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China Iphone Apple Hardware

Apple Asks Suppliers To Shift AirPods, Beats Production To India (nikkei.com) 55

Apple is asking suppliers to move some AirPods and Beats headphone production to India for the first time, in a win for the South Asia nation as it attempts to rise in the global supply chain. Nikkei Asia Review reports: The move is part of Apple's gradual diversification from China, as it looks to lower the risk of supply chain disruptions stemming from the country's strict zero-COVID policy and tensions with the U.S. Apple has been talking with a number of its suppliers about increasing production in India, including of key acoustics devices, as early as next year, three people familiar with the matter told Nikkei Asia. In response, iPhone assembler Foxconn is preparing to make Beats headphones in the country, and hopes to eventually produce AirPods there as well, two people with direct knowledge of the matter said.

Luxshare Precision Industry and its affiliates, which already produce AirPods in Vietnam and China, also plan to help Apple make the popular wireless earphones in India, sources said. However, Luxshare is focusing more on its Vietnamese AirPods operations for now and could be slower than its competitors in starting meaningful production of Apple products in India, one of the people said. Bringing AirPods and Beats production to India would enlarge Apple's production footprint in the country, following a recent announcement that the latest iPhone is already being made there. Apple started having some older iPhone models made in India in 2017 by a smaller supplier, Wistron, but only accelerated such production last year.

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Apple Asks Suppliers To Shift AirPods, Beats Production To India

Comments Filter:
  • by dohzer ( 867770 ) on Thursday October 06, 2022 @05:30AM (#62943199)

    "Hey Sri, order me some Beats by Shivansh."

  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Thursday October 06, 2022 @05:36AM (#62943211)

    Apple needs more servile wage slaves.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Apple sees the writing on the wall. China is going to side with the authoritarians. The dream of openness through prosperity has failed. A new iron curtain is rising. Supply chains are routing around future incisions.

    • Apple needs more servile wage slaves.

      You can STFU until even ONE of Apple's actual competitors moves their Contract Manufacturing to the United States.

  • They'll move help-desk support from India to China ... "Cindy" will just have a slightly different accent. :-)

    • They'll move help-desk support from India to China ... "Cindy" will just have a slightly different accent. :-)

      Apple's Tech Support, at least for the U.S., has always been based in the U.S.

  • by stealth_finger ( 1809752 ) on Thursday October 06, 2022 @06:15AM (#62943251)
    Designed in California

    Made by the lowest bidder
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The design is terrible anyway. They are glued and plastic welded together, completely impossible to repair. Not just the ear buds which at least have the excuse of having to be very compact, but the charging case too. Both contain batteries with a finite lifespan.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        you mean like 99.7% of all electronic devices ever produced? you apple haters are so funny.

        • Not as funny as the guy who's obviously never worked on electronics trying to tell us they're all glue sandwiches. I'll also assume he's a teenager due to the smartphone fixation, seemingly unaware of the existence of desktop computers, radios, televisions, laptops, game consoles, etc., and unaware that these are all electronics.

          On second thought, it's not so funny. It's just sad.

        • Re:Apple (Score:4, Funny)

          by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday October 06, 2022 @08:29AM (#62943459) Homepage Journal

          you mean like 99.7% of all electronic devices ever produced?

          That is obviously disingenuous. The vast majority of devices with lithium batteries in them can be taken apart without breaking them.

          you apple haters are so funny.

          I got to be one by being an apple user.

          • you mean like 99.7% of all electronic devices ever produced?

            That is obviously disingenuous. The vast majority of devices with lithium batteries in them can be taken apart without breaking them.

            you apple haters are so funny.

            I got to be one by being an apple user.

            I think you were predisposed.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          For comparison, Samsung's wireless ear buds can be disassembled and the battery replaced with common tools and in a way that doesn't destroy them. The case too.

      • Also yes.
    • Designed in California

      Made by the lowest bidder

      As opposed to HP, Dell, etc, which are. . . ?

  • diversification from China

    oh come on. We all know it's in preparation for the coming war.

    • War with China?

    • The enemy of my enemy is my friend right there.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    India is cheaper than China these days, and China is starting to have to grapple with its environmental crisis.

    India doesn't give two fucks about environment, worker safety, and they have far fewer holidays where people are off work. Plus they are buying Russian oil on the cheap so production costs are a lot less.

    • .. is crippling local and regional economies in his country. There seems to be an unwritten rule that power starts corrupting after a decade or 2 with a drift away from reality at the same time.

      • Power is usually taken by assholes, and assholes create yes men, so they start getting bad information — and then they can't make effective decisions.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    > in a win for the South Asia nation as it attempts to rise in the global supply chain

    It only really needs to hold on, keep their collective heads down and wait. China's gradually imploding under its own weight, issues such as excessive lockdowns, re-education camps, forced labour and even social scores could see China drop off the worlds favourite trading partners list in just a few years.

    India isn't without it's problems for the West, but it's way, way cleaner than China ever was. It's also a lot less

    • India does substantially the same things as China, or nearly so and catching up fast. They don't have a free press, government corruption from top to bottom, and the border disputes regarding Kashmir raise the specter of war in a way analogous to Taiwan. India doesn't have formal concentration camps for the Muslims yet, but the religious persecution is going full steam ahead, so it won't be long.

      They certainly have a better image than China does at this point in time. I think that's the best thing you can s

  • If India can pull in as much money from western corporations as china has in the last 2 decades they'll become a superpower fast. Arguably they almost are already since they have nukes but their conventional forces are hopeless. I suspect under someone like Modi they won't stay that way for long once the cash firehose starts flowing. Whether thats a good of bad thing is anyones guess , though I imagine for Pakistan it won't be great news.

  • India has too many uppity people who are riled up easily and protest. Vietnam, or Southeast Asian countries, are a better choice.

    • If any corporation gets what it wants, the natural end result is protests, because they always want to fuck over everyone they see.

  • What would be the harm of making even one thing in the United States?
    • What would be the harm of making even one thing in the United States?

      You think there's an "Apple Tax" now. . .

      BTW, Apple did do that with at least one or two generations of Mac Pros.

  • Should have diversified outside of the BRICS alliance. If the global breakdown continues to get worse between NATO and BRICS then apple still effectively has all their eggs in one basket.

  • After WW2, U.S. became one of the leading global manufacturers. Then, as workers demanded more wages, the corporations looked for cheaper labor, to keep profits higher. They moved to Japan. I remember in the 60's when people would say "I wouldn't by anything with a made in Japan logo". Then they got better. As the Japanese workers started to demand more money, the corporations looked again for cheaper labor, to keep profits high. They moved to South Korea & Taiwan. Again, as those workers started
    • They thought they found their crown jewel because the "workers" (slave labor) can't really demand more in wages because the CCP will just off them, and replace them with someone else. But, not with the political fallout, the corporations looked for a place and they found India.

      Weird, you were doing so well there and then you pretended reality didn't apply to China