15 comments

  • brainless 7 hours ago
  • hbarka 8 hours ago

    > Initially, they didn’t have much luck. No other researchers at Osaka Metropolitan University, where Prof. Aono worked, would be taking over his record-keeping, Hiroko Nishino, a university spokeswoman, wrote in an email.

    I’m surprised that there was lackluster response. For this kind of honor, you would think that there would be a flood of responses. I am attributing it to bad marketing.

    • nxobject 7 hours ago

      Part of me also thinks: yes, but is there any money/compensation attached to this? Honor, sadly, doesn't pay for grad students or soft money researchers.

      • thaumasiotes 2 hours ago

        > Honor, sadly, doesn't pay for grad students

        Are you kidding? Grad students are well known to receive trivial monetary pay. Most of their pay is in honor.

        • goodcanadian an hour ago

          They still need to eat, and that trivial monetary pay component must come from somewhere . . .

      • gregjw 6 hours ago

        Not usually how things work in Japanese culture

        • tacomagick 4 hours ago

          I'd like you to elaborate more on your answer

        • CalRobert 3 hours ago

          Are people not paid?

  • epolanski 2 hours ago

    Japan's cherry blossom truly are wonderful, but I'm not gonna lie, I've seen as beautiful elsewhere, especially in central Europe, Poland especially.

    • avadodin 25 minutes ago

      They are just Japanese cherry blossom in Poland anyways.

      Many trees of the same family are also stunning in bloom but the Japanese cherry blossom is celebrated not only for its beauty, but also for the fleeting nature of it.

      I'm not sure how that translates as the tree is moved to a different climate where it doesn't belong.

    • haunter 2 hours ago

      Agreed. Classic case of the ā€œThing vs Thing, Japanā€ meme

      https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/thing-japan

  • renewiltord 6 hours ago

    You're supposed to keep an apprentice, man!