(UPDATE) TOKYO — Japanese toilet giant TOTO has launched a service allowing those caught short in public to locate the nearest washrooms and see how busy they are real-time with a phone and quick-response (QR) code.
Like other countries, Japan struggles with managing long lines outside public toilets, particularly for women, in its teeming train stations and other places.
The system launched this month by TOTO — famous for its water-spraying, musical toilets — links consumers up with existing internet-connected facility management systems.
This was developed to automatically notify facility staff if a particular cubicle is dirty or occupied for an unusually long time.
Now users can scan a QR code with their mobile phones to access a website showing restroom locations and live congestion levels.
“In addition, a QR code inside a restroom stall brings you to a website where a user can report problems, like being unable to flush or something broken,” TOTO spokesman Tasuku Miyazaki told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Thursday.
The service is multilingual and available in English, Chinese and Korean.
The government is also trying to relieve the problem of long lines for women, with the transport ministry seeking extra funds in the budget for the coming fiscal next year.
These will be used to set up digital signage displays and movable toilet walls that can increase the number of stalls for women, local media reported.
, This news data comes from:http://ikjsfls.ycyzqzxyh.com

Need to pee? Japan has QR code for that
- Sotto willing to testify in Senate probe of flood control anomalies if summoned
- Thailand set for vote on new PM after dissolution bid rejected
- Palace: Govt monitoring Chinese sleeper agents, PLA presence in PH
- Pagasa: Rainy Monday over Visayas, Luzon areas due to LPA, 'habagat'
- Trump moves to cut more foreign aid, risking shutdown
- MMDA proposes rainwater facilities in Camp Aguinaldo to mitigate EDSA flooding
- Afghanistan earthquake kills more than 800
- N. Korea test-fires two 'new' air defense missiles
- Tokyo protests to Beijing over gas field in East China Sea
- Kris Aquino is alive, says friend amid reports of death