[🔒] Japon

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Du fait du manque d’activitĂ© sur la commu, l'Ă©quipe de modĂ©ration a choisi de fermer (temporairement?) cette communautĂ©.

Au lieu de poster ici tout contenu en rapport avec le japon, je vous propose d’aller sur [email protected] (pour le contenu gĂ©nĂ©ral) ou sur [email protected] (pour les news) !

Merci pour votre compréhension

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cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/6186718

I kinda like this explanation of things.

Your thoughts?

He's got a video on Marxism that I haven't checked out yet, though I'm afraid to watch it.

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They contain a sweet honey that you can taste by sucking the bottom, a friend made me taste. I just did some research about it for this post. It appears some are actually toxic, and it's very hard to tell the difference.

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Post cree le : 2024-04-26 a 07H14mn08s GMT-Time

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As tu un point de vue ici ou pas du tout ? :) @[email protected]

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Gekokujƍ (例態侊 ou 例手侊?) est un terme japonais pouvant se traduire par l'expression « les plus faibles gouvernent les plus forts » ou bien « le faible domine le fort ».

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cross-posted from: https://jlai.lu/post/6118881

An illustration of the "ultra free" market in Japan, is the insane amount of ways to pay at the cashier. It seems every financial group thought they could do better than the other, and for some reason I don't understand, they didn't eat each other, they just coexist.

The main categories are: bank card, payment apps connected to bank account, transportation cards, electronic money. They may work through card reader, no-contact, bar code scan or QR code scan. For the last two, you are either scanned or you have to scan them.

Also, Japan loves "points". If you know the cashback system, where you get something like 1% of your bill back, in Japan they usually get points back, which are of course limited to shops accepting those points. So on top of payment methods you also have a dozen of points system, either specific to the shop brand or from a different company that may have agreements with different merchants.

Despite that, cash remains essential, it's very common to end up in a restaurant that only accepts cash, even the convenience of paying your house bills at the konbini requires cash.

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La discu se passe sur le feed original.

cross-posted from: https://jlai.lu/post/5993644

I'm not super convinced by the water jet. It can make a mess, it requires a lot of paper to dry if you don't want to wet your pants and if you don't have soap, are you really cleaning?
Heating seat feels like overabundance (a common thing in Japan).
But the sink to clean your hands and reuse this gray water for the next flush is amazing. I think it should be made mandatory in every region with water resources issues. It's still not clear to me, however, if using soap there will cause more maintenance issues or not.

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Bigs Spoilers OFC mais balek, l'Histoire avant tout.
Je conseille le DL de ce SHow lawl

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C'est la 93eme Asadora et l'histoire se déroule juste avant et pendant la restoration Meiji. C'est l'histoire d'une fille Asa qui curieuse qui se marie à une famille de commerçant et décide de participer à la gestion de business. Le personnage d'Asa est basé sur Hirooka Asako connu pour avoir géré une mine de charbon, ouvert une banque, et a fondé la premiÚre université pour femmes au Japon.

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Petit cp ici, vu le contenu + editeur,
#japanmania

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/14103714

Bundle pas mal, avec des titres qui ont l'air bien sympa, des avis ? :)

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