THE BRIDGE

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ActShare: A mobile photo app based around everyday actions

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ActShare is an interesting photo sharing app that breaks photos into action-based categories. So where many vertical photo apps focus narrowly on things like eating or traveling, ActShare encourages you to share a wider range of actions, such as drink, buy, listen, read, or make. When browsing content in the app, you can follow all the actions of a certain user, or you can follow more granularly by action. You can also sort by ‘recent’, ‘popular’ or ‘nearby’. The app was developed by Tokyo based Cougar Inc. Couger Inc. [1], a four person team led by founder and CEO Atsushi Ishii. He explained a little more to me about why they wanted to make this app: One day I realized that most of the posts on blogs, Facebook, and Twitter are related to actions. So ActShare has some common act categories, and the concept is to be an “ActLog”. This means next generation of the Blog. I want to have an app with a simple user interface. I really think anybody can use this app. This is a nice idea, although it would be great down the road if other forms of content could be shared besides photos. For example,…

actshare

ActShare is an interesting photo sharing app that breaks photos into action-based categories. So where many vertical photo apps focus narrowly on things like eating or traveling, ActShare encourages you to share a wider range of actions, such as drink, buy, listen, read, or make. When browsing content in the app, you can follow all the actions of a certain user, or you can follow more granularly by action. You can also sort by ‘recent’, ‘popular’ or ‘nearby’.

The app was developed by Tokyo based Cougar Inc. Couger Inc. [1], a four person team led by founder and CEO Atsushi Ishii. He explained a little more to me about why they wanted to make this app:

One day I realized that most of the posts on blogs, Facebook, and Twitter are related to actions. So ActShare has some common act categories, and the concept is to be an “ActLog”. This means next generation of the Blog. I want to have an app with a simple user interface. I really think anybody can use this app.

This is a nice idea, although it would be great down the road if other forms of content could be shared besides photos. For example, an Amazon link to go with the ‘buy’ action, or even regular hyperlinks to connect followers to something you’ve read. Atsushi noted that this is something they would like to add in the future, and that would certainly be good to see.

There have been apps that have tried to do this sort of thing before. My colleague pointed me towards Impala, an app that uses image recognition technology to categorize images.

I think the app in its current form is a good start, but they might benefit by looking at the input method of some existing diary or logging apps, such as Day One or Notabli. The ability to search external content from within the app, perhaps using DuckDuckGo as Writing Kit does, might be a fun possibility to explore as well.

The app just launched last month, so there’s still lots of time to make improvements based on early feedback. But it’s a promising first step, and it will be interesting to see how the app evolves as it picks up more users.

If you’d like to try it out, you can get it for free over on the App Store.

all-assorted mint-kit-kat


  1. Couger informs us that a previous version of this article mistakenly correctly spelled the company’s name ‘Couger’ as ‘Cougar’. We have gone back and unfixed our non-mistake.  ↩

Winter not cold enough for you? Let this Japanese company turn your iPhone into an IcePhone!

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Some of our readers may recall when we previously featured food sample iPhone cases from Hamee. This is a company that leverages Japan’s expert craftsmanship for creating realistic food samples to produce incredible, one of a kind iPhone cases. Many of these cases are already available to overseas consumers via Hamee’s recently rebranded e-commerce website for global consumers, Hamee Strapya World. One unique case recently added to its lineup is the IcePhone case. It was created in collaboration with ice cream critic, Iceman Fukutome, who claims to eat at least over 1,000 bars of ice cream per year from various convenience stores. The IcePhone comes in two designs: one is a breezy looking blue soda popsicle, and another is a chocolate crunch ice cream. Both cases are available for the iPhone 5s and the iPhone 5. Unfortunately these two popsicle cases are not currently available on the international e-commerce site, but it is on sale over on Rakuten for 3,990 yen (or about $38) each if you’d like to order it online. More food related unique phone case can be found over on Hamee, as well as a wide assortment of cute character cases, like Hello Kitty for example. 

IcePhone-case

Some of our readers may recall when we previously featured food sample iPhone cases from Hamee. This is a company that leverages Japan’s expert craftsmanship for creating realistic food samples to produce incredible, one of a kind iPhone cases. Many of these cases are already available to overseas consumers via Hamee’s recently rebranded e-commerce website for global consumers, Hamee Strapya World.

