Space Travel News  
FARM NEWS
Japan's vending machines sell cool bananas, read minds

New EU atlas maps threats to soil biodiversity
Brussels (AFP) Sept 23, 2010 - European soil biodiversity is at risk in parts of Britain, the Benelux countries and northern France, according to an atlas released Thursday by the European Commission. The 128-page atlas, mapping potential threats to soil diversity, was released by the Commission's research body as a contribution to the UN's International Year of Biodiversity 2010. "Soil is essential to the biodiversity which makes life on earth possible and keeps our economies sustainable," said research and environment commissioners Maire Geoghegan-Quinn and Janez Potocnik in a statement. "Soil degradation threatens our access to food, clean air and water, as well as to many crucial raw materials." "Unless we tackle this problem soon," they added, "it will cost a lot more to put it right." The European Atlas of Soil Biodiversity includes the first ever threat map covering most EU Member States. Regions most affected are particularly concentrated in several parts of Britain, except the most northern, the Benelux countries and northern France, it said, as well as Italy's Po valley, the country's only region to fall into the high risk category.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 23, 2010
They sell umbrellas, flowers and cooked meals, cough up cool drinks after earthquakes and even try to read your mind: they are Japan's five million vending machines.

Scattered across the country, the automated stores are about as ubiquitous as traffic lights and offer an ever-widening, dizzying palette of goods.

Thanks to Japan's low crime rate, companies have placed them everywhere, from neon-lit city centres to the icy summit of Mount Fuji, with little risk of them being burgled and relieved of their rich coin vaults.

"They are so convenient, I wish I had one in my room," said 18-year-old Tokyo resident Hibiki Miura, who like many Japanese finds it hard to imagine modern civilisation without the handy helpers.

Japan has 2.5 million vending machines that sell just beverages -- about one for every 50 people. They generated a staggering 27 billion dollars last year, says the Japan Vending Machine Manufacturers' Association.

Machines that sell other miscellaneous goods -- from cigarettes to toys, flower bouquets and even printed oracles at Shinto shrines -- raise the total to more than five million, according to industry estimates.

In the world's most saturated vending machine market, providers are competing ever more fiercely to be noticed above the machines' neon-glare and the clatter of change with novel new offerings.

Dole Japan, Ltd. turned heads when it set up a banana vending machine at a Tokyo train station in June, selling chilled bananas for 130 yen (1.5 dollars) each or a bunch of about five for 390 yen.

"You can buy bananas at convenience stores or supermarkets, but people seem to find it fun to buy them from a vending machine," said Dole spokeswoman Hiromi Ohtaki. "People think it's fun to watch, fun to buy and fun to eat."

Some machines provide added social functions, such as news flashes and baseball scores on electronic display boards.

Coca-Cola (Japan) Co. says 5,100 of its 980,000 machines will roll out drinks free in the wake of major earthquakes and other disasters.

Most recently, a machine provided 680 bottles of beverages to people who fled their homes in the northern prefecture of Hokkaido when a quake in distant Chile triggered a tsunami alert for Japan in February.

At the other end of the Japanese archipelago, in a remote village of subtropical Okinawa island, Coca-Cola says it supports a nature survey with vending machine-mounted microphones that record chirps of rare birds.

The very latest in high-tech vending machines even attempts to make the consumer's choice for them, using a camera and software that recognises a person's sex and 10-year age band with about 75 percent accuracy.

Using the point-of-sale data, the machine at Tokyo's Shinagawa train station may look at a person and suggest a sports drink or a chilled can of espresso based on its accumulated marketing wisdom.

Trying the machine recently, Hidemi Mio, 48, said that after scrutinising her with its digital brain for a second, it recommended three drinks on its 47-inch touch-screen display, including a flavoured tea.

Happily, the machine guessed correctly, picking one of her favourites, she said, adding that she would take on board the machine's suggestions again in future, especially "when I can't make a decision".

Payments can be made with swipe cards and cellphones as well as cash.

To protect consumers' privacy, images are deleted immediately, but data on sex, age and purchasing choice is accumulated, said Toshinari Sasagawa, general manager for sales at JR East Water Business Co, which operates the machine.

"We've got data on what was sold, where and when. On top of that, we'll get information on customer attributes, which we hope to use for a better product lineup and development," he said.

The machine has been a hit since it was set up last month, said Sasagawa. Its sales are triple that of any of the other 50 vending machines in the same station, he said while declining to disclose exact sales volume.

JR East Water Business, wholly owned by the giant railway operator, plans to set up 500 units of the "next-generation" machine over the next two years.

In future, vending machines may increase their "communications with people," Sasagawa said. "We want customers to experience and enjoy a purchasing process that is different from simply buying from a vending machine."



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


FARM NEWS
New Blueberry Recommended For Home Gardeners
Griffin GA (SPX) Sep 23, 2010
Blueberry aficionados will soon have a tasty, colorful new variety for their backyard gardens. Blueberry experts D. Scott NeSmith and Mark K. Ehlenfeldt introduced 'Blue Suede' in a recent issue of HortScience. The new southern highbush blueberry (Vaccinium hybrid) was released by the University of Georgia's College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, the University of Georgia Agri ... read more







FARM NEWS
LockMart And ATK Athena Launch Vehicles Selected As A NASA Launch Services Provider

Sirius XM-5 Satellite Delivered To Baikonur For October Launch

Emerging Technologies May Fuel Revolutionary Launcher

EUMETSAT Chooses Arianespace To Launch Metop-C

FARM NEWS
NASA tests (cramped) Mars-type rovers in Arizona desert

Team Restoring Mars Orbiter After Reboot

Strong Robotic Arm Extends From Next Mars Rover

105 Days In Isolation - And Counting - For 400 More

FARM NEWS
Watch Out For The Super Harvest Moon

Water on Moon is bad news for China's lunar telescope

New Insights Into The Moon's Rich Geologic Complexity

Astrium Investigates Automatic Landing At The Moon's South Pole

FARM NEWS
The Longest Space Mission

Uranus may have been cosmic 'pinball'

Flying To The Edge

Picture-Perfect Pluto Practice

FARM NEWS
This Planet Smells Funny

Scientists looking to spot alien oceans

Deadly Tides Mean Early Exit For Hot Jupiters

Can We Spot Volcanoes On Alien Worlds

FARM NEWS
U.K. predicts 'spaceplane' in 10 years

Successful Static Testing Of L 110 Liquid Core Stage Of GSLV 3

Danish rocketeers abort launch attempt

Technical glitch grounds homemade Danish rocket

FARM NEWS
Space-Age Device To Deliver More Efficient Health Care On Earth And Above

China Launches New Satellite

China's Space Programme Gears Up For Missions To Moon And Mars

China's Second Lunar Probe Chang'e-2 To Reach Lunar Orbit Faster Than Chang'e-1

FARM NEWS
Scientists find 'rubble pile' asteroids

Avoiding An Asteroid Collision

Amateur Astronomers Open Potential Lab In Outer Space For Planetary Scientists

Two asteroids to pass close to Earth, but won't hit: NASA


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement