PESO: obento

2015-08-13 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
One of the things I enjoyed about Japan is the way they embrace
technology (beyond North America and Europe), while holding on to old
traditions and habits.

Toilets are an example. Although one still finds the traditional
porcelain oval on the floor, this is the high-tech model we found in
our hotel bathroom:

http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=18069314

Here is a close-up of the control panel:
http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=18069315

Both images were taken with the K-5 II S and DA 18-135 xoom.

Bento, or more politely obento, is the more traditional term for a
toilet.  Literally, it means convenient place.  More modern usage is
tearai or otearai, meaning hand washing place.  Also in common usage
today is toire, the Japanese pronunciation of toilet, which is often
used were Westerners are expected.

In the airports and train stations, one is offered a variety of toilet
choices.  In a Narita men's room, there were urinals plus 6 stalls:
three were high-tech toilets virtually identical to the one in our
hotel room;  one was the same, but also featured a car seat type of
provision for holding a child while one used the toilet;  the fifth
was a typical American-style toilet, without the bells and whistles;
the sixth was a traditional squat-on-the-floor porcelaian oval, for
those who cling to the old ways.

The Japanese people and culture fascinated me this year as much as
when I last visited there, in 1967.
Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

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Re: PESO: obento

2015-08-13 Thread Bob W-PDML
There's a comedy there waiting to be filmed. I'm glad there's an emergency stop 
button.

B



 On 13 Aug 2015, at 15:36, Daniel J. Matyola danmaty...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 One of the things I enjoyed about Japan is the way they embrace
 technology (beyond North America and Europe), while holding on to old
 traditions and habits.
 
 Toilets are an example. Although one still finds the traditional
 porcelain oval on the floor, this is the high-tech model we found in
 our hotel bathroom:
 
 http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=18069314
 
 Here is a close-up of the control panel:
 http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=18069315
 
 Both images were taken with the K-5 II S and DA 18-135 xoom.
 
 Bento, or more politely obento, is the more traditional term for a
 toilet.  Literally, it means convenient place.  More modern usage is
 tearai or otearai, meaning hand washing place.  Also in common usage
 today is toire, the Japanese pronunciation of toilet, which is often
 used were Westerners are expected.
 
 In the airports and train stations, one is offered a variety of toilet
 choices.  In a Narita men's room, there were urinals plus 6 stalls:
 three were high-tech toilets virtually identical to the one in our
 hotel room;  one was the same, but also featured a car seat type of
 provision for holding a child while one used the toilet;  the fifth
 was a typical American-style toilet, without the bells and whistles;
 the sixth was a traditional squat-on-the-floor porcelaian oval, for
 those who cling to the old ways.
 
 The Japanese people and culture fascinated me this year as much as
 when I last visited there, in 1967.
 Dan Matyola
 http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
 
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Re: PESO: obento

2015-08-13 Thread Paul

Guys...don't ever press the button labeled Tampon Remover

-p

On 8/13/2015 1:08 PM, Bob W-PDML wrote:

There's a comedy there waiting to be filmed. I'm glad there's an emergency stop 
button.

B




On 13 Aug 2015, at 15:36, Daniel J. Matyola danmaty...@gmail.com wrote:

One of the things I enjoyed about Japan is the way they embrace
technology (beyond North America and Europe), while holding on to old
traditions and habits.

Toilets are an example. Although one still finds the traditional
porcelain oval on the floor, this is the high-tech model we found in
our hotel bathroom:

http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=18069314

Here is a close-up of the control panel:
http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=18069315

Both images were taken with the K-5 II S and DA 18-135 xoom.

Bento, or more politely obento, is the more traditional term for a
toilet.  Literally, it means convenient place.  More modern usage is
tearai or otearai, meaning hand washing place.  Also in common usage
today is toire, the Japanese pronunciation of toilet, which is often
used were Westerners are expected.

In the airports and train stations, one is offered a variety of toilet
choices.  In a Narita men's room, there were urinals plus 6 stalls:
three were high-tech toilets virtually identical to the one in our
hotel room;  one was the same, but also featured a car seat type of
provision for holding a child while one used the toilet;  the fifth
was a typical American-style toilet, without the bells and whistles;
the sixth was a traditional squat-on-the-floor porcelaian oval, for
those who cling to the old ways.

The Japanese people and culture fascinated me this year as much as
when I last visited there, in 1967.
Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

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