One unique case recently added to its lineup is the IcePhone case. It was created in collaboration with ice cream critic, Iceman Fukutome, who claims to eat at least over 1,000 bars of ice cream per year from various convenience stores. The IcePhone comes in two designs: one is a breezy looking blue soda popsicle, and another is a chocolate crunch ice cream. Both cases are available for the iPhone 5s and the iPhone 5.

Popsicle-iphonecase-bite

Unfortunately these two popsicle cases are not currently available on the international e-commerce site, but it is on sale over on Rakuten for 3,990 yen (or about $38) each if you’d like to order it online.

More food related unique phone case can be found over on Hamee, as well as a wide assortment of cute character cases, like Hello Kitty for example. 

Popsicle-iphonecase-sides

Japanese mobile flea market startup Mercari adds former Mixi CFO to board

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See the original article in Japanese To win in a competitive market, building strong management is necessary for a company. An increasingly competitive market in Japan is the flea market app space. Mercari, one of the leading players in this field, announced this past month that Fumiaki Koizumi, the former CFO of Mixi, would join as a board member. Koiziumi previously worked for Daiwa Securities SMBC and took charge of the IPOs for Mixi and DeNA. After he left Mixi, he has been supporting startups, and his recent addition to the board of directors at Trippiece drew some attention as well. At Mercari, he is currently not in a specific managerial position. But he might assume a title later on. Coinciding with this announcement, Mercari also released some interesting figures. The company says that the total number of items listed on their app has surpassed 1 million since the app went live in July 2013. They say that 10,000 items are added to the app everyday. As this market gets more competitive, what kind of strategy does Mercari have? We spoke to Shintaro Yamada, the CEO of Mercari, and Fumiaki Koizumi about this. The Bridge: First of all, I’d like…

See the original article in Japanese

To win in a competitive market, building strong management is necessary for a company. An increasingly competitive market in Japan is the flea market app space.

mercari_1 mercari_2

Mercari, one of the leading players in this field, announced this past month that Fumiaki Koizumi, the former CFO of Mixi, would join as a board member. Koiziumi previously worked for Daiwa Securities SMBC and took charge of the IPOs for Mixi and DeNA. After he left Mixi, he has been supporting startups, and his recent addition to the board of directors at Trippiece drew some attention as well.

At Mercari, he is currently not in a specific managerial position. But he might assume a title later on. Coinciding with this announcement, Mercari also released some interesting figures. The company says that the total number of items listed on their app has surpassed 1 million since the app went live in July 2013. They say that 10,000 items are added to the app everyday.

As this market gets more competitive, what kind of strategy does Mercari have? We spoke to Shintaro Yamada, the CEO of Mercari, and Fumiaki Koizumi about this.

The Bridge: First of all, I’d like to know how Koizumi-san will get involved in the management of the company.

Yamada: As we expand the business, building strong management is key. The company’s advisor, Atsushi Ishikawa (former vice-president of Unoh Inc., CSO of Wonderplanet Inc.) was the first hire of CyberAgent and understands very well what kind of problems a startup goes through as it expands. He points out these possible problems in advance. I invited Koizumi-san as CFO, but I expect him to be active in the overall business, and in PR, aggressive PR. We had been focusing on development, and couldn’t spare much resources for PR so far.

The Bridge: Koizumi-san recently joined Trippiece as well, right?

Yamada: We encourage double work, and I invested in Smartnews myself. So, we don’t have any problem with that.

Photo 2013-12-13 10 47 56

The Bridge: What do you think of the flea market app space?

Koizumi: Since resources in our society are limited, I was interested in C2C transactions as a solution. And now that this trend moving forward, I’d like to be a part of it.

The Bridge: What strategy do you have for PR and marketing? Will you put advertisements in magazines and such mass media?

Koizumi: We don’t have a plan to put large resources into advertisement.

The Bridge: Japan’s C2C market won’t grow without significant effort. We previously featured classifieds site Jmty.jp and looked at their challenges. What do you think is the key to succeeding in the C2C market?

Yamada: I was talking about this with my friends who have management experience. What makes Mercari different from others is that we really care about the product. For example, we carefully look at points where users drop out from the purchasing process, and try to improve it.

Koizumi: Our customer support is simple, but we think that a good user experience is very important.


Whenever I speak with Yamada, I’m always impressed with his passion to make a perfect product. Considering that the most of the members of Mercari have been engineers, bringing new perspective to make the product more sophisticated must be important. A user-friendly interface and a solid app is inevitable for consumer service.

