Japan gadget wizards conjure hay-fever hoods, spy cam specs

Tokyo firm milks USB in offbeat novelties

It may look like a joke, but Thanko's USB Pollen Blocker is a hood with filtered ventilation that's designed to protect hay fever sufferers from airborne pollen.

It may look like a joke, but Thanko's USB Pollen Blocker is a hood with filtered ventilation that's designed to protect hay fever sufferers from airborne pollen.

In February, the hills around Tokyo come alive with cypress pollen, and that means one thing: hay fever.

Millions of miserable Japanese try to cope with their allergies by donning surgical masks. But for one upstart Tokyo company, that just doesn't cut it.

Enter the USB Pollen Blocker, a filtered, ventilated head covering developed by Thanko, a small firm based in the capital's electronics mecca of Akihabara. The Pollen Blocker looks like a bright yellow hazmat hood and can completely seal off the heads of hay fever sufferers from the ambient pollen.

The filtered fan in the baseball cap-style brim is powered by USB. Just hook it up to a laptop or mobile device and you'll have a pollen free head space as long as your battery lasts.

Of course, the Pollen Blocker looks more than a tad ridiculous, but that's Thanko's stock-in-trade.

At a time when Japanese manufacturers have been written off for failing to innovate amid competition from China and South Korea, Thanko has been creating and marketing a steady stream of think-out-of-the-box products.

Aside from the Pollen Blocker, recently launched for US$39.80, there's the Handy Salt Meter, a thermometer-style device that can measure sodium content in soup and noodle broth; the iPhone 5 Magnifier, a folding plastic screen that makes your screen easier to read; and the USB Fanning Tie 3, a necktie with a hidden collar fan for those sticky summer nights.

If you have a yen for Japanese culture, there's the USB Warm Futon Mouse Pad, a futon-style mouse cover that keeps your fingers warm while muffling clicking sounds so you won't disturb those around you; the USB Onigiri Warmer, which keeps rice balls toasty in a cosy zippered pack; and the USB Hot Haramaki, a tummy band for cold winter days.

Thanko is staffed by a crew of veritable gadget ninjas, headed by President Hiroyasu Yamamitsu. He founded the company ten years ago after he found that the computer accessories firm he worked for wasn't crazy about his product ideas.

"Thanko products have to be totally novel, interesting, and sometimes funny," said Yamamitsu. "They also have to help people in their daily lives somehow." Thanko markets its goods through its Japanese website and recently began reaching out to overseas gadget lovers through a new English-language website, Raremonoshop.jp.

Meanwhile, its shop along Akihabara's main drag, home to French maid cafes and myriad other "otaku" (geek) haunts, is an emporium of oddities: glasses and pens embedded with spy cameras, figurines that float in mid-air over magnetic platforms, tarantulas preserved in see-through computer mice, and Thanko's USB Vibration Helmet, a mechanical scalp massager that looks like a prop from "Tron."

USB is a common Thanko theme because Japanese regulations for the standard are looser than those for plug-in power from the grid.

The store's shelves are overflowing with nearly 800 types of gizmo, while the online shop has 1,000, most for about ¥3,000 to ¥5,000 (US$30 to $50). The company is putting more emphasis on developing its own inventions but mainly imports products from China, where it has a manufacturing base.

The roughly 20 staff at Thanko are expected to come up with ideas every week. Not all concept have what it takes to make it to market. Yamamitsu, for instance, once invented a memo pad that had a keyboard. It proved too costly and impractical to commercialize.

"We take inspiration from everyday problems, things that stress you out," said Naohiko Shibasaki, who handles marketing at Thanko, pointing to the Cushion For Use When Lying Prone, an inclined floor pad that supports your chest and neck when you're using a laptop or reading. For total comfort while lounging, there's a pair of USB-powered heated slippers nearby.

"We want to find solutions for small hassles that can be annoying or painful," Shibasaki added. "We want to surprise you."

Thanko competes against Japanese computer accessories firms such as Sanwa Supply and Iosys but has tried to carve out its own niche with a steadily growing stream of original inventions. Its wacky thinking has paid off with a swelling fan base, and it's now aiming to increase annual revenue to ¥1 billion.

Yamamitsu isn't shy about taking the spotlight to hawk Thanko's gadgets in images and videos, happily sporting the Pollen Blocker and Vibration Helmet. He thinks Japanese businesses could use a little more unconventional thinking.

"Japanese were an agricultural people who respected conservatism and diligence," said Yamamitsu. "We still have that temperament, and are averse to risk and failure. That's why I think Japanese business is grounded in soil that makes it hard to grow innovative products and services."

So what's next for the gadget wizard? A USB wand?

"My dream product is a wearable computer that's controlled by brain waves or sight," he said.

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Tags consumer electronicsaccessoriesThanko

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