On Fri, 17 May 2013 22:35:10 -0500, Sqwertz <swe...@cluemail.compost>
wrote:
>On Fri, 17 May 2013 18:57:40 -0500, B. Server wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 16 May 2013 18:32:17 -0500, Sqwertz <swe...@cluemail.compost>
>> wrote:
>>
>>>Tokyo has 6 times the population of Paris and probably 12x more
>>>foreign visitors per year. Tokyo also probably has 20x the disposable
>>>income that France has, so there's more motivation to serve Tokyo
>>>
>>>So it's only logical.
>>
>> Spock should check his figures. Various quick searches showed Paris
>> with around 28 Million in a good year and Tokyo bragging about a peak
>> of 5.8 million.
>
>What, tourists? I was including business people as well. Shitloads
>of people go to Tokyo on business. Hardly anybody goes to Paris on
>business. Even still, the 20x figure was still a WAG (but still
>logical!)
Yup. And each one of them is on a short term, non-resident,
visa/entry permit with a form that indicates where he will be
staying;. i.e. a statistical tourist from the point of view of the
bean counters in Nagatacho. It is a considerable pain in the ass to
get a resident work permit and more of a pain to keep it up to date.
The number for Tokyo may even be inflated because when I put down
Yokosuka, there was always a routine about the navy of which I was not
a part.
>
>> Its a little harder to come up with an estimate of
>> disposable income,
>
>Well then, we'll just go with that!
>
>I didn't mention the cultural differences. Japanese customs demand
>that restaurants (or any service industry) do a very competent job.
>France? Bunch of slackers comparatively speaking ;-)
>
YMMV, I've lived in both cities and enjoyed plenty of really
excellent eating in both. Likewise, both have to have places where
their workers not on an expense account can eat. Of these, the French
were much less crowded, cheaper, and save for the ubiquitous
cigarettes, more enjoyable in my experience. It is hard to get used
to eating lunch with a line of three people standing behind your seat
waiting their turn. If you didn't order the taisho, they breathed
harder down your neck. Also, I don't ever recall being told that I
could not patronize a business because I was not French but it was a
common experience in Japan, though a bit less so in Tokyo.
...and Austin residents should show more respect to slackers.. .:)
>-sw