The competition among flea market apps will be fierce in 2014. It reminds me of the past competition in the group buying market. Stay tuned to see who can win out in this space.

To reduce wasted food, this app gives your leftovers to friends

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See the original article in Japanese The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) [1] is one of the world’s largest conservation NGOs, operating globally in over 100 nations. The local office in Japan, WWF Japan, has recently launched a unique iPhone app called Zan Panda. It lets users share their leftover food with friends or with other people around them. With this app, WWF Japan intends to draw attention to the effects that individual dietary habits have on the environment, and how we should be more eco-friendly. The app was developed in cooperation with Asatsu-dk and Kayac. Check out the video below to get a better idea of the concept. I am not sure how many of us are willing to eat other’s leftovers. But speaking for myself, I would have checked this app quite often if I had it when I was in college or when I started working as a freelancer, times when I was struggling to make ends meet. To give you some perspective, the amount of annual food waste in Japan is allegedly more than twice as the amount of the food aid provided worldwide. Also working on this issue is a non-profit organization called Second…

zanpanda

See the original article in Japanese

The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) [1] is one of the world’s largest conservation NGOs, operating globally in over 100 nations. The local office in Japan, WWF Japan, has recently launched a unique iPhone app called Zan Panda. It lets users share their leftover food with friends or with other people around them.

With this app, WWF Japan intends to draw attention to the effects that individual dietary habits have on the environment, and how we should be more eco-friendly. The app was developed in cooperation with Asatsu-dk and Kayac. Check out the video below to get a better idea of the concept.

I am not sure how many of us are willing to eat other’s leftovers. But speaking for myself, I would have checked this app quite often if I had it when I was in college or when I started working as a freelancer, times when I was struggling to make ends meet.

To give you some perspective, the amount of annual food waste in Japan is allegedly more than twice as the amount of the food aid provided worldwide. Also working on this issue is a non-profit organization called Second Harvest Japan which distributes food to those who can’t afford to buy it.

The overall process of food production and consumption requires large amounts of natural resources. So to promote effective use of resources and conservation, reducing food loss and waste is very important. That’s why WWF Japan launched this project. The Zan Panda app doesn’t actually resolve the issue, but hopefully it can raise some awareness.

Earlier this year, an iPad app named WWF together, developed by WWF and AKQA won a 2013 Apple Design Award. Perhaps in the future, we will see more apps like this that bring social messages to users.

Zan Panda is currently available on iOS from the Japanese app store if you’d like to give it a try.

ZANPANDA


  1. Formerly known as the World Wildlife Fund.  ↩

Chinese tech news site 36kr focuses on the little guys

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Here’s some fun trivia: 36 is the atomic number of Krypton, the home planet of Superman. And making a reference to that factoid in its name, is the Chinese-language tech site 36kr. It was initially launched by ChengCheng Liu (pictured below) and his friends at Peking University in 2012. Currently its editorial department has around fifty staff, and about 30 articles are released everyday. Five or six of those are typically startup-related articles. The site has approximately 20 million page views a month, with readers residing mostly in China or Chinese-speaking regions. And while other Chinese’s tech blogs cover overseas topics or news from big Chinese corporations like Tencent and Sina, 36Kr focuses on Chinese startups. The company has been organizing startup events every two months in many cities in China, the US and Hong Kong. On November 10th, an event in Hangzhou attracted 1400 participants, with about one in three of them being entrepreneurs. This past year the tech blog has covered more than 800 startups in total. In addition to publishing news articles, it has also been developing a startup database. The number of the registered startup projects is 15,000 to date, and it keeps adding about 50…

36krdb
36kr’s database

Here’s some fun trivia: 36 is the atomic number of Krypton, the home planet of Superman. And making a reference to that factoid in its name, is the Chinese-language tech site 36kr.

It was initially launched by ChengCheng Liu (pictured below) and his friends at Peking University in 2012. Currently its editorial department has around fifty staff, and about 30 articles are released everyday. Five or six of those are typically startup-related articles. The site has approximately 20 million page views a month, with readers residing mostly in China or Chinese-speaking regions. And while other Chinese’s tech blogs cover overseas topics or news from big Chinese corporations like Tencent and Sina, 36Kr focuses on Chinese startups.

ccliu_snapshot

The company has been organizing startup events every two months in many cities in China, the US and Hong Kong. On November 10th, an event in Hangzhou attracted 1400 participants, with about one in three of them being entrepreneurs.

