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/ 16 January 2007
Sony’s games unit said on Tuesday that it had shipped one million PlayStation 3s in Japan since the launch in November, as it struggles to meet its March target of selling six million consoles globally. The company had reported previously that it had shipped one million PlayStation 3s in North America by the end of 2006, meaning that it has now shipped at least two million worldwide.
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/ 10 January 2007
Japan this week bade farewell to Momofuku Ando, known as the inventor of instant noodles that have become a global household product, after he died aged 96. Ando died of acute heart failure on January 5, said Nissin Food Products, the company he founded in 1948 in the aftermath of World War II and built into a multibillion-dollar empire.
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/ 10 January 2007
Sony’s long-awaited PlayStation 3 may have missed its global shipment target and been beaten in its home market by rival Nintendo’s surprise hit Wii video game system, new figures show. The results herald more bad news for Sony, which is struggling to maintain its dominance in video gaming amid a three-way battle with Nintendo and the Xbox 360 of United States-based Microsoft.
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/ 27 December 2006
Japanese romantics will have the chance to hear some truly flowery language with the help of a playful gadget purported to express the feelings of plants. Through the voice of a small doll, the device will share what the plant is upposedly ”thinking” when a person strokes it.
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/ 26 December 2006
Japan’s justice minister vowed on Tuesday to carry out more executions after the country’s first hangings in over a year, saying the vast majority of the public supported the death penalty. Japan hanged four prisoners on Christmas Day, including two men in their seventies.
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/ 18 December 2006
Japan on Monday launched one of the world’s largest geostationary satellites in a bid to improve mobile telephone reception in remote areas. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency launched the H-2A rocket at 3.32 pm local time as planned after a postponement on Saturday due to cloudy weather at the launch site at Tanegashima in southern Japan.
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/ 13 December 2006
Brazil formally submitted a bid to Fifa to host the 2014 World Cup on Wednesday, hoping to bring the tournament to the country for the first time since 1950. Ricardo Teixeira, the president of the Brazilian Football Confederation, presented his country’s bid to soccer’s world governing body in Tokyo where he and his fellow directors are attending the Club World Cup.
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/ 6 December 2006
A team of Japanese scientists have found a gene closely linked to nicotine addiction, which could lead to more effective ways for smokers to kick the habit, a Japanese daily said on Wednesday. The team at Osaka University found that among heavy smokers a gene responsible for producing an enzyme that breaks down nicotine is more active than others.
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/ 23 November 2006
Thirty-year-old nurse Rie Wakaume is a camera maker’s dream. About to get married in Italy, Wakaume is ready to splurge on the latest trend in photography — digital SLR cameras — even though she has a perfectly good camera. ”Digital SLRs are now cheaper, smaller and take better pictures,” Wakaume said.
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/ 21 November 2006
Japanese auto buffs with a passion for classic European designs will get to be builder, mechanic and driver with new do-it-yourself cars unveiled on Tuesday. The miniature car requires the owner to put together all the parts of the car, from the steering wheel to the brakes, with the help of a set of tools and an instruction manual.
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/ 17 November 2006
Japan on Friday declared its bid to host the 2015 Rugby World Cup and bring the event to Asia for the first time, after learning lessons from its narrow defeat to New Zealand for the 2011 contest. ”We decided because of the enthusiastic support at home and overseas,” said Japan Rugby Football Union president Yoshiro Mori.
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/ 17 November 2006
Hardly any Japanese felt the earthquake in the distant north Pacific this week, but anyone watching television saw a tsunami warning and thousands evacuated to higher ground. While the waves that rolled ashore were only about 40cm high, a network built up over decades has made possible the swift dissemination of information vital to saving lives.
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/ 16 November 2006
Small tsunami waves hit Japan’s northernmost island late on Wednesday after a major quake in the north Pacific triggered a full-scale tsunami warning for areas of northern Japan and Russia’s sparsely populated Kurile islands. An initial tsunami of 40cm came ashore near Nemuro on the Pacific coast of Hokkaido island, just before 10pm (1pm GMT).
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/ 15 November 2006
Small tsunami waves hit Japan’s northern-most island late on Wednesday after a major quake in the north Pacific triggered a full-scale tsunami warning for areas of northern Japan and Russia’s sparsely populated Kurile islands. An initial tsunami of 40cm came ashore near Nemuro on the Pacific Coast of Hokkaido Island just before 10pm local time (1pm GMT).
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/ 15 November 2006
A massive earthquake struck in the northern Pacific Ocean on Wednesday, triggering a tsunami warning for the coasts of Japan and Russia. The earthquake registered 8,1 on the Richter scale at 8.15pm (11.15am GMT) in the Pacific, about 600km north-east of Japan’s main northern island of Hokkaido.
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/ 10 November 2006
The International Energy Agency chief on Friday warned not to fight past battles over the Kyoto Protocol after the United States election, saying the pressing concern was drafting a successor. ”One can say that the US was wrong in not ratifying Kyoto, but today it is not the Kyoto protocol at issue. The problem is what next,” said Claude Mandil.
