Employee Survey Labels Gadget Maker Foxconn a ‘Prison’

Workers at Foxconn, the Taiwanese electronics maker famously known for manufacturing Apple’s iPhone, among other gadgets, used words like “prison” or “cage” to describe working conditions at the factory, according to a recent survey.

The workers quoted in the report complained about inhumane schedules requiring regular overtime work, stagnant wages and inflating dorm fees for factory beds, according to Global Post, who has been investigating Asian supply chains. The employee complaints were cited in surveys conducted by roughly 100 academics at China’s top universities.

“Under the labor and dormitory system, there is great physical, spiritual and spatial repression,” the report said when describing Foxconn’s prison-like working conditions. “An ordinary worker can easily be forced to the edge of collapse.”

Foxconn’s problems are symptomatic of a widespread issue in Asia, where gadget factories are notorious for committing labor violations, sometimes paying hourly wages of a dollar, firing people without notice and violently abusing employees.

Foxconn, however, has been under intense scrutiny in the media spotlight in light of a dozen employee suicides that have occurred at the factory this year. In response, Foxconn opened a tour of the factory to journalists and later promised it would work to improve working conditions by implementing wage hikes, among other changes.

However, the newest survey claims that these promises for improvements have yet to materialize.

In an e-mail response, Foxconn denied the allegations.

Foxconn is certainly not perfect,” Foxconn said in an e-mail statement sent to The Register, “but we take our responsibility to our employees very seriously and we are committed to giving each and every one of our more than 937,000 employees in China a safe and positive working environment and compensation and benefits that are competitive with all of our industry peers.”

The Hong Kong-based organized Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior, or SACOM, which helped conduct the investigation, said it was calling on manufacturers such as Apple, HP and Dell to take responsibility for the tragedy. The three companies said in May that they were in contact with Foxconn to examine the working conditions.

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Photo: Bert van Dilk/Flickr


Sony LCDs build in Google TV, cost $599 and up

Sony’s much-anticipated series of LCD TVs is the first of its kind to build the Google TV service into a television. The NSX-GT1 series starts at $599 for the 24-inch model.

Sony Announces Details, Prices of Google TV Lineup

Sony on Tuesday launched internet-connected HDTVs and Blu-ray players powered by the new Google TV software interface.

With Google TV, Sony says users can “watch television while tweeting about what they’re watching, checking their fantasy football scores, or finding related content on the web.”

As the video above shows, Sony’s emphasis with Internet TV is less about delivering stand-alone content over the web than recasting the television set as a multitasking device. Prices range from $400 to $1,400, and all models will be available for purchase Oct. 16.

Image by Sony

Sony’s Internet TV HDTVs will come in four sizes: 46-inch ($1,400), 40-inch ($1,000), 32-inch ($800), and 24-inch ($600). All four will have Intel processors, 1080p resolution and LED backlighting (except the 24-inch HDTV, which has a CCFL backlight). They will all have four HDMI and four USB inputs. (The press release has no information about component or composite inputs.)

They all have Wi-Fi, will come with the now-famous QWERTY RF remote with integrated mouse, and of course will have Google TV built-in. (Each Internet TV model has the NSX prefix and a GT1 suffix; for example, the 46-inch Internet TV is the NSX-46GT1.)

Sony will also be selling an Internet TV Blu-ray player, called the NSZ-GT1, for $400. It will have the same remote, a similar Intel processor, and will be able to play back Blu-ray discs. The Blu-ray player will have one HDMI input, one HDMI output and four USB inputs.

Google first presented its new Android-powered search, information and application platform for television at the I/O Conference in May. Last week, they launched a new Google TV website to announce their content and application partners, and Logitech debuted its Google TV set-top box, the Revue.

Sony’s contribution to Google TV, however, has probably attracted the most speculation. An ABC News story on Sony’s Internet TVs showed an oversized remote control that disappointed many (including a few of us here at Wired). Last week Sony Insider received leak about the product line (which we wrote about here at Gadget Lab) that nailed the screen size of all of the HDTVs but happily overshot the prices by as much as $500. I had an inkling, though, that those prices might be high when Sony held a contest to give away a new 40-inch Internet TV and pegged the approximate retail value of the prize at just $1,000.

Sony is certainly pricing Internet TV much more aggressively than most observers expected. In fact, the new Internet TVs will actually be selling for about $100 less than already-discounted current Bravia models with similar specifications. For example, the 46-inch Bravia NX-800, which also has an LED backlight and built-in Wi-Fi, currently retails for $1,500 at SonyStyle.com (marked down from $2000); the comparable NSX-46GT1 with Google TV will start at $1,400. The Blu-ray player does cost more than comparable non-Google TV Sony Blu-ray players with Wi-Fi, which run between $200 and $300. But for only $100 more than the $300 Logitech Revue, the additional Blu-ray playing capability may make $400 seem like a very fair price too.

