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And here I thought Apple was different from other corporations...

Tenchiro

Attention K Mart Shoppers
Jul 19, 2002
5,407
0
New England
Inside Apple's iPod factories
By Macworld staff

Apple's iPods are made by mainly female workers who earn as little as £27 per month, according to a report in the Mail on Sunday yesterday.

The report, 'iPod City', isn't available online. It offers photographs taken from inside the factories that make Apple music players, situated in China and owned by Foxconn.

The Mail visited some of these factories and spoke with staff there. It reports that Foxconn's Longhua plant houses 200,000 workers, remarking: "This iPod City has a population bigger than Newcastle's."

The report claims Longhua's workers live in dormitories that house 100 people, and that visitors from the outside world are not permitted. Workers toil for 15-hours a day to make the iconic music player, the report claims. They earn £27 per month. The report reveals that the iPod nano is made in a five-storey factory (E3) that is secured by police officers.

Another factory in Suzhou, Shanghai, makes iPod shuffles. The workers are housed outside the plant, and earn £54 per month - but they must pay for their accommodation and food, "which takes up half their salaries", the report observes.

A security guard told the Mail reporters that the iPod shuffle production lines are staffed by women workers because "they are more honest than male workers".

The report also explains that the nano contains 400 parts, and that its flash memory is the most expensive component. The report looks at several salient components of the nano, and describes the product as a reflecting the global way business works today. This is because the iPod nano contains parts developed by technology companies from across the planet.

Apple is just one of thousands of companies that now use Chinese facilities to manufacture its products, the report observes. Low wages, long hours and China's industrial secrecy make the country attractive to business, particularly as increased competition and consumer expectations force companies to deliver products at attractive prices.
 

binary visions

The voice of reason
Jun 13, 2002
22,101
1,153
NC
That lawsuit has been in the works for a while now. They're slapping each other around. I think Creative has two pending lawsuits against Apple, and Apple has one against Creative.
 

maxyedor

<b>TOOL PRO</b>
Oct 20, 2005
5,496
3,141
In the bathroom, fighting a battle
Quick question, and don't flame me for it. How far will that 27 British pounds go in China? The artical mentions that at another factory workers make 54 and half of that has to pay for room and board. I make considerably more than that but about half of my income goes to room and board as well, so it seems that although they make very little money their expenses are proportionaly the same. I'm just interested in whether this sallary that they make allows them to live an equivilant lifestyle to factory workers in other parts of the world. As for the police outside of the factory, that makes sense to me. The ipod is worth a lot of money and would be easy to smuggle out of the factory, or break in and steel a bunch. In China things work differently than over here, I would imagine getting the police to secure your building there is about the same as mall security here.
 

Ciaran

Fear my banana
Apr 5, 2004
9,839
15
So Cal
Tenchiro said:
And here I thought Apple was different from other corporations...
Now why on earth would you think that? They are a corporation who's sole goal is to make as much money as they can, as cheaply as they can. Just like any other company, despite what the advertising agency would have you think.