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  • 10 Days in Japan: Tokyo, Kyoto and the Hidden Temples

    Row of red torii gates at Fushimi Inari Shrine in Kyoto leading through a bamboo forest

    Japan has always been on our bucket list. After two years of planning we finally made it happen: ten days, three cities, countless temples, too much ramen, and memories for a lifetime.

    Cost Overview

    Average daily costs per person (flights not included)
    Category Budget Mid-range Comfort
    Accommodation $30-50 $90-150 $220-450
    Food $20-30 $40-65 $90-180
    Transport $15-20 $20-30 $35-70

    Tokyo – Megacity Without Overwhelm

    Tokyo skyline at night featuring the illuminated Tokyo Tower surrounded by high-rise buildings

    We spent the first four days in Tokyo. With 14 million residents in the city proper, it could feel intimidating – but the public transport system is so precise and logical that you quickly find your bearings.

    • Shibuya Crossing: Yes, it is touristy. Yes, it is still fascinating. Go at night when the neon signs are blazing.
    • Yanaka District: The real old Tokyo – tiny craft shops, temples, cats on rooftops. Barely a tourist in sight.
    • Tsukiji Outer Market: Have breakfast here. Tamago sandwiches at 6am are the best breakfast in the world.
    • teamLab Borderless: Mind-bending digital art installation. Book tickets three months ahead.

    Kyoto – Where Time Stands Still

    Traditional Japanese temple with curved red roof surrounded by blooming cherry blossom branches

    Three days in Kyoto is not enough. The city has over 1,600 Buddhist temples and 400 Shinto shrines. Our non-negotiable must-see list:

    1. Fushimi Inari Shrine – go before 6am, no crowds
    2. Arashiyama Bamboo Grove – immediately after
    3. Kinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion)
    4. Philosopher’s Path during cherry blossom season
    5. Nishiki Market – buy kitchen knives, eat mochi

    Japan changes you. You come home and wonder why trains elsewhere are never on time and why public toilets are so basic.

  • EU Web Accessibility Act: What Businesses Need to Know Now

    Reichstag building in Berlin with glass dome and German flag under blue sky with white clouds

    March 28, 2026 | By Dr. Andrea Morrison, Technology Policy Correspondent

    The European Parliament has formally adopted the revised Web Accessibility Directive, significantly expanding the scope of mandatory accessibility requirements for digital services and tightening enforcement mechanisms applicable to private sector entities operating within the European Union. Member states are required to transpose the updated directive into national law within eighteen months, with full enforcement expected to commence by the fourth quarter of 2027.

    Key Changes Under the Revised Directive

    The most consequential amendment extends accessibility obligations to commercial operators with annual revenue exceeding EUR 500,000, irrespective of employee headcount, effectively bringing an estimated 340,000 additional enterprises within the regulatory perimeter. Previously, the directive applied primarily to public sector bodies and large enterprises meeting a dual threshold of revenue and staffing levels. The revised scope aligns with the broader objectives articulated in the European Accessibility Act (EAA), implemented in national law across Member States as of June 28, 2025, and represents a deliberate policy decision to harmonize accessibility standards across the public-private boundary.

    Technical Conformance Requirements

    Conformance with the directive is assessed against the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.2, Level AA, published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) under the Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI). The WCAG framework is organized around four foundational principles – Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, and Robust (POUR) – each encompassing specific success criteria with associated conformance levels A, AA, and AAA. Level AA conformance, as mandated by the directive, requires satisfaction of all Level A and Level AA success criteria including:

    • Minimum color contrast ratio of 4.5:1 for normal text and 3:1 for large-scale text (Success Criterion 1.4.3)
    • Full keyboard operability without reliance on specific timing of individual keystrokes (Success Criterion 2.1.1)
    • Non-text content must have a text alternative that serves the equivalent purpose (Success Criterion 1.1.1)
    • Text must be resizable up to 200 percent without loss of content or functionality (Success Criterion 1.4.4)
    • Accessibility conformance statement and feedback mechanism allowing users to report barriers and request accessible alternatives (Article 7a)
    • Compatibility with current user agents and assistive technologies including screen readers, switch access devices, and voice control software (Success Criterion 4.1.2)

    Enforcement Timeline and Penalties

    National supervisory authorities will assume primary enforcement competence, with cross-border complaints coordinated through the Single Digital Gateway established under Regulation (EU) 2018/1724. Administrative fines for non-compliance are scaled according to enterprise size and the nature of the infringement, ranging from EUR 10,000 for minor procedural violations by micro-enterprises to EUR 500,000 or two percent of annual global turnover – whichever is higher – for systematic and intentional violations by large operators. Recidivist violations may additionally attract operational restrictions including temporary suspension of the non-compliant digital service pending remediation.

    “Web accessibility is not a technical nicety or a compliance checkbox. It is a fundamental prerequisite for equal participation in an increasingly digital society. Operators who treat it as optional will find the revised enforcement regime persuasive.”

    – Commissioner for the Digital Single Market, European Commission

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