Harsh Work Conditions
It is a little hard to ascertain what was the first portable or laptop PC, the first portable computers did not look like the book-sized and folding laptops that we are acquainted with today, however, they were both easy to transport and fitted on ones lap, and which led to the development of notebook style laptops.
Many people have since penned stories involving laptops similar to the following.
A story which recently appeared in the paper concerning Compal Electronics Inc., some say the world’s most sizeable contract laptop producer. The company maintain that China’s labour deficit and rising wages will pose a danger to it amid the recovery in the computer market. Don’t worry your Dell Mini will still arrive if you order it, as most don’t come from Asia to the UK at the moment.
The company chairman believes that the best way to head off any future problems is to increase wages for their Chinese workers and ensure that they have adequate conditions to work in.
He stated that the wages will increase by a “small amount” but refused to elaborate.
Compal turned out 38 million laptops last year 23 percent of the world total mostly from its production base in the Chinese city of Kunshan, near Shanghai.
Compal are expecting to set up some more manufacturing plants over the next year, given the increase in laptop PC sales so far.
It is felt that by 2030 80 percent of China will be urbanized,” The Chairman informed a shareholders meeting. It is his belief that “wages are still low in the west, but will catch up rapidly. Businesses should not relocate just for the sake of wage concerns like wanderers chasing new grasslands.”
With an economic recovery in full swing in mainland China, workers have begun demanding significant wage increases and showed far less tolerance for harsh work conditions than their ancestors did only not so long ago.
The issue of poor worker morale in China came into stark relief earlier this month amid a spate of suicides at the giant electronics facility of Taiwan’s Foxconn Technology Group in southern China. fearing negative presses after the suicides, the company promised to raise basic wages at the facility from 900 yuan ($130) to 2,000 yuan, beginning in the autumn.
Following on from thisSadly a £116,000 damages award to a disappointed shopper has been dismissed by appeal judges, in a landmark ruling which could impact thousands of consumers in Scotland.
It was reported that Richard Durkin handed back a laptop computer to PC World because it turned out not to be the kind he wanted.
Following this, the bank that had provided credit for the purchase continued to follow him for payments, and eventually blacklisted him when he refused to make any.
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