Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 4th Dec 2012 00:01 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 544102
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"Assembled in USA" is the new way to say: "we got the parts from China, they came in huge containers, and we're only assembling it here".
So, basically, it's not "made in USA". Only assembled. It makes no difference, maybe beside local employment rate going a little up.
Bogus news.
So, basically, it's not "made in USA". Only assembled. It makes no difference, maybe beside local employment rate going a little up.
Bogus news.
Actually, if we stop and assume most of the devices are actually sold in the U.S. (which seems to be true for Apple), it could actually save on shipping costs to ship the parts (more densely packed that way) and assemble them in the U.S. rather than shipping the fully assembled/packaged devices which wastes more space. They can probably make better use of the containers they ship from China this way.
I'm guessing Apple isn't doing this for any other reason than to save money somehow - and secondarily as a marketing reason since many U.S. citizens get all warm and fuzzy thinking that the company is somehow supporting American workers.




Member since:
2007-11-23
"Assembled in USA" is the new way to say: "we got the parts from China, they came in huge containers, and we're only assembling it here".
So, basically, it's not "made in USA". Only assembled. It makes no difference, maybe beside local employment rate going a little up.
Bogus news.