Report Profiles Secrecy at Apple's Asian Manufacturing Partners' Facilities - Mac Rumors

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Report Profiles Secrecy at Apple's Asian Manufacturing Partners' Facilities

Wednesday February 17, 2010 01:51 PM EST
Written by Eric Slivka

Mac News

Reuters today reports on the secrecy demanded by Apple of its Asian manufacturing partners, profiling a sprawling Foxconn facility in Longhua, China complete where employees live and work while producing many of Apple's devices.

Inside the walled city -- one of several compounds run by Foxconn International, a major supplier for Apple Inc -- employees are provided with most of their daily needs. There are dormitories, canteens, recreation facilities, even banks, post offices and bakeries.

The rank-and-file within the compound have little reason to venture outside. That reduces the likelihood of leaks, which in turn lessens the risk of incurring the wrath of Apple and its chief executive, Steve Jobs, whose product launches have turned into long-running, tightly controlled media spectacles.

According to the report, workers are subject to metal detectors and searches when leaving the compound, while security personnel aggressively protect the security of the facility. One Reuters reporter was reportedly physically assaulted by Foxconn security personnel while taking photos of the compound from a public road, and only the intervention of police summoned by the reporter was able to resolve the situation.

"You're free to do what you want," the policeman explained, "But this is Foxconn and they have a special status here. Please understand."

Apple's manufacturing partners are also subject to confidentiality agreements as is standard in the industry, while Apple also performs unannounced security checks at manufacturing facilities to test security. According to sources, several partners have been warned about the possibility of losing their contracts if suspected leaks continued, although none appear to have actually had their contracts terminated.

Another security measure employed by Apple is the use of custom parts with tight lead times for parts manufacturers, limiting the amount of time such companies are aware of Apple's plans. Apple also reportedly sources components from many different manufacturers, leaving each one with only very limited knowledge of Apple's forthcoming devices until manufacturing begins just weeks before product launch. Finally, the report notes that Apple has been known to test potential manufacturing partners by contracting with them for production of different parts and watching for any leaks from those sources.

Apple's obsession with secrecy has been profiled in the past, with workers on its main headquarters campus in Cupertino faced with numerous security access points and special protocols to severely limit the number of people with knowledge of products under development. According to the earlier report, Apple has also been known to seed its own employees with incorrect information in attempts to discover the sources of product information leaks in its bid for the strictest security possible.

To a point I understand that we are talking about China here, and it should not surprise anybody to hear this kind of story come out of a country like China. With that said I think that this kind of behavior from Foxconn is to be expected given that Apple is a BIG customer of said company. I find it pathetic that because of Steve Jobs asphyxiation with secrecy, that a company would result to the type of measures described on the Macrumors article. And all for what? The iPad was know to be coming down the pipe, IT WAS NO SECRET APPLE!!!!! And to make things worst, the iPad is yet perceived to be lacking. Way to go Steavo.

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BlackBerry Bold Wallpapers | 178 Walls | Yeeeeee | Painting, Art, Photography, Graphic Design

I just got a new Blackberry Tour from work so i was looking for a Wallpaper and i stumbled on this pretty cool collection of wallpapers for the BB bold. Well they also work for the Tour so I grabbed a few of them. Enjoy.

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Google Buzz

WoW, Here comes Google with another great product with lots of potential. Google has always had a hardtime breaking into the Social aspect of the web. Buzz seems to marry a lot of functionality's together while also acting as a curator for you Social content. Im still waiting for it to be rolled out to my account but I just got done watching the video and I have to say that I am very impressed.

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Spaghetti Carbonara: Their Pic, My Pic « You Make It You Eat It

I always wanted to try Spaghetti Carbonara. This recipe looks to be pretty easy, i think the hardest part will be to make the poached egg.

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Fire Outfoxed: Greasemonkey Creator Builds Native Support Into Chrome

When Google launched Extensions for Chrome in December, they had around 300 of them ready to go in their gallery. A day later, that number was already up to 500. By now, there are a few thousand available, and that number just got multiple by several times as Google has announced that the latest official version of Chrome, version 4, now natively supports Greasemoneky user scripts.

As Google engineer Aaron Boodman

(who also happens to be the creator of Greasemonkey) writes today

on the Chromium blog, on the popular site userscripts.org

there are over 40,000 scripts alone. While he notes that not all of the user scripts written for Greasemonkey will work seamlessly with Chrome immediately (because of the differences between Chrome and Firefox), that should only affect 15%-25% of those over 40,000. He also notes that Google will continue to work on issues on their end to improve compatibility with these Greasemonkey scripts.

While neither side is likely to admit it, this is another big blow to Mozilla’s Firefox browser. Boodman wrote Greasemonkey in 2004 specifically for Firefox, and now he’s just helped a rival browser implement the majority of these scripts natively. And in fact, the native support works so well that Chrome actually treats these user scripts just like regular Chrome Extensions, so you can install and disable them in the same way you do with regular ones.

Boodman cautions users who choose to install these user scripts to be careful, as they can potentially access private data you’re browsing on a website. He notes that you should read the comments and descriptions on a user scripts’ page to figure out exactly what it’s doing before installing it. Still, there are a ton of very useful Greasemonkey user scripts out there, and this makes Chrome even better.

While obviously, Chrome 4 is only officially launched for Windows, the beta versions available for both Mac and Linux are also version 4. And actually, the newer dev builds across all platforms are already onto version 5, so these user scripts should work fine on all of them.

Wow... just wow. Greasemonkey was one of the plugins that allowed Firefox to remain in the lead in the browser wars. Now that Chrome supports these scripts natively there is nothing that Firefox has that Chrome does not have. This is going to be a huge blow to the Firefox team. I'm just wondering if Google is targeting the wrong browser here, I feel they should really go after IE, not Firefox.

Posted via web from PCoraJr