Categories
Technology

The largest population of robots in the world

Many American science fiction movies portray robots as a danger to humanity, some movies even portray robots as rulers of the world above humans. On the other hand, Japanese movies and manga usually show robots as kind and empathic creatures plenty of feelings. For example, in some anime shows robots help humanity to save the planet against alien menaces. Most Japanese people like the idea of a society where robots take more and more importance helping them in their everyday life.

Terminator
Frequently robots in western fiction are evil. (more Terminator photos here)

Astroboy
On the other hand, Japanese fiction usually portrays robots with a pleasant and likeable face and as superheroes capable of saving humanity.

The Japanese population is expected to decline from 127 million inhabitants right now to 103 million people in the year 2050. The forecast is optimistic regarding the birth rate and immigration. It is without a doubt an unprecedented decline of population in human history, which is severely affecting the economy of the country.

Nowadays, Japan is the country with the largest population of robots in the world. There are 1,000,056 industrial robots operating around the world according to the International Federation of Robotics. Almost a third of those robots, 298,000 units, are in Japan; 166,000 are in United States, Canada and Mexico, and 336,000 are in Europe. In 2008, the industrial robotics market handled more than 9,000 million euro (12,000 million dollars), and 79% of the market was controlled by Japanese corporations, the largest one of them being Kawasaki, more known in the west for its motorcycles than for its robots.

Some years ago there was a debate about whether robots could steal the jobs from humans, something that would make the unemployment rate to go up. In Japan, the ironic thing is that the lack of people is making a necessity that robots replace people without affecting the unemployment rate. Robots have become an essential part of the working force of the country. Toyota, the corporation in the world with more operational industrial robots, is also the corporation that uses them with the highest efficiency. Toyota production lines are the fastest in the world, its robots can produce a car in just a few hours almost without human help.

Another kind of robots that is starting to make up for the lack of people are service robots. For example, Japan faces a great lack of nurses. The aging of the population is causing a dramatic rise in the numbers of people admitted to hospitals and living in geriatric centers. The lack of young people able to assist the elderly is being offset by the introduction of service robots capable of doing complex tasks like, for example, helping people to get up from bed and go with them to the bathroom, or even fry an egg.

Defense, rescues, security and logistics are other sectors where service robots are gaining more and more importance. There have already been many cases where robots have been the hero of a rescue in a catastrophe in Japan, mostly in earthquakes.

Taking into account industrial robots, service robots and domestic robots, there are more than 5 million operational robots in Japan. It is forecasted that at the end of this decade there will be more than 30 million. Robots are becoming more and more commonplace in our everyday life, not only in Japan but all around the world. They are here to make our lives easier and they are indirectly changing the rules of the game, our society and the economy, as computers did in the second half of the twentieth century.

Article originally published in the Spanish newspaper El País.

Other articles published in El País:

Categories
Anime

Osamu Tezuka in Takadanobaba

Osamu Tezuka, considered the father of manga, was born in the neighborhood of Takadanobaba in 1928. Takadanobaba is a quiet student neighborhood in Tokyo located near Waseda University, north of Shinjuku. Tezuka lived practically all his live in Takadanobaba and the neighborhood appears sometimes in some of his works; for example in his manga Astro Boy, the main character was born in the “future” in the year 2003 in Takadanobaba. Tezuka Osamu died at the end of the 80s, but his work is still alive in Japan. In 2003, to celebrate the “birth” of Astro Boy, streets in Takadanobaba were decorated with murals to pay tribute to one of the most respected mangakas in history. The murals are permanent and you can see them if you visit the subway station (it’s only 5 minutes from Shinjuku using the Yamanote line)

Takadanobaba Osamu Tezuka

Takadanobaba Osamu Tezuka

Takadanobaba Osamu Tezuka

Takadanobaba

Takadanobaba

Tezuka
Atmosphere next to the station.

Tezuka

Tezuka

Tezuka

Tezuka

Takadanobaba

Takadanobaba

Takadanobaba

Takadanobaba

Takadanobaba
Advertising of an academy to educate future movie animators.

When Yamanote trains stop at Takadanobaba station, the Astro Boy melody is played in the subway. In this video you can hear the song:

Tezuka

Tezuka

Categories
Various

Random pictures

I bring you here some more pictures that were waiting to be published but don’t deserve a post on their own. I hope you like them.

House without windows
House without windows

Varias
This one has windows but the balcony is somewhat weird.

Takeshi Kitano ad
Kitano Takeshi ad in Shibuya.

Okonomiyaki
Advertising for a chain of okonomiyaki restaurants. For those studying Japanese, can you find the pun?

Polygonal house
I was walking randomly around Tokyo streets and bumped into the polygonal house!

AKB48
AKB48 section in a shop. AKB48 is one of the most popular idol music bands in Japan at the moment.

Don't get drunk
Don’t get drunk and cause trouble in the subway.

Curious house facade
Curious house facade.

Yoyogi-Hachiman
Yoyogi-Hachiman in Tokyo in the moonlight.

Don't know
I don’t know exactly what it is. We found it in west Tokyo.

.
A state of the art electronic dictionary. It is an ideal device to learn Japanese!

Ginza station
Ginza station, without people!

Turfy merchandising
Turfy merchandising stall; I think it is a horse races mascot. If somebody knows something about Turfy let us know.

Aquarius advertising
Aquarius Vitamin Guard advertising in the subway. I think this kind of Aquarius is only sold in Japan.

Crappy bus stop
Another crappy bus stop

Unkempt house in Tokyo
Unkempt buildings in Tokyo downtown. Notice that the light post is also falling apart. It’s not difficult to find some parts of Japanese cities that look like they have been abandoned.