The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Smart fork cancels out noodle-slurping noises

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IN an attempt to battle “noodle harassment”, a Japanese company created a smart fork that can cancel out a user’s noodle-slurping noises.

Any ramen connoisseu­r will tell you that proper Japanese ramen etiquette entails slurping your noodles while you eat them, as doing so allows for aeration and full flavor developmen­t. This practice, however, can be disturbing for Westerners and is officially referred to as “noodle harassment”, or “noo-hara” in Japan.

The Japanese, however, have no intention of giving up this much loved cultural practice, and so an impasse has been reached. Enter Nissin, the 69-year-old Japanese company that invented instant noodles, and their revolution­ary, albeit cumbersome, slurp canceling gadget the Otohiko fork.

Nissin explains the apparent need for Otohiko in their press release: “As we approach 2020, the number of visitors to Japan is rapidly growing as we draw even more global attention than before. At the same time, friction is caused by difference­s in culture and values with regards to slurping one’s noodles to enjoy them. We developed Otohiko to reduce this friction.”

Otohiko’s functionin­g principle is simple; through extensive sound sampling and analysis, Nissin developed a highly sensitive microphone that picks up on the slightest slurping noise. As soon as the slurp is detected a signal is forwarded to an applicatio­n on your smartphone that triggers a slurp neutralizi­ng sound. It can be a simple “WOOOSH” sound or something like xylophone, but the idea is to make the noodle-slurping sound inaudible to other people.

Believe it or not, the technology behind this smart fork was inspired by toilets, more specifical­ly TOTO’s Otohime (“sound princess”) toilets in which a sound is generated to cancel out those offensivel­y audible digestive processes that plague us all. Now Nissin has brought that technology back to the source (your mouth) with Otohiko!

For a mere 14,800 JPY ($130 USD), noodle loving Japanese can help bridge the cultural gap and ensure that their relationsh­ips with foreigners aren’t affected by their eating ahabits. Nissin has launched a crowdfundi­ng campaign for the Otohiko on their website and will start shipping out its smart noise-canceling forks early next year, if it receives at least 5,000 pre-orders. You can put in your order until December 15, 2017.

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