GhostFist
Member
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2010
- Messages
- 1,551
sigh.....
http://gizmodo.com/#!5542527/undercover-report-from-foxconns-hell-factory
http://gizmodo.com/#!5542527/undercover-report-from-foxconns-hell-factory
pugilato said:Some would say that it was the greed of the manufacturers, others would say it was the greed of the unionized workers. And always the pressure from consumers for stable or preferably lower prices. Something had to give, and the result is what we see now.
pugilato said:ABC News recently did a piece in which they selected a house, and took out everything that was not made in the USA. Unbelievably, the only thing left was a flower pot (or something like that). No tables, no chairs, no kitchen tools or gizmos, nothing. Everything that this country invented and used to make is not made here anymore. And so it is with Apple and just about everything else we use.
Some would say that it was the greed of the manufacturers, others would say it was the greed of the unionized workers. And always the pressure from consumers for stable or preferably lower prices. Something had to give, and the result is what we see now.
So dont be critical if I will buy something that is made overseas but serviced and supported here. I want the thing to work reliably. I want to be able to buy it. If it were made in America, it (whatever it is) would probably be unaffordable. So there it is... I did not make the system. It developed into what we see now, and I would love to see things go back to the way they were.
tvgordon said:Unless one is very well off, buying products made outside the US is unavoidable. Everything from clothes, tools, tv's, computers, etc,etc,etc are all made elsewhere (including PCs).
I agree with pugilato that it is nice when customer service includes face to face help, email or someone will call you at the time you ask them to call. I will spend my money at companies that invest a little more in customer service, like Festool and Apple.
Tom
Sparktrician said:I STRONGLY prefer buying US-made goods, all things being equal, but in the absence of US-made tools (or whatever) that fit the need, I will buy the product that fits the need, regardless of source ...
Book an appointment online and then you won't have to wait nearly as long.Kodi Crescent said:My only complaint is that the Apple stores in the mall are always mobbed! The unique customers can make for some interesting people watching though.
That's not true. Apple has taken a lot of heat in the popular press. As a start, as someone else earlier in the thread suggested, google "Apple foxconn".joraft said:However, what remains a curiousity to me is that despite the continuing widespread anger towards American companies that move jobs overseas, with our government even repeatedly threatening to financially punish them, Apple has always gotten a pass on any criticism, even though everything they sell is made in Asia. I hate to think that it is because their products are so culturally popular in the U.S., because that would make us a bunch of hypocrites. [wink]
jmbfestool said:At first I HATED the Imac and MacBook Pro and thought the Ipad was just okay. I was thinking of getting my PC back out and my laptop!
Well...... I love it! I would never go back the PC.
NuggyBuggy said:That's not true. Apple has taken a lot of heat in the popular press. As a start, as someone else earlier in the thread suggested, google "Apple foxconn".joraft said:However, what remains a curiousity to me is that despite the continuing widespread anger towards American companies that move jobs overseas, with our government even repeatedly threatening to financially punish them, Apple has always gotten a pass on any criticism, even though everything they sell is made in Asia. I hate to think that it is because their products are so culturally popular in the U.S., because that would make us a bunch of hypocrites. [wink]
NuggyBuggy said:... So in a way it seems that Apple may actually be held to a higher moral standard than other companies.
joraft said:I would differentiate between the (I agree) disproportionately positive attention the press seems to make about every new Apple product release and any ethical standard the company may be held to. There hasn't been a big public outcry made about Foxconn stuff going into Dell or HPs or Xboxes, that I am aware of. Why not ?NuggyBuggy said:I don't know by who. It's certainly not by the "court of public opinion". Just the announcement of a new product will cause lines to form all over the country, no matter what that product does, where it is made, or the working conditions invovled in making it.
I'm not saying that Apple is any better or worse than any other company, I just find the undying love and devotion they seem to have generated among so many Americans very curious.
Apple has become a leader in many spaces, very good at defining new product areas, and the press coverage reflects that. As much as I love my Samsung Captivate phone, for instance, a story about a new Samsung product release just isn't going to generate the same number of clicks as an iPhone release, because Samsung and its ilk are not driving innovation in the same way. They are driving competition, and in the case of the Captivate IMO, implementing what is more rather than less of a knock-off, better.