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Tech

Dr. Nakamats: Patently Strange

Motherboard visits Nakamatsu’s lab in Tokyo to learn more about the mad scientist’s inventions, his underwater brainstorm sessions, and his quest to activate technological creativity in others.

It should come as little surprise that Japan, home to the world’s most advanced and strangest inventions, would give rise to an inventor like Yoshiro Nakamatsu. But the quirky, fun-loving 81-year-old scientist seems ripped from another dimension altogether. Dr. NakaMats, as he’s known, is a kind of Thomas Edison on steroids, the mastermind behind over a world-record breaking 3,000 inventions, including “PyonPyon” spring shoes, the karaoke machine, CinemaScope, armchair “Cerebrex”, the sauce pump, the taxicab meter, and a hydrogen-powered engine. If you’ve ever used a digital watch, a floppy disk, a CD or DVD, you’ve also got him to thank.

Dr. Nakamatsu harbors other ambitions too: in 2007, he took his penchant for political campaigning to a new level, becoming a candidate in the gubernatorial election in Tokyo, and the election for the Upper House. Although he failed to get a seat, Dr. NakaMats has other tricks up his sleeve. In 2005 he was awarded the Nobel prize for Nutrition, for photographing and retrospectively analyzing every meal he has consumed during a period of 34 years (and counting). By the time he dies at the age of 144 (a goal he maintains with an elaborate daily ritual that rejuvenates his body and triggers his creative process), he intends to patent 6,000 inventions. Motherboard recently visited Nakamatsu’s lab in Tokyo to learn more about the mad scientist’s inventions, his underwater brainstorm sessions, and his quest to activate technological creativity in others.