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  2. Toyota Will Rent You a GR Yaris in Japan for $106 Per Day - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/toyota-rent-gr-yaris-japan...

    Pricing out my ideal week in Nippon with the GR Yaris totaled out to around $690, and that's with Toyota's rental insurance tacked on. Considering the week-long cost of a standard rental car in ...

  3. Denso mapcode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denso_mapcode

    Furthermore, on October 18, 2016, Denso has launched the free smartphone app Drive! Nippon, for iOS and Android. [10] This app, bilingual in Japanese and English, will show the MapCode if you know the street address of GPS-coordinate. If you point at a location on the map, it will show the street address and GPS-coordinate and produces the ...

  4. Nissan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan

    Renault also exported cars to Japan and were available at "Nissan Red Stage" locations, and are still available at Nissan Japanese dealerships. Nissan Red Stage was the result of combining an older sales channel of dealerships under the names "Nissan Prince Store" ( ja:日産・プリンス店 , Nissan Purinsu-ten ) , established in 1966 after ...

  5. Nissan Shatai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan_Shatai

    Nissan Shatai Co., Ltd. is a Japanese automobile contract manufacturer for Nissan that is headquartered in Hiratsuka, Kanagawa.Its direct history began in 1949. As of September 2016, Nissan owns 45.8% of the company stock.

  6. Tilden Rent-a-Car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tilden_Rent-a-Car

    Tilden later entered into a similar joint venture with Nippon Rent-a-Car of Japan to set up rental agencies in Asia. By the mid-1960s, Tilden Rent-a-Car System had 2,000 corporate-owned vehicles and 2,500 vehicles owned by independent franchise operators in Canada.

  7. Nippon Express - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nippon_Express

    The company was established in 1937 in line with the Nippon Tsu-un Kaisha Law as a semi-government transportation service by pooling the assets of Kokusai Tsu-un KK (International Express Co., Ltd.), which consolidated many of the nation's small-scale rail transport companies, and six other competitors, with additional funding from the Japanese government.