☆@lemmygrad.ml
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      4 days ago

      These sorts of things are meaningless overall though. Where I’m from nearly everything is done digitally, most people are used to paying with digital wallets, we’re all on digital ID, and we hardly have paper anywhere. But everybody is still poor, miserable and struggling. I never liked the idea that having minor convenience technology is what makes for a futuristic society. Give us public transport, healthcare and jobs, even if I have to do everything on paper for the rest of my life, that’s decades more advanced than what most people get these days, lol.

      • Capitalist Tears@lemmygrad.ml
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        4 days ago

        I agree with your idea of futuristic but when people say “living in 2050” they are referring to the advances in technology.

        The fax thing is not an exception, for example, they make it hard to do things online, often requiring physical copy of documents that you used their website to fill.

        I live here, and it gets frustrating how difficult some things here are which these days takes 5 minutes inmost of the countries.

      • LaGG_3 [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        4 days ago

        I agree with you like Capitalist Tears, but I think it’s less the Japanese being in the future - moreso a lot of us are stuck in fucking 1650 with the completely abysmal social structures we have

  • Capitalist Tears@lemmygrad.ml
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    5 days ago

    Japanese websites and any of there internet based systems are so bad that there should be a helpline for the mental damage it causes.

    • Dr. Wesker@lemmy.sdf.org
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      5 days ago

      How are they bad? Is it just because they aren’t the bloated nightmares we’ve had shoved down our throats?

      • 陆船。@lemmygrad.ml
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        5 days ago

        Idk about UI design, but from personal experience, Japanese software feels really weak. I play a popular Japanese CCG and the tournament software they use is really bad. At the big events there’s 30m+ of downtime between rounds because there’s no automated way to input match slips. At 2000+ person attendance it crashes the site so you can’t see online pairings which makes everyone in the venue scramble to the printed pairings. When they announce banlist updates, the website crashes from the traffic. A lot of this feels like a solved problem from other big firms and game publishers, but the Japanese ones without fail have consistently awful software that feels stuck in the 90s by comparison.

      • Capitalist Tears@lemmygrad.ml
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        4 days ago

        The UI is a reflection of the hoardings and signs you see in the pictures of streets full of signboards. It’s bloated with information. They lack basic understanding of how design works through digital interfaces. It is centuries behind anything you would see in the rest of the world.

        They also ignore security standards and best practices of building modern websites. A very frequent and glaring ignorance of basic security practice that you encounter in Japanese software is restricting the length of passwords to something absurdly small like 8 characters WITH no special characters allowed.