Seven Reasons Why the New iPhone Sucks

by edward612 21 Replies latest jw friends

  • moshe
    moshe

    A lot can change in three years!!! I just got my Iphone-4S today. I would have to say, they don't suck anymore. Never had an Iphone before, but the Siri voice recognition feature got me hooked. I have yet to ask it- "where can I find a Kingdumb hall?"

  • thetrueone
    thetrueone

    Sounds like fun Moshe, I've had my IPhone for a couple years now and I think its been the best cell phone I've ever own.

    Will most likely be getting the new 4GS next year when my contract runs out.

    Will see if that Siri program is an advantage or not, sounds a bit gimmicky right now.

    The better camera feature does sounds good though.

  • Quarterback
    Quarterback

    I've had the IPhone4, for a year now. I love it. I could not get into Blackberry's ....I had a Storm model before my Iphone.

  • finallysomepride
    finallysomepride

    I still have my iPhone 3GS works great, NO plans to upgrade downgrade to iPhone 4 or 4S hehe

    Love my Android Galaxy s

    FSP

  • DarioKehl
    DarioKehl

    Blackberry made my life a living HELL for a year. My GOD what a terrible device. I'd post the Youtube video of me smashing it with a hammer, but that would reveal my identity lol. I did upgrade my iPhone to the i OS5 last night and it's pretty nifty! Buuuuuut...it can't seem to recognize my wi-fi anymore :/

    I have an 11:50 am appointment at the "Genius Bar" tomorrow to get it worked out. But hey, anything's better than field service!

  • Berengaria
    Berengaria
    Seven Reasons Why the New iPhone Sucks

    Number One

    The massive Foxconn factory in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen is known for assembling famous electronic goods like Apple's iPhone and iPad. But in recent months it has gained a darker image, as a place where distraught workers regularly throw themselves to their deaths. The latest fatality came on Tuesday morning, when a 19-year-old employee died in a fall in the company's Shenzhen compound, according to the state-run Xinhua news service. He was the ninth worker this year to have died in a fall from factory buildings on Foxconn's properties in Shenzhen; two have survived suicide attempts, according to state-media reports. Another teenager, who the company revealed this month died after jumping from a company building in Hebei province in January, brings the total employee death toll from falls to 10 this year.

    The string of deaths has drawn attention to the labor practices of a highly successful Fortune 500 company that has 420,000 workers on its payroll in Shenzhen alone. Two dozen activists protested outside the company's Hong Kong offices on Tuesday, calling on Foxconn to improve working conditions and raise wages. The Taiwan-owned company, which is an arm of the Hon Hai Group, has defended the treatment of its workers. "A lot of things cannot be said at this point, but we are quietly doing our job," CEO Terry Gou told a business forum on Monday. With over 900,000 employees globally in the Hon Hai Group, Gou acknowledged the difficulties of employee management. "But," he said, "we are confident we will get things under control shortly." (See portraits of Chinese workers.)

    Working conditions at Foxconn's factories have been under scrutiny for years. The attention was heightened in 2009 when 25-year-old employee Sun Danyong, who had been accused by management of losing an iPhone prototype, jumped to his death from his apartment in Shenzhen. Chinese press reports said Sun, who grew up in a poor village in Yunnan province and attended the top-rated Harbin Institute of Technology, might have been physically abused by company security guards searching for the missing device.

    Like Sun, the Foxconn workers who died this year have all been young, ranging in age from 18 to 24. The cases all differ, but there are common themes. "They feel a sense of pressure — pressure to make more money, pressure to work harder, pressure from family or difficulties in personal relationships," says Geoffrey Crothall, an editor for the China Labour Bulletin, a Hong Kong–based workers rights' group. Experts say suicides can happen in clusters, with people in a group influenced by earlier incidents. (See pictures of China's internal migrants.)

    The dead have all been migrant workers, and for many Foxconn was their first job. The company pays most of its assembly-line workers in Shenzhen the city's minimum wage of $130 a month, and many work significant overtime hours in order to maximize their incomes. "The work [at Foxconn] is long, monotonous and boring," says Liu Kaiming, a labor researcher and executive director of the Shenzhen-based Institute of Contemporary Observation. "The speed is very fast and you can't slow down, for 10 hours a day at the minimum. You can see how someone could easily become numb and turn into a machine."

    After hours, many workers live in on-site dormitories, where heavy staff turnover makes long-lasting personal connections impossible. That combination — long workdays and a minimal social safety net — leaves vulnerable young workers with few places to turn, says Liu. "Foxconn has 420,000 people; in the U.S. that would be a big city. Even in China that would be a big city, but it's a city without any families. Everyone is working. They live in a dormitory for seven months and don't know their own roommates' names." (Read about the Chinese worker.)

    In 1999, the most recent year for which numbers are available, China reported its national suicide rate was 13 men and 14.8 women out of every 100,000 people. That would put the suicide rate at Foxconn below that of the population as a whole, though a lack of newer statistics makes a comparison difficult. Suicides at factories in southern China have not been uncommon over the past decade, says Liu, but in recent years improvements in telecommunications like the proliferation of mobile phones have made it easier for workers to disseminate information about deaths. And given the size and prominence of Foxconn, and its famous clients such as Apple, Sony, HP and Dell, the suicides at its Shenzhen manufacturing center have earned the company significant unwanted attention in recent weeks.

    Foxconn says it has provided social options like libraries and sports for its workers, and recently has prevented many more attempted suicides. But labor activists argue it needs to make more fundamental changes, like paying higher wages so that workers don't feel forced to work so many overtime hours.

    In mid-May the Chinese newspaper Southern Weekend ran a story by a young reporter who spent a month working undercover at the factory. Liu Zhiyi wrote that the workers all dreamed of wealth, but felt that they had few opportunities outside the company. The workplace wasn't a sweatshop, Liu wrote, but the assembly-line work slowly dehumanized the employees. "It seems as if while they operate the machines, the machines also operate them," the story said. "Parts flow by, and their youth is worn down to the rhythm of the machines."

    Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1991620,00.html#ixzz1aoORwmuN

  • moshe
    moshe

    Well, the life of an auto worker, coal miner, or sewing machine operator in a shirtwaist factory was pretty brutal for our ancestors 100 years ago. I suspect these factories have less than 5 more years of eploiting to do, before workers will succeed in gaining meaninful job concessions. The corporartions are truly between a rock and a hrad place, as they have no place left to run to for cheap and willing workers. Not unless they learn how to build Apple android robots to operate their factories in 2050.

  • thetrueone
    thetrueone

    Sadly even Apple isn't immune to exploiting cheap labor in the orient.

    Seems like most big companies are doing this to create higher earnings for themselves and their stock holders.

    Exclusive apathy and greed for the sake of wealth is unfortunately common now days.

    Its even more ironic that its American companies that are participating in this, the country where organized labor got

    off the ground and flourished.

  • HintOfLime
    HintOfLime

    It makes me sad when I see pre-teens and even children playing with iPhones and iPads. If you want to raise a child with no creative ambitions, no talents, and no real-world computer skills - by all means get them an iPad. You will end up with a child that is wonderful at solving every problem in life with a $2.99 app purchase.

    • Instead of learning photo manipulation in an actual photo editing application - they'll just download a 'photo retouch' app that automatically touches up photos (with varying success) with one click.
    • Instead of learning non-linear video editing on a real-world editing platform and producing something good - they'll just upload crappy raw phone footage to YouTube and Facebook via convenient "Share" buttons plastered on everything.
    • Instead of learning how to write a good story, poem, how to type, or even perform basic formatting in a word processing program - they'll just write in net-speak and short sentences because there is no freaking keyboard for any sort of extended work effort.
    • Instead of becomming curious and trying to create their own apps - they'll learn that you can't program on those devices, and download another movie or video game to play instead.

    And when it is time they step into the business world - where those devices really never will cut the mustard (Apple has made it pretty clear they're not interested in producing machines for business - recently cutting their entire server line, dumbing down pro tools like Final Cut, etc.) - they won't know jack.

    - Lime

  • shamus100
    shamus100

    Well well well.

    I just bought the iPhone 4S. I frigging love it. Siri - you have to try it to believe it. The days of typing could soon be over. It's really fast.

    And I imagine those workers in China are pleased as punch to have the work - working in those work camps are fairly standard over there.

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