Friday, December 9, 2011

Japan Airlines To Start The World’s First In-Flight e-Comic Next Spring

Japan's national carrier Japan Airlines(JAL) announced the world's first digital manga(Japanese comic) service "Sky Manga" on board with one of the nation's largest publisher Shogakukan and digital publishing company eBook Initiative Japan [J]. The new service will be a part of new Boeing 787 debut on JAL.

The service will start from March 2012, 90 comics in total, the first to the third series of each 30 manga-s supplied by Shogakukan. The manga-s are changed each couple of months. The first selection includes following popular comics series (click to Amazon Japan),

天(そら)は赤い河のほとり (1) (少コミフラワーコミックス)

僕の初恋をキミに捧ぐ 1 (フラワーコミックス)



Japan Airlines To Start The World’s First In-Flight e-Comic Next Spring


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An Investor’s Promise

As a fellow entrepreneur (and secondarily as an investor), I promise the following to you if you are an entrepreneur:

1. I will respond to your communication (email or phone or text message) within a day (unless I am on vacation).

2. I will share what I learned from my experiences so they can possibly help you without as much bias or holding back.

3. I will support you even if you fail at your venture, because I have failed multiple times.

4. I will open my network & connections fully and transparently to help you.

5. I will be honest with the assessment of your idea, product or company.

If I break this promise at any time, feel free to call me out in the comments and help me keep this promise.

Related posts:

  1. How I Judge Investors – [Startup Pitches]
  2. Product Promise & Product Pillars – What you need to know
  3. Vertical Expertise of Indian Angel Investors
  4. Post Funding: What Entrepreneurs Must Ask and Tell Investor about the Business
  5. Personal Finance Startup , Perfios Raises Series A from Individual Investors [Interview]


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Google+ Occupied By AKB48 Within A Day In Japan

After the unexpected collaboration announcement by Google and AKB48 project yesterday, Japanese Google+ scene is very reactivated.

The word by Google's product VP Bradley Horowitz, who is visiting Japan (likely) for the AKB48 announcement is good how huge it is in Japan,

If you don't know AKB48, you don't live in Japan (or in fact, many other parts of Asia.) They are phenomenon that might be equivalent to the Beatles + American Idol + the Spice Girls + Justin Timberlake... They are a roster of more than 200 hand-selected performers who are the subject of huge media attention, and support from millions of devoted fans.

According to Google+ Ranking by UserLocal, top Japanese Google+ user by number of followers totally replaced with AKB48 girls. UserLocal also set up an AKB48-only followers ranking as it is the biggest interest on Japanese G+.

7 of the top 10(#2, #3 and #5-#9) are now AKB48 members who began Google+ yesterday. 20 AKBs are ranked in top 30. I was at around 25th before AKB but now at 67th after 42 AKBs ;-)

In compare to Twitter, where the top rankers boast million followers, the most followed Japanese user only has sub-40K followers. When you think the influence of TV, it is not strange and the ranking will be soon occupied all by AKB48, or other TV celebrities may ride the bandwagon from Twitter and Ameblo.

This Google+'s move with AKB48 definitely let many ordinal people know and join Google+, but I am not sure how much Google expected this beforehand.

5 languages translation

As reported, their messages on Google+ are being translated into 5 languages. It is done by a Google user AKB48 Translator to translating some (not all) of top AKB48 members' messages into 5 (or 6, as it seems to write both in Simplified and Traditional Chinese) languages like this.



Google+ Occupied By AKB48 Within A Day In Japan


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Listen and Follow Your Heart

Follow-Your-Heart

Credit: justinlattaway.com

A successful entrepreneur told me something this morning that is pretty true: “You’re only as good as your weakness.”

Take for example, perseverance, which could be seen in two ways. When your startup succeeds, the people around you say you have effing awesome determination. But when you fail people say you are way too stubborn.

Which is true?

I thought about it but concluded that an entrepreneur needs to know when to let go or when to keep moving forward. Letting go doesn’t necessary mean giving up your dream. Rather, it’s more about finding an alternative way to reach your goals when facing difficulties.

So how do we know when we need that change?

Besides user data or taking advice from mentors, a lot of the time my heart is the best filter and indicator of my next move. I do track user data and based on what I receive, make changes accordingly. But most of the time I make changes based on my gut feeling. So far, I haven’t gone too wrong. My gut, surprisingly, tends to be right (at least for now).

The world can say all kinds of good and bad things about your startup – “Your product sucks,” “It rocks so much that I use it everyday,” “You should change focus.”

But the thing that matters is what you believe in. It is, after all, your startup and you should know it better than others.

I tend to listen to people who have real solid entrepreneurship experience and are usually critical and not afraid to tell the truth. For folks who haven’t been entrepreneurs before, I will often discount their advice. But that is just me.

You see, even after picking up external advice, we often follow our heart anyway. And sadly most people like to hear nice things rather than the truth. These are the folks who can’t be entrepreneurs. Though nice words are encouraging, what really helps in product development is honest and painful feedback.

Take all advice and feedback with a grain of salt. Listen, filter, and then follow your heart. You know your product better than anyone else does.

You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart,

— Steve Jobs’ 2005 Stanford Commencement Address.



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Asia Tech Tour Episode 2: Youku.com from China [VIDEO]

at Youku

Youku HQ in Beijing

This is episode 2 of our Asia Tech Tour video series. If there’s any Asian service or app that you’d like to see us explore, please send us your request.

Today Charlie [1] and I do a quick overview of Youku.com (NYSE:YOKU), which is the leading streaming video website in China, with about a 30 percent market share. We’ve written about them pretty extensively in the past, and you can read those articles here.

The company gets pegged as the YouTube of China quite often, and while there are certainly similarities, there are a few differences as well. To find out more, check out the video below.


  1. Disclosure, Charlie has worked for Youku in the past.  ↩


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Live TV Stream Offers Glimpse into Entertainment in North Korea

dprk-tv1

North Korea Tech shared an amazing link yesterday that is apparently a live stream of Korea Central Television, i.e. the DPRK’s official TV station. I’ve been watching it for the last half-hour, and even though I don’t speak a word of Korean, it’s still pretty damn interesting!

You can watch the stream using this link, but the easiest way to watch it is using a client like VLC (if you don’t have VLC, grab it here because it’s great). Using VLC, choose “Open Network” in the File menu and then copy-paste this URL: http://112.170.78.145:50000/chosun

From North Korea Tech:

[The stream is] apparently the work of Seoul-based Unification Broadcasting and, according to various postings in Internet discussion boards, has been sporadically available for several months.

In our experience, the stream has been a bit unstable. Connecting from China, I’ve been able to stream it smoothly with occasional drops in the connection, but not everyone on our team has had as good luck, so your results may vary. Also, as noted above, the station just displays a test pattern most of the time, with programming occuring between around 17:00-23:00 Pyongyang time, it seems.

In terms of programming, it’s pretty clear even to someone who speaks no Korean that this is some propaganda-tastic stuff. Right now they’re blasting some tunes backed with inspiring images of workers and slogans; earlier there was a short piece that appeared to be about how awesome it is to work in a North Korean coal mine. (OK, I have no idea what they were saying, but everyone was in a coal mine and they all seemed happy and excited.) There’s also a lot of music matched with slideshows of natural beauty like mountains and lakes from (I assume) North Korea, and I saw one show that appeared to be an old woman reading from a book, telling a story about the North Korean army in winter.

Anyway, in case the live stream doesn’t work for you, here’s a taste of what we saw:

Even though it’s tough to understand without the language skills, a picture is worth a thousand words, and I think it’s still worth checking out the feed to see the sort of stuff that plays on North Korean TV during primetime.

dprk-tv-3

dprk-tv-4

dprk-tv-5

sparks flying from construction on some skyscrapers, apparently

dprk-tv-6

News broadcast: this isn't a bad screen capture, he did almost the entire broadcast without looking up from his desk.

dprk-tv-7

An interview with some soldiers, one of whom has a guitar for some reason.

dprk-tv-8

This is the weather lady. Apparently some parts of the DPRK can expect snow this week.

dprk-tv-9

part of a montage of still images set to an upbeat women's choir piece

[Via North Korea Tech]


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