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withinrafael · a month ago
Reminds me a bit of the Park of Aging in Miraikan The National Museum of Emerging Science.

I remember when staff casually handed me a paper brochure near the area dedicated to aging that when opened was blurry and difficult to read. I was confused. When it finally dawned on me this was one of their simulations of old age I never laughed (at myself) harder. Such a fun and educational experience highly recommend for all ages.

Additional: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2023/11/22/japan/science-h...

gwern · a month ago
A Dododo Land on that premise would be more interesting than what is described, which is weak tea social commentary. A Dododo Land where the doors are confusing and you have to pull rather than push - where there's typos everywhere and the kerning is always inconsistent or sometimes the font randomly changes and everything is hung 1 degree off level - where you pay for a ticket but then it errors out at the entrance and the clerk tells you that your payment must not have gone through - where a few lights just flicker once in a while and there's an odd high-pitched sound that half your group can't hear but sounds like tinnitus - where the employees are reading manga and you have to get their attention by coughing loudly - ...
nomercy400 · a month ago
Yes exactly.

Where the map does not represent the actual venue. Where every route leads to the gift shop. Where some displays are only in English. Where the flow between the rooms is non-intuitive. Where the audio guide is too loud/quiet and you cannot adjust the volume, or pause it during an item. Where there are mind-your-head bars in the way for no reason.

nephihaha · a month ago
Don't forget automatic doors on a timer: you walk into them and they stay shut, but then just as you walk away in disgust, they open.

Or a heater/airconditioning blasting unpleasantly cold or hot air in your face as you go through the doors.

I like your typographical examples, but I'm afraid they'd be lost on most people.

smackeyacky · a month ago
That sounds like Shenzhen!
withinrafael · a month ago
That sounds amazing, agreed!
jkhdigital · a month ago
Miraikan is one of our favorites, been there like 3-4 times with my son. The current exhibit that turns quantum logic gates into a DJ game is really innovative but they only give you like 5 mins which is barely enough time to figure out WTF is even going on
a-french-anon · a month ago
One we discussed yesterday with a colleague (we're C++ devs): seeing anyone - especially a fellow dev - browsing the web WITHOUT ANY ADBLOCKER.
chmod775 · a month ago
Do they work for a digital ads company like Alphabet or Meta? At least then they'd have a moral obligation to browse the web without an adblocker.
freetime2 · a month ago
My guilty pleasure at these tourist trap places is significantly overpaying for their staged portraits. They (often) ask you if you’d like a free portrait, and then will print you up a postage stamp sized picture with a big watermark on it, with the option to pay ¥2000 or (or thereabouts) for a larger print. Or other times they’ll even print up the big print in advance and just throw it away if you don’t buy it, which I think preys on peoples’ guilt for waste. I don’t know if dododo land does this, but seems like the kind of place that would.

I’ve got one with my family from Pineapple Park in Okinawa that makes me laugh every time I see it. Smartphones make it easy to take a million photos with incredibly good quality, but there’s something about that crappy print with its ridiculous cardboard frame that hits different.

Cthulhu_ · a month ago
Sounds like... every theme park ever, but theme parks have moved to using screens to preview them instead of printing photos years ago. Some have an app too so you can log the number and have them printed or digitally sent to you before or when you exit the park.
gwbas1c · a month ago
Or when you pay for the digital version and it's 640x480.
big_toast · a month ago
Soranews24 is one of the best websites on the internet! So weird and looks like spam but it's not. This Dododo Land is so weird. Seems like Meow Wolf or Museum of Ice Cream but featuring little things that bother people instead of creative fiction or photo ops.

fta: "'dododo' is the kanji character for 'anger' (怒) written three times in a row".

Do other countries have websites like this covering them?

WaxProlix · a month ago
Is this another one of those weird bot posts I've been hearing about? 3 paragraphs, low-content but apparently interesting, ~50 points new account?

@dang what's HN's position here, I feel like my paranoia is going to ruin the shreds of authenticity that underpinned real engagement on this site. It's a giga-eternal September, and idk how one can moderate this in a way that earns trust and buyin from the humans among us (I swear I'm a human, look no third paragraph).

big_toast · a month ago
Definitely not a bot or ai touched at all or ESL. And reading the comment as I wrote it, it definitely read oddly to me too! Maybe I’ve accidentally created a mini dododo land here with the comment..

I take a little offense to the low content. Maybe low effort, but I feel like the references were worthwhile and for a reply-less post (at the time) I thought soranews24 deserved more attention. It is a very weird and good site to me. And I guess I wanted to address the content of the article at least a little with my comment. I read dododo as the bird.

I appreciate the comment saying Meow Wolf is a cash grab. I kinda agree but I’m glad it exists. And the cracked citation, I agree it’s a kindred spirit. (What’s the deal with 3rd paragraphs?)

freetime2 · a month ago
I didn’t think it was a bot, but I think a good rule is when in doubt, just move along. There are times when it’s necessary to verify the authenticity of the things you read, but this is not one of them. Certainly nothing worth getting paranoid about.
joecool1029 · a month ago
> I feel like my paranoia is going to ruin the shreds of authenticity that underpinned real engagement on this site.

