Inside Apple’s iPod Factories

Whilst we here at ATRACLife are not versed on the working conditions Sony provide for their employees, it is very unlikely that it is anything similar to the horror described below. Note: these kind of situations are common in Asia, so it is not fair to only ridicule Apple for such. Nonetheless, this is something to think about next time you stroll past the dozen of iPods sitting idle on the store shelf.

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.

[From Macworld]



Image Converter 2 Plus Ver.2.2.05 Update Program

 

A new update for Image Converter 2 Plus is now available for download from Sony. The new improved features in Image Converter 2 Plus Version 2.2.05 are:

  • Maximum Recording Time per file. Increased from 2.0 Hours → 6.5 Hours
  • File divide-function is available not only during data-transcoding but also during data-transfer.

DOWNLOAD LINKS: JAPAN | ASIA-PACIFIC 

Note: If Image Converter 2 (MSSW-IC2) is installed on the computer, users must first update to Image Converter 2 Plus Ver.2.2 before proceeding with this update.



Network WALKMAN A1000/1200/3000 Price Reduction

WALKMAN A

Sony Japan announced today of a price reduction to its HDD based Network Walkman A1000/1200/3000 series. The new revised retail price will be as follows:

  • WALKMAN A1000 Series
    NW-A1000 (6GB) – 22,800 yen (2,000 yen price reduction)
    NW-A1000/B [Limited Ed] (6GB) – 20,800 yen (2,000 yen price reduction)
    NW-A1000/N [Limited Ed] (6GB) – 20,800 yen (2,000 yen price reduction)
  • WALKMAN A1200 Series
    NW-A1200/B [Limited Ed] (8GB) – 24,000 yen (2,000 yen price reduction)
  • WALKMAN A3000 Series
    NW-A3000 (20GB) – 26,800 yen (3,000 yen price reduction)
    NW-A3000/B [Limited Ed] (20GB) – 24,800 yen (3,000 yen price reduction)

 



Inside Sony’s failure to ‘Connect,’ Again

Early in 2005, more than a dozen Sony employees from the company’s consumer electronics divisions gathered for an unusual meeting in the tiny Palo Alto, Calif., headquarters of digital media start-up Kinoma.

Kinoma Chief Executive Peter Hoddie, an Apple Computer alumnus, had been put in charge of high-profile Sony software development, including the Connect digital music project. For a company historically averse to using outside technology, this was a significant step.

For more than two hours, the group met in the futon-lined public area of Kinoma’s offices. According to attendees, Hoddie gave a sales pitch, but not much more. When asked for details on the technology they’d be using for Connect, Hoddie declined to provide them, and the meeting turned contentious before breaking up, employees said.

Read the rest of this entry »



NEW: PSP Firmware 2.71

PSP2.71

Sony Computer Entertainment (Japan) announced today of a new PSP firmware version 2.71. The new firmware will be available via network update and manual download.

UPDATE NOW AVAILABLE: PSP Firmware 2.71 (Japanese version) | (US version) 

PSP FIRMWARE 2.71 UPDATE INFORMATION PAGE: Japanese | English
Improvements with Firmware 2.71:

 Network

  • Using the PSPâ„¢ system’s [Internet Browser] feature, game demos can now be downloaded and saved on Memory Stickâ„¢ media. Note: As of June 1st, only the LocoRoco and Kazuo game can be acquired via this new feature.
  • A new Portable TV (P-TV) icon has been added to the PSP interface. (only applicable to Japanese PSP with its corresponding Japanese firmware; Icon as shown below). Note: Some videos from So-net may require a fee.
  • Video can now be displayed correctly when an external tuner is selected in [LocationFreeâ„¢ Player].
    Note: Affects LocationFreeâ„¢ base station (a Sony product sold separately) model numbers LF-B1 (sold in North America/Taiwan/Korea) and LF-X11 (sold in North America). (Refer to the instruction manual for your LocationFreeâ„¢ base station to locate the model number.) The issue that has been addressed does not affect LocationFreeâ„¢ base stations sold in Japan or Europe. For additional information, contact SCEA Consumer Services at 1-800-345-7669.

New  Portable TV (P-TV) Icon (Picture Source: AVWatch)

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