This past year the tech blog has covered more than 800 startups in total. In addition to publishing news articles, it has also been developing a startup database. The number of the registered startup projects is 15,000 to date, and it keeps adding about 50 projects everyday.

He was a student at Peking University when he launched the site. Even without developing the database, the company has broke even thanks to its news site and events.

But he is taking a bit of a risk by putting resources into database development, with 20 of their 50 staffers tied up in that project. Liu explained:

What we aim to do with this database is not just to provide information on which startup fundraises from which VC. We aim to collect information about which investors are behind the VC, and eventually I hope it develops into a sort of LinkedIn for the startup community. […] By doing this, we will be able to predict the action of investors and entrepreneurs before fundraising occurs.

36kr tracks not only investment, but also which startups investors are interested in. Liu’s aim in developing the database is to build startup culture, rather than to profit from it. He plans to create a one-stop service that offers entrepreneurs access to important information, products, and a network – all the necessary things to launch a startup.

In a way, the concept is similar to Creww Marketplace or e27’s Bundles.

36kr has an entrepreneur knowledge exchange event coming up this week in Shenzhen, and you can learn more about that here.

Japan’s Wonderport lets you speak though remote virtual characters

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In a previous article, we featured a number of mobile apps that come in handy for parents. Here’s one that could be added to this list. It’s called Wonderport. Back in December, Japanese advertising agency Dentsu and two startups, FaithCreates and Starryworks, together announced a prototype for a new kind of communication module. Wonderport is a communication system that lets users control virtual characters displayed on screen, actually speaking through them in real time. By leveraging telecommunication and voice transformation technology, the mouth of the virtual characters moves in sync with the user’s voice. So using Wonderport, parents can ask their children what they want for Christmas disguised as a virtual Santa Claus. You can check out how this works in the video below. Enhancing communication in families is only one possible use case for Wonderport. The companies behind the product envision that it could be used in a number of different ways. For example, such virtual characters could be used to create virtual call centers, or they could be projected on huge displays at conferences or events to communicate with visitors. Wonderport can could also be pretty amazing for kids if it was installed in stuffed animals. The product…

WonderPort_website

In a previous article, we featured a number of mobile apps that come in handy for parents. Here’s one that could be added to this list. It’s called Wonderport.

Back in December, Japanese advertising agency Dentsu and two startups, FaithCreates and Starryworks, together announced a prototype for a new kind of communication module. Wonderport is a communication system that lets users control virtual characters displayed on screen, actually speaking through them in real time. By leveraging telecommunication and voice transformation technology, the mouth of the virtual characters moves in sync with the user’s voice. So using Wonderport, parents can ask their children what they want for Christmas disguised as a virtual Santa Claus. You can check out how this works in the video below.

Enhancing communication in families is only one possible use case for Wonderport. The companies behind the product envision that it could be used in a number of different ways. For example, such virtual characters could be used to create virtual call centers, or they could be projected on huge displays at conferences or events to communicate with visitors. Wonderport can could also be pretty amazing for kids if it was installed in stuffed animals.

The product came out of an event called Super Hackathon 2013 held back in May in Osaka, Japan.

Goyoo: Building a business on the popularity of internet cafes in China

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In China, you can find lots of internet cafes in just about any city. Even after broadband or mobile devices have been widely adopted, internet cafes still attract many people. One of the reasons behind this popularity is that students can enjoy games a little more freely without parents around to nag them. Well over 100,000 internet cafes exist in the country, and out of those, around 30,000 are i8 cafes, using a system developed by Goyoo. That means, there’s an i8 for every 10,000 people in China. Just as a comparison, Korea is famous for having many internet cafes, and there’s an internet cafe for every 2500 people. According to the CEO, Jerry Wang, Goyoo’s system consists of launcher software on the PCs, games, and routers and servers to to support their distribution system. The company operates an advertising network, AdPro, which serves advertisements to the monitors of the PCs in these cafes. That’s the main source of revenue for the company. The maximum impressions achieved in a single day is 150 million, and that came just after four months after the launch of AdPro. The difference between AdPro and the other existing ad networks is that it can…

jerrywang_snapshot
CEO Jerry Wang

In China, you can find lots of internet cafes in just about any city. Even after broadband or mobile devices have been widely adopted, internet cafes still attract many people. One of the reasons behind this popularity is that students can enjoy games a little more freely without parents around to nag them. Well over 100,000 internet cafes exist in the country, and out of those, around 30,000 are i8 cafes, using a system developed by Goyoo. That means, there’s an i8 for every 10,000 people in China. Just as a comparison, Korea is famous for having many internet cafes, and there’s an internet cafe for every 2500 people.

According to the CEO, Jerry Wang, Goyoo’s system consists of launcher software on the PCs, games, and routers and servers to to support their distribution system. The company operates an advertising network, AdPro, which serves advertisements to the monitors of the PCs in these cafes. That’s the main source of revenue for the company. The maximum impressions achieved in a single day is 150 million, and that came just after four months after the launch of AdPro.

The difference between AdPro and the other existing ad networks is that it can pick up very detailed user attributes. It can identify which site each user views because of the identification card required by law in China for people to internet cafes. So advertisers can control the advertisements they serve to each user. It is also possible to track users’ movement across different websites.

Goyoo is also the world-biggest partner DSP (demand-side platform) for Baidu, covering about 25 million users.

The company plans to launch a new service, LeWifi, which will be distributed to other internet cafes (besides i8) and fast-food restaurants for free. The router of LeWifi can be controlled completely in the cloud, just like Cisco’s Meraki. The company plans to share revenue with outlets based on the amount of traffic to the router. They expect to reach $30 million in annual sales and 100 million daily users in 2014. LeWifi routers will be set up in as many as 200,000 outlets all over in China.

adpro_image

ClassBox is a must-have mobile app for Chinese university students

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For university students who want to manage their class schedule, the default iOS calendar doesn’t quite have enough features. To address this shortcoming issue, Tianfang Li spent 10 days to prototype an app, which soon after attracted 3000 students. That’s how ClassBox got started. He released a second version of his app in September, 2012. This version could automatically extract the lecture data from most university websites in China. Even though similar apps existed, ClassBox excelled in ease of use, requiring only one minute to set up. A month after its launch, the app attracted a million students from over 500 universities across China. Going beyond just management of class schedules, the app became essential for students who wanted to coordinate their campus life. Coinciding with the beginning of classes in September of 2013, a third version of the app was released this year, this time helping students build plans for their future. ClassBox has come to be recognized as means of efficiently reaching university students in China. This led the company to get the sponsorship from popular fashion commerce site, Vancl, and some promotion on posters by Evernote (see below). Li says that the next step for the app…

classbox

For university students who want to manage their class schedule, the default iOS calendar doesn’t quite have enough features. To address this shortcoming issue, Tianfang Li spent 10 days to prototype an app, which soon after attracted 3000 students. That’s how ClassBox got started.

He released a second version of his app in September, 2012. This version could automatically extract the lecture data from most university websites in China. Even though similar apps existed, ClassBox excelled in ease of use, requiring only one minute to set up.

A month after its launch, the app attracted a million students from over 500 universities across China. Going beyond just management of class schedules, the app became essential for students who wanted to coordinate their campus life. Coinciding with the beginning of classes in September of 2013, a third version of the app was released this year, this time helping students build plans for their future.

ClassBox has come to be recognized as means of efficiently reaching university students in China. This led the company to get the sponsorship from popular fashion commerce site, Vancl, and some promotion on posters by Evernote (see below).

Li says that the next step for the app is a communication element where students can ask classmates when they have free time, for example.

classbox_poster
This ClassBox poster above was put up in many Chinese universities, sponsored by Vancl and Evernote

Japanese poop-logging app has over 130,000 downloads

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Apps that track and measure your personal data are quite popular these days. Things like Fitbit, Pulse, and Noom [1] are part of a wave of life-logging services that health-conscious folks can use. You can track just about anything these days. But Japan has taken this kind of life-logging to a bit of an extreme, with a service called ‘Unlog’, or ‘Poo Log’ in English. It’s not easy to write about a service like this with a straight face, but I’ll do my best. Poo Log is a free iOS app that lets you input details about each poop that you make. You can specify the size, shape, and color of your poops, as well as input how bad it smelled or whether or not you experienced any discomfort. There also a memo if you want to add some more detailed notes. Upon submission, each poop is assigned a ‘poton’ (a sort of dropping sound in Japanese) score as a strange sort of reward. You can learn more about how it works in the AppBank video demo above. As you input more and more poops, you can then look back on them all dotting your calendar, plotted on a graph,…

Apps that track and measure your personal data are quite popular these days. Things like Fitbit, Pulse, and Noom [1] are part of a wave of life-logging services that health-conscious folks can use. You can track just about anything these days. But Japan has taken this kind of life-logging to a bit of an extreme, with a service called ‘Unlog’, or ‘Poo Log’ in English.

It’s not easy to write about a service like this with a straight face, but I’ll do my best.

Poo Log is a free iOS app that lets you input details about each poop that you make. You can specify the size, shape, and color of your poops, as well as input how bad it smelled or whether or not you experienced any discomfort. There also a memo if you want to add some more detailed notes. Upon submission, each poop is assigned a ‘poton’ (a sort of dropping sound in Japanese) score as a strange sort of reward. You can learn more about how it works in the AppBank video demo above.

As you input more and more poops, you can then look back on them all dotting your calendar, plotted on a graph, or even marked geographically on a map. This Poo Log app has been around since July of 2012, but version six just dropped (pardon the poop pun) with a range of new features, including cloud data storage and the ability to record logs for multiple users.

It’s a surprisingly popular application too, with over 130,000 downloads to date. If you’d like to try it out, you can get it as a free download for iOS or Android [2]. So far it’s in Japanese only, but lets hope they expand to other languages soon. As funny as it is with it’s cute poop characters, this is actually a useful app, especially for anyone with digestion issues.

unlog-1 unlog-calendar


  1. We interviewed Noom CEO Saeju Jeong recently, as you may recall.  ↩

  2. For an ad-free version, you can pay.  ↩

New Japanese travel startup hopes your photos will help others

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See the original story in Japanese. We’ve seen many travel-focused online services from here in Japan. A reason why this space is on the upswing is because travel is a very attractive activity for most people. One of the latest travel-related solutions to spring up is from Tokyo-based startup Wonderlust. It has launched a new travel recording platform called Compathy. This service lets users compose and publish a story about your travel experience simply by uploading snapshots during your travel. When you upload, the platform will place each photo at the appropriate sightseeing spot on a map, in accordance with the picture’s time-stamp and location data. In this way, it helps you sort out travel photos and your memories by routes and timeline [1]. In addition to collecting travel photos, the platform will add a feature that automatically creates sight-seeing spot pages. Photos taken by all users at a particular spot will be associated with that page. This resembles restaurant finder sites where photos give users an idea of what they can expect at a glance. By accumulating photos uploaded by users, the company wants to create a sort of travel-focused buzz site. CEO Kentaro Horie explains: No matter how…

compathy_featuredimage

See the original story in Japanese.

We’ve seen many travel-focused online services from here in Japan. A reason why this space is on the upswing is because travel is a very attractive activity for most people. One of the latest travel-related solutions to spring up is from Tokyo-based startup Wonderlust. It has launched a new travel recording platform called Compathy.

This service lets users compose and publish a story about your travel experience simply by uploading snapshots during your travel. When you upload, the platform will place each photo at the appropriate sightseeing spot on a map, in accordance with the picture’s time-stamp and location data. In this way, it helps you sort out travel photos and your memories by routes and timeline [1].

In addition to collecting travel photos, the platform will add a feature that automatically creates sight-seeing spot pages. Photos taken by all users at a particular spot will be associated with that page. This resembles restaurant finder sites where photos give users an idea of what they can expect at a glance.

By accumulating photos uploaded by users, the company wants to create a sort of travel-focused buzz site. CEO Kentaro Horie explains:

No matter how many more more photos or comments we acquire, it would be pretty difficult to defeat TripAdvisor and its SEO tactics. We will focus on acquiring comments posted under real names.

At this point their strategy is very similar to Retty, which is collection of restaurant reviews and evaluations posted under real names.

compathy_screenshot1

The company also plans to add a new feature in January, where users can arrange travel plans using the platform. Horie added:

For our next step, we’d like to add a new feature that encourages users to link up with friends overseas. You will be able to arrange plans and take advantage of their advice.

Wonderlust was a member of Incubate Camp, an incubation program operated by Tokyo-based Incubate Fund. They have been improving their service, and now finally has received investment so they can launch the service.

compathy_screenshot2


  1. Their service model resembles Korea’s Tripvi Album.