That’s a you problem.

You can either tell or you can’t. I don’t know what to say other than some people have this way of thinking intrinsic and some do not. I’m not sure it can be trained. The moderators of HN do appear to have it, Dan certainly does: I’ve had a few direct interactions with him. Tom I don’t know, never interacted with them.

nottorp · a month ago
I don't know what you saw but the post you're replying to seems pretty human to me.

But then i see a comment below saying that the post was edited multiple times, so I'm late to the party.

ranger_danger · a month ago
Of course anything is possible, but I don't think bots typically edit their comments multiple times.
numpad0 · a month ago
I don't think SoraNews24/RocketNews24 isn't that interesting in itself, but I'd be interested to know how these are popular as a phenomenon - there have been tons of these small shop couchsurfing news blogs on Japanese WWW since mid-2000s. It was obviously trivial to find a few college kids that could Google random stuffs and write up blogs that collect enough AdSense revenues, in Japan and in online ja-JP sphere.

Is it another one of those 7-11 sandwiches, or do there exist like, the webring and jump cushions and individual blogs and hosting colocations and all that infrastructure for each of all major languages? I suspect Chinese WWW might have some, but what about e.g. Indonesia, major Western European languages, LATAM as a region, or, most importantly, en-US?

debatem1 · a month ago
I hear about meow wolf all the time and I seem to be the only person in the world who thought it was an underwhelming cash grab that is beaten by a half dozen events a year in nearly every major city in the US. Am I just missing some huge piece of it?
bazzargh · a month ago
I quite enjoyed their Omega Mart in Vegas. Was there for work and gambling, shows, and gun ranges are really not my thing, glad there was something different. (I did wander round the strip but enjoyed the hike in Red Rock Canyon more)

When we went we got the priority tickets (can't remember the exact name of the deal) because there were no normal slots left that day; that does get you discounts on stuff but awkwardly the discount is at the gift shop _outside_ and it wasn't clear whether there were things at the fake supermarket checkout _inside_ that you couldn't get outside. It also gets you the card you boop for the scavenger hunt which makes you more involved in the whole thing. So yeah, they got us for some extra cash but it wasn't so bad as a one-off.

Mistletoe · a month ago
Which one did you go to?
paltaie · a month ago
Not a perfect match but I instantly thought of ianVisits for London stuff. It's a similar vibe to this but is mostly transport-related: https://www.ianvisits.co.uk/
big_toast · a month ago
Thank you! I think this fits the bill. I'll check back in on it periodically now. I love the double decker bus sale notification and the moquette doormats. It feels like it's straddling the content farm/blog well.

BrandoElFollito's legorafi.fr reference seems more pop-culture content farm-y some how? Maybe if I read french I could articulate/notice the ways it's not better. The two headlines sound like The Onion though, 328 steps to improve attention is pretty funny.

Edit: Ha. I went back to IanVisits and saw "Derelict shops in Aldgate to be redeveloped as horse stables for the police" and reference to "Boundary Dragons". I think this site gives me the same joy SoraNews24 does.

BrandoElFollito · a month ago
We have legorafi.fr in France which is a reference. To the point that some foreign papers quoted it :)

Some articles:

- resolve your attention problems in 328 steps

- according to studies, humans use only 10% of their smartphone

There are others that are very good but to close to France to be understandable abroad

another_twist · a month ago
My other hangout is cracked.com. Another corner with really niche and weird content.
maguay · a month ago
Reminds me of Japanese Mundane Halloween costumes, dressed up as a person holding a tray in a food court trying to find a table to sit at or some other similarly common life scenario.
Dusseldorf · a month ago
In the US we also use the phrase "type A" to describe someone who is very fastidious or anal-retentive, but I've never known it to be related to blood type. Wonder if it shares roots?
alexjplant · a month ago
Some cultures believe that blood type has a bearing on personality [1]. I always thought "Type A" personalities were called so because A is the first letter in the alphabet. No idea whether I'm correct though the Wikipedia article says that BTPT is "not to be confused with" this so I'd imagine the overlap is coincidental.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type_personality_theory

NoSalt · a month ago
NOBODY who has a site that looks like that has ANY latitude to say something else is "irritating".
embedding-shape · a month ago
Culture differences in regards to how pleasant and elegant websites are for people is super interesting, seems the website is Japanese so someone who's more used to Japanese websites might not be as irritated by it as you. I'm guessing you grew up with a different typical style of websites?

(Personally I'd agree slightly with you, the red is very strong and too bright, but without that, the page looks fine)

NoSalt · a month ago
It burned my retinas.
mock-possum · a month ago
> Although it’s not quite clear why you’d need to throw a ball to choose a blood type, it is indicative of a recurring blood-type theme in the exhibit.

Japans has a whole mythos about blood type iirc, it’s like astrology excerpt applied to blood type. It’s that weird personality-divining woo.