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/ 10 November 2006
PlayStation 3 fans were preparing for a sleepless night ahead of Saturday’s launch of Sony’s new console but the hype has been tempered by fears of an over-reliance on recycled hits. ”Content-wise, the PS3 doesn’t look that impressive,” said Hiroshi Kamide, a game analyst at KBC Securities.
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/ 9 November 2006
Sony will roll out the the PlayStation 3, the latest version of its blockbuster games machine, in Japan on Saturday in a three-way showdown with Microsoft’s Xbox 360 and Nintendo’s upcoming Wii in the nearly -billion video-game market. The stakes are high for Sony.
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/ 9 November 2006
The Williams Formula One team has hired Japan’s Kazuki Nakajima as a test driver to work alongside race drivers Nico Rosberg and Alex Wurz. Nakajima, who is currently racing in the Formula 3 Euro Series, joins India’s Narain Karthikeyan as a Williams test driver in preparation for the 2007 season that starts in Melbourne in March.
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/ 5 November 2006
Japanese researchers said on Sunday that a bottlenose dolphin captured last month has an extra set of fins that could be the remains of back legs, providing further evidence that ocean-dwelling mammals once lived on land. Fishermen captured the four-finned dolphin off the coast of Wakayama prefecture in western Japan.
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/ 18 October 2006
United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice sought on Wednesday on a whistle-stop tour of the region to ensure North Asian powers were committed to a unified stance on United Nations sanctions following North Korea’s nuclear test. Rice arrived in Tokyo for talks with the Japanese foreign and defence ministers as intelligence experts warned a second nuclear test was likely.
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/ 11 October 2006
Japan announced on Wednesday it would impose new sanctions on North Korea over this week’s reported underground nuclear blast, while the reclusive communist state held out the threat of more tests. North Korea’s KCNA news agency said pressure from Washington to rein in its nuclear programme would be tantamount to a declaration of war.
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/ 11 October 2006
Japan is likely to announce new sanctions on North Korea later on Wednesday in response to its reported nuclear test this week, Tokyo television said, while the reclusive communist state held out the threat of more tests. NHK TV said Japan’s government had decided to impose fresh sanctions on Pyongyang and the decision would be formalised later in the day.
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/ 10 October 2006
Japan is considering imposing more sanctions on North Korea in response to its announcement that it conducted a nuclear test, and lawmakers are set to vote later on Tuesday on a resolution criticising Pyongyang’s actions. North Korea said on Monday it had successfully carried out its first nuclear test earlier that day, and Washington has sought harsh United Nations sanctions.
World powers neared consensus on a statement warning North Korea against a nuclear test on Friday amid speculation that the state might detonate a device deep inside an abandoned mine as early as this weekend. North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, making his first public appearance since the Stalinist state vowed on Tuesday to conduct a nuclear test, held a meeting to rally army commanders.
Nissan said on Thursday it was still open to an alliance with a United States carmaker after the failure of talks with ailing General Motors, amid speculation Ford could be next to the negotiating table.
North Korea said on Tuesday it would conduct a nuclear test in the future but would never use atomic weapons first and remained committed to the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula, Pyongyang’s KCNA news agency reported. Analysts say the reclusive state, which shocked the region in July with a series of missile tests, has enough fissile material to make at least six to eight nuclear bombs.
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/ 29 September 2006
Japan’s Sony, scrambling to contain the fall-out from widening defective battery problems, launched a global replacement programme after China’s Lenovo became the latest computer maker to mount a recall. Sony will offer to replace certain battery packs for notebook computers in response to concerns at recent overheating incidents, it said late on Thursday.
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/ 26 September 2006
North Korean leader Kim Jong-il lavished luxury cars and apartments on female footballers who won the recent under-20 world championship, according to the country’s media. Kim rewarded the players for their crushing 5-0 win over China in the tournament final in Moscow earlier this month.
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/ 22 September 2006
Superstitious or not, Japanese golfer Mitsuhiro Tateyama is likely to shudder whenever he comes across the number 19 in future after an horrific round at this week’s Acom International. Still, though, Tateyama could see the funny side after setting a Japanese record by taking 19 on a par-three hole at the Ishioka Golf Club on Thursday.
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/ 20 September 2006
Shinzo Abe, a conservative advocate of a more muscular Japanese foreign policy, was overwhelmingly elected as ruling party leader on Wednesday, setting the stage for his election as prime minister next week. Abe, set to become Japan’s first prime minister born after World War II, has pledged to rewrite Japan’s pacifist Constitution.
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/ 4 September 2006
A Japanese man was arrested after trying to steal a mannequin from a display window, claiming it was love at first sight, news reports said on Monday. Shoji Shibuzaki (33) was arrested at 3am in the southern city of Maebara for allegedly trying to remove the mannequin from display at a community centre.