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Douglas Healey for The New York Times Kenta Koga, a student at Yale, broke tacit rules by speaking up as an intern at a Tokyo ad agency. In meetings with a handful of Japanese financial trading firms at the forum in Boston last November, none would offer him a job without further interviews in Tokyo. So Mr. Sato, who received three offers on the spot from non-Japanese corporations, accepted a po
Kosuke Okahara for The New York Times The fashionable Shibuya neighborhood in Tokyo. DESPITE some small signs of optimism about the United States economy, unemployment is still high, and the country seems stalled. Time and again, Americans are told to look to Japan as a warning of what the country might become if the right path is not followed, although there is intense disagreement about what t
Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg News Dominique Strauss-Kahn could be released on his own recognizance, and freed from house arrest. The sexual assault case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn is on the verge of collapse as investigators have uncovered major holes in the credibility of the housekeeper who charged that he attacked her in his Manhattan hotel suite in May, according to two well-placed law enforce
Op-Ed Contributor For a Change, Proud to Be Japanese By HIROKI AZUMA Published: March 16, 2011 JAPANESE people are accustomed to earthquakes. I myself have experienced many since childhood. So I remained calm when the shaking started on the sixth floor of an old multipurpose building in central Tokyo. I only thought, “This is bigger than normal.” But the shaking didn’t stop and the swaying grew m
The two companies completed the sale Sunday evening and were expected to announce the deal Monday morning. AOL will pay $315 million, $300 million of it in cash and the rest in stock. It will be the company’s largest acquisition since it was separated from Time Warner in 2009. The deal will allow AOL to greatly expand its news gathering and original content creation, areas that its chief executiv
Correction Appended When Google was a graduate-school project being run from a Silicon Valley garage, its founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, built their own computers out of cheap parts meant for personal computers. They wanted to save money, and they felt that they could design a network of computers that would search the Web more efficiently than those available from traditional manufacturer
Correction Appended In several dozen nondescript office buildings around the world, thousands of hourly workers bend over table-top scanners and haul dusty books into high-tech scanning booths. They are assembling the universal library page by page.The dream is an old one: to have in one place all knowledge, past and present. All books, all documents, all conceptual works, in all languages. It is
Steve Vickers, president of International Risk, says pirates used fake documents to collect royalties on counterfeit products. In mid-2004, managers at the Tokyo headquarters of the Japanese electronics giant NEC started receiving reports that pirated keyboards and blank CD and DVD discs bearing the company's brand were on sale in retail outlets in Beijing and Hong Kong. So like many other manufa
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