I think this was the closest I ever been in real life to that recurring dream of mine. And so, I got three, including a paperback of Solaris, and a hard cover of Fiasco, which is my favourite book.pic.twitter.com/TI4OzU0fPE
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148. How lucky you must be as a museum to get your mascot designed by Miyazaki!pic.twitter.com/fJsMSRLivs
149. At the Gas Museum (sic!), gas range cookers that also look like faces.pic.twitter.com/7bCaxn5uO4
150. (150!) This is a particularly Marcin-shaped mystery. I know this clock from my childhood. From Poland. I recreated it in JavaScript. I wrote about it (https://medium.com/the-outtake/the-clock-85e8e3a50e4b …). So why is it here, now, all over the place!?pic.twitter.com/ZakyxPAz23
(Also, how likely it is for me to take two separate clock photos, on two different days, in two different cities, both at 10:26?)
151. A cute relaxed kitten plus a cute pictogram of its startled Schrödinger counterpart.pic.twitter.com/MsUikSiTLu
153. This ticket ordering machine had an impressively large touch screen.pic.twitter.com/w0vJq6ubaO
154. I generally liked the convention of lighting up things where you’d insert cards/money or get something out. Not new, but more comprehensive and more elegant. (Some lights would pulsate like old PowerBooks/MacBooks.)pic.twitter.com/P8qAnzSN7r
Some machines would (also) show a little diagram on the screen and point to the relevant parts.pic.twitter.com/efAd8KHVNs
155. When things came out of the machine – for example an ATM – they would all come out at the same time, instead of sequentially. Here, it was really easy to grab my card and the receipt via one gesture.pic.twitter.com/Lj2nI0ZZlx
156. If you’re asking “but can I *insert* more than one thing?” the answer is HOT DAMN YESSSSS. The machines encourage you to just put in the entire phat stack.pic.twitter.com/lxg3xfhjwU
(If you’re also asking “Marcin, will this thread ever end?” my answer is I REALLY DON’T KNOW. The discoveries simply don’t seem to ever end.)
157. For example, only just a few hours ago I discovered a new type of interaction. Instead of inserting a card or touching it a few times, this ticket machine asks you to place it on a mat for the duration of the transaction.pic.twitter.com/efbCA4zFz0
158. Only yesterday, I discovered that as you approach a taxi, the driver can remotely open your door for you, and then do the same as you arrive. There are also many more automatic sliding doors around, even in little stores. Opening a “normal” door seems like a rarity.
159. When you pay, even to a cashier, you don’t hand someone the money. You put it on a special tiny tray. It feels elegant and refined. (I went to a coffee shop really early and they didn’t put one out yet, and really scrambled, not wanting to do the transaction without it!)pic.twitter.com/kbag6n9c74
160. Also, in bakeries and so on you’re supposed to just grab a tray and put your stuff directly on it? It was kind of weird. As you bring it all to the cashier, they transfer them onto a plate or basket for you, or into to-go bags. PLEASE TELL ME I DIDN’T DO ANYTHING WRONG.pic.twitter.com/kohGm8ngvs
161. Two beautiful things in another bakery’s placard. One is a list indicating the presence of allergens (milk, peanuts, and so on). The other, and I miss it so much from Europe: the price with tax included! (Which is typically usually even the default here?)pic.twitter.com/kyivr1KBRi
162. Speaking of beautiful… look at these manholes, even the tiny ones!pic.twitter.com/QfDIuRyugc
And those above, in turns out, are the ones when they phone them in.pic.twitter.com/IaqaZV5D3m
Because when they don’t phone them in… I seriously have no words.pic.twitter.com/zoxouAqCi6
163. Amidst all the high-tech restrooms, it’s fun to see ones that are really old. Here is a cool retro hand soap dispenser, and a vintage flush handle that nevertheless already allows you to choose between a weak and a strong flush.pic.twitter.com/wnV7DLvQPC
(By the way, no paper napkins or towels ever in restrooms! There are scant hand dryers, but I think many people just walk out with their hands wet…? Or are you supposed to carry a handkerchief?)
164. Typography! From whatever little I understand, I believe Japanese writing system(s) have an unprecedented flexibility: they could go left to right, right to left, or top to bottom. Here’s an example from the side of a (modern) bus and a (vintage) tram.pic.twitter.com/QWeV1649e7
It seems that flexibility can be used when you’re out of particular type of space. These displays show the interim stations that the train will stop at. You can immediately sense whether it’s a local or an express, but it also gives you more!pic.twitter.com/9RtH1TpHcD
165. Here are some beautiful station indicators from a local commuter line. Showing the terminus to the left/to the right of a given station can be achieved with a pretty narrow sign.pic.twitter.com/HXATT781RG
166. It’s really fun to see when Japanese and English coexist, and Latin letters are forced to do things that makes them rather awkward. Look at “cars” here!pic.twitter.com/viGl4zpfzq
(I’m not an expert, but diagonal Japanese feels much more natural than Latin would!)pic.twitter.com/SjRJWgNFW5
(It’s actually really refreshing to see English as a second-level citizen for once! Here is an archive of a guestbook from a small museum. Japanese entries have been retyped, but English ones just copied and pasted.)pic.twitter.com/Eo6x0iACvv
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