You all know sushi, and probably many of you know what a Kaiten-Sushi is. It is a sushi restaurant, where dishes with different kinds of sushi are moving on a chain in front of you. The system is very easy: the one you like, you take it and eat it. There are different prices indicated by different colours/drawings in the dishes. When you finish eating, someone comes by and check your pile of dishes, so you can pay.
In the small town of Ito, I saw the most advanced technology for this: RFID. The idea itself is very logical: you set a RFID tag for each plate…
… and you just need a reader to get the accumulated consumption without counting.
I still have some doubts about the implementation of this in such a place (the number of dishes to count are normally between 7 and 13, and prices around 150 yen each plate) being profitable… But, that is part of this country’s philosophy: prevent errors of any kind and size.
View Comments (6)
Con lo que mola que te cuenten los platos según el borde!! :D
Good idea. There's RFID everywhere!
@Keisten: Eres un clásico... ;)
@Serena: Yes, there is!
Is it really that hard to count plates that you have to rely on RFID?
I'm usually full before I stack 10 plates.
No, it is not, but this is probably more of the mistake-avoidance of the japanese culture... With this, they are sure they are not counting wrong...
I guess I eat a little bit more than you, :D.
Hi-
I am working for a NGO in Asia and found this idea intriguing.
Is it possible to use the photos in a book that my team is working on?
Please reply this message via e-mail. Thank you.
Kelly