Nuvendil said:
Studies in business writing, technical writing, and oral communications for professionals were standard for my degree (Creative Writing, it was a liberal arts university), so I learned a good bit about culture in the workplace and international business communications. The high context nature of Japan probably plays a big role in a lot of aspects of the Japanese developer scene. Their obsession with visuals - quality, style, symbolism, and so on - likely ties into the characterestic emphasis on surrounding context in communication and nonverbal communication. Gestures, colors, expressions, etc. are important to them in all communication and are often key to conveying the idea. Low context is more direct, more frank, which is probably why we have a tendency to have things more gritty, direct, and stoicly straight forward. As for development, "patience" is the key word. Japanese companies are more patient in general while low context cultures are more focused on time efficiency. For high context cultures, concept may be just as important if not more important than concrete details (similar to context being as or more important than content in communication). That's probably why a number of developers over there prefer to start at the general concept stage and begin development there and shape it as they go as opposed to western developers who prefer to fully flesh everything out before committing resources. |
Is this a recent thing for Japan? Because as far as I read (very little), during WWII the japanese did not much care for patience in design and improvements. They only cared that it could accomplish a job and often came with high failure rates. Whilst Germany and the USA had to make sure everything worked.
I guess it is a recent thing because their train system has been active and running for 51 years with no fatalities. Their cars are also generally perceived as more reliable, which would be the opposite during war time.







