Japan's Cherry Blossom Database, 1,200 Years Old, Has a New Keeper
44 points by caycep 4 days ago | 5 comments

hbarka 2 hours ago
> Initially, they didn’t have much luck. No other researchers at Osaka Metropolitan University, where Prof. Aono worked, would be taking over his record-keeping, Hiroko Nishino, a university spokeswoman, wrote in an email.

I’m surprised that there was lackluster response. For this kind of honor, you would think that there would be a flood of responses. I am attributing it to bad marketing.

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nxobject 2 hours ago
Part of me also thinks: yes, but is there any money/compensation attached to this? Honor, sadly, doesn't pay for grad students or soft money researchers.
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gregjw 11 minutes ago
Not usually how things work in Japanese culture
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renewiltord 31 minutes ago
You're supposed to keep an apprentice, man!
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