Many people have often inquired about who came up with, and where the initial portable PC or laptop came from., the initial portable computers did not look like the hard back book sized and folding laptops that we are accustomed to seeing today, however, they were both portable and fitted on ones lap, and led to the evolution of notebook style laptops as we know them now..
Journalists continue to write numerous stories about laptops even to this day, including the following.
A story which lately appeared in the local paper concerning Compal Electronics Inc., some say the world’s biggest contract laptop maker. The company maintain that China’s labour shortage and rising wages will pose a big challenge to it amid the fragile recovery in the computer market. Nothing to worry about your Dell Studio will definitely arrive if you order it soon, as most don’t come from Asia to the UK yet.
But instead of moving manufacturing to lower-wage countries, Compal have decided to increase the wages of its Chinese workers and try to improve the environment that they work in, company chairman Hsu Sheng-hsiung was quoted as saying.
He commented the salary will increase by a “marginal amount” however he refused to elaborate.
Compal turned out 38 million laptop computers last year 23 percent of the world total mostly from its production base in the Chinese city of Kunshan, near Shanghai.
With pc sales expected to increase 20 percent this year, Hsu said Compal will set up several plants in China’s interior to meet demand.
It is felt that by 2030 80 percent of Mainland China will be urbanized,” Hsu informed a shareholders meeting. It is his belief that “wages are still low in the west, but will catch up rapidly. The suggestion was made that some large corporations are preparing to chase lower wages and move their operations, which can be very short-term.”
It is believed that an economic recovery is in full swing in mainland China, workers have started demanding large wage increases and showed far less endurance for harsh work conditions than their parents and grandparents did only a short time ago.
The difficulty 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. following the suicides, the company promised to raise basic wages at the facility from 900 yuan ($130) to 2,000 yuan, starting in October.
Sadly a £116,000 damages award to a disgruntled shopper has been wiped out by judges in an appeal court, in a landmark ruling which might affect thousands of consumers in Scotland.
Richard Durkin handed back a laptop computer to PC World because it wouldn’t do what he wanted he wanted.
However, the bank that had provided credit for the purchase continued to chase him for payments, and eventually blacklisted him when he declined to make any.