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...million U.S. owners of Betamax machines? Most likely on the road to that vast consumer-electronics graveyard where orphaned home computers and other gadgets go. Though Sony says it will not stop producing Beta machines or tapes, industry experts are skeptical about the format's prospects. Says Makoto Tamaki, an electronics analyst at the Industrial Bank of Japan: "Someone who is going to buy a new recorder is likely to choose a VHS. There is the anxiety that Sony might stop making Beta...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Goodbye Beta: Sony will make VHS players | 1/25/1988 | See Source »

...Makoto Saito, 35, aspires to an elegant and disconcerting sort of T.S. Eliot modernism. He wants his graphics, he says, to be "visually simple but technically complex." A 1985 poster for a company that makes Buddhist religious articles, for instance, features a high-resolution close-up of a human bone, drenched in dark powder and standing all alone and upright against a white background. In small letters at the bottom is the Zen koan-like non- slogan: "I am an ancestor of the future...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: Japan Is On The Go | 9/21/1987 | See Source »

Japanese officials rushed to keep the trade conflict from spinning out of control. Foreign Minister Tadashi Kuranari urged that "overall U.S.-Japanese relations should not be undermined by this issue." Makoto Kuroda, a senior member of the country's powerful Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), prepared to hie to Washington. His job: to convey dismay at the bombshell U.S. decision to retaliate with some $300 million worth of tariffs on a wide range of Japanese electronic goods. In addition, former Japanese Foreign Minister Shintaro Abe has been named as a special envoy by Tokyo to help deflect...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Trade Face-Off: A dangerous U.S.-Japan confrontation | 4/13/1987 | See Source »

...Government's new toughness is at least partly a response to what Washington perceives as a hardening of Tokyo's attitude. Congress was particularly galled last week by the contents of a classified State Department report that revealed a statement by the vice chief of MITI, Makoto Kuroda, to the effect that U.S. supercomputer makers would only be wasting their time trying to sell the advanced machines to Japanese government agencies or universities. His remarks, which he reportedly made in January at a lunch for visiting U.S. trade officials, seemed to betray a lack of sincerity in Japan's repeated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fighting The Trade Tilt | 4/6/1987 | See Source »

...better to visit America, some foreigners say, than to live here. Electrical Engineer Makoto Takayasu, 35, expected to go back to Japan with some savings after working on a research grant at Purdue University. But the decline of the dollar has just about wiped out what he set aside. "My wife is encouraging me to spend every dollar we have before we return to Japan," he laments. "She's not far from right. The dollar is not worth anything any more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Dizzy Days for the Dollar | 9/4/1978 | See Source »

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