A handful of Google TV apps will come pre-installed on Sony devices, including Pandora, YouTube, Napster, Twitter, television content from CNBC and the NBA, and Sony’s own Qriocity on-demand video service.

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The Scariest Gadgets Around

Telenoid R1.jpg

With Halloween just around the corner, what better time to examine some of the scariest technology around. I’m not talking about all of the electronic vampires and ghost that tend to pop up in the holiday section of your local drugstore chain–these are gadgets that can actually maim you, light you on fire, or worse.

We asked the PCMag staff to pull together some of the creepiest, scariest, and generally worrisome gadgets around.

Sony Google TV HDTVs and Blu-ray player launch details revealed

Straight from Sony’s Google TV unveiling in New York we finally know the official details of its plans, which include four HDTVs (24-, 32- , 40- and 46-inch) with prices from $599 to $1,399, plus a funky white set-top box with built-in Blu-ray player for $399. The 24-inch is a CCFL backlit LCD, while the larger models all feature edge LED lighting, while all of them feature built in WiFi, so no need to go stringing any new network cables to the living room. The only custom app we’re seeing among the preinstalled ones (Netflix, CNBC, Napster, Pandora and more) is a Sony Qriocity VOD player, for more you’ll be waiting for the Android Market to hit in early 2011. If you want to be the first on your block with one, hit up the local Sony Style outlet when they go on sale this weekend, or Best Buy stores starting October 24, meanwhile, check the press release after the break for full specs and details.

Continue reading Sony Google TV HDTVs and Blu-ray player launch details revealed

Sony Google TV HDTVs and Blu-ray player launch details revealed originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Oct 2010 17:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceSony Style, Sony PR  | Email this | Comments

Maxthon Releases Version 1.5.1 Of Its Internet Explorer Browser

This article was written on December 17, 2005 by CyberNet.


Maxthon 1.5.1 Internet Explorer Browser

Maxthon has released the next version of its web browser, version 1.5.1 which is the only update over the past two months. They fixed many of the internal bugs, along with adding better pop-up blocking. Also, they redesigned the home page so that it will be better for the user’s needs. Lastly, they added a “Pin to start page” on the RSS side bar which makes it easier to add feeds to your home page. If you are a Maxthon user then you should rejoice at another update! Maxthon is great because it will added the critical features that Microsoft Internet Explorer lacks, such as tabs (duh!). It adds a ton of features all while using Internet Explorer as a base, which is great because any site that works in Internet Explorer (just about all of them, except maybe www.killbillsbrowser.com) will work in Maxthon. If you are looking for an Internet Explorer Alternative then look no further.

Some more features include:

  • Tabbed Browsing Interface
  • Mouse Gestures
  • Super Drag&Drop
  • Privacy Protection
  • AD Hunter
  • RSS Reader
  • IE Extensions Support
  • External Utility Bar
  • Skinning
  • And Much More to Explore…

Maxthon’s Home Page

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Releasing soon: ‘Apocalypse Now’ Blu-ray and other classics

Apocalypse Now (three-disc full-disclosure edition) hits stores on October 19. And several other classics are coming to Blu-ray this fall.

This Is Sony’s $1399 Google TV-Powered Internet TV [Googletv]

We’re live at Sony’s Internet TV press conference, where we’re seeing the “world’s first HDTV powered by Google TV” (and its gnarly remote). Not bad at all, $1400 for the 46-inch model, available this weekend. Updated. More »

Live from Sony’s Google TV event

Things are all set to go down at 5:30EST — we’ll see you then!

Live from Sony’s Google TV event originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Oct 2010 17:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NES controller gains a Rumble Pak, DIYer gains a dedicated following

Ah, the Rumble Pak. It was arguably the must-have accessory for the Nintendo 64, and had it been around during the time of R.B.I. Baseball, we’re certain it would’ve went over well. One Andy Goetz decided that he’d be interested in reshaping history a bit, and spent 20-some-odd hours building a rumble device for his NES controller as a deadline loomed. He ended up submitting it in Oregon State University’s Engineering Expo, and while it seems that they can’t actually control when the rumble happens, at least your youngster will likely believe that he / she is doing something right while they’re being humiliated by CPU racers in Excitebike. Cruel? Maybe. But totally practical.

NES controller gains a Rumble Pak, DIYer gains a dedicated following originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Oct 2010 16:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Hack-A-Day  |  sourceAndy Goetz  | Email this | Comments