Originally published at: https://boingboing.net/2019/12/19/secret-base-of-kubito.html
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Not bad for a hole-in-the-wall.
What I find most interesting about this, is finding someone using Bing.
I wonder what the rent is on that place in Tokyo.
Some rodent in going to be really happy.
Really amazing detail. The lamp on the desk even works. Going with an old CRT computer monitor is an odd choice. Maybe they don’t make 1’’ flat screens
Wow. This is so adorably cool, I can’t even handle it.
More than you can afford.
It’s not “Kubito,” it’s “Kobito”—which means (directly translated, and I think also in spirit) “little person.”
Hammy the Hamstersan’s office?
Excellent concept and props by Mozu.
The tiny hidden room really hit me. When I was a little kid, we lived in a place with slatted hardwood flooring. While in bed, I used to fancifully imagine pulling up one of the slats in my bedroom, revealing a miniature tunnel, very brightly lit and containing the busy traffic of sleek futuristic vehicles zooming in and out of our place. I think I understand Mozu!
Completely unrealistic. That CRT has way too flat front glass.
The Borrowers are sending out change of address cards.
I beg to differ.
Late CRT monitors and TV got a flat screen surface
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTN7bTUFlPe0lp7eYVDw1X9zvrcBXiaM5rctHGW1ZWFaJW_K6Sj&s
I like the style of it. Also, more space for the lighting inside.
Surely, some driven artist out there has done a tinier room hidden inside a tiny room.
Some did, sure (I had an LG Flatron monitor myself), but they were quite rare as CRTs went. A few series from a few manufacturers at most. And of course I don’t count “flat”-glassed TVs that were actually curved but had a flat piece of glass placed in front of the actual CRT.
Your move, tiny house enthusiasts.
If you have to ask…
Flat screen CRT monitors were a thing for a few years before cheap high-res color LCDs. You can still get them on eBay, though I don’t think they made them quite that small…
Maybe it was just Microcenter and PC Magazine where I did most of my computer shopping in the 90’s, but I remember them being quite common.
Not only that, but it’s showing an “About MacOS” screen in the classic style and the computer is a Power Macintosh 7600. Recognisable on the floppy drive slot.