The Zojirushi NHS-06 cooks rice the way a rice cooker did before microchips: you add rice and water, press a single spring-loaded lever, and a thermostatic switch holds the boil until the water is gone, then releases. There is no microcomputer, no menu, and no clock · the lever is the entire interface, and it is the one moving part that can wear.
What the specs tell you
A mechanical thermal switch, not fuzzy logic. Microcomputer cookers add sensors and a control board to fine-tune the cycle; the NHS-06 deliberately omits all of it. Fewer parts means fewer parts to fail, and nothing in the cooker depends on firmware that could change or lapse.
3 cups uncooked, 300 watts. It is sized for one or two people, and the modest element is part of why these run for years. Note one honest limit: the NHS-06 has no keep-warm function · that feature starts on the larger NHS-10 and NHS-18.
A removable nonstick pan and a glass lid. The parts that touch food lift out for cleaning and are the only consumables; a worn pan is replaced without tools. It is a machine designed to be kept, not replaced.