Bell tolls for the last of Japanese pagers

AFP
"Pagers were once a huge hit ... but the number of users is now down to 1,500." 
AFP
Bell tolls for the last of Japanese pagers
AFP

A Nippon Iridium employee displays a pager made by Japan's electronics giant Kyocera at the company's head office in Tokyo, on December 28, 1998.

The end of the pager era is nigh in Japan after five decades, as the country’s last provider announced yesterday it would be scrapping its service next year.

Tokyo Telemessage, the only pager service provider left standing, said it had decided to terminate its service to Tokyo and three neighboring regions in September 2019 — describing the development as “very regrettable.”

“Pagers were once a huge hit ... but the number of users is now down to 1,500,” the company said, adding it had stopped manufacturing the hardware device 20 years ago.

Pagers, known as “poke-beru” (pocket bell) in Japan, became very popular in the 1990s especially among high school girls obsessed by their primitive text messaging functions.

At break time, long queues of high school girls would form outside public phones as they frantically punched in numbers which were then converted into short messages to classmates and boyfriends. At the 1996 peak for the technology, the number of users reached more than 10 million, according to government data.

But mobile phones quickly consigned pagers to the technology dustbin.

Visitors to Japan are often surprised at the contrasting use of technology in Japan.

On the one hand, Japan is a land of high-tech and futuristic gadgets but can also sometimes be bizarrely old school — for example, faxes are still routinely used as a method of communication.

When the last missile from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea flew over Japan, one of the more surreal moments was TV footage showing Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe learning about the emergency on his flip-phone.

And the Japanese minister in charge of cyber security recently made international headlines when he admitted that he delegated computer work to others.


Special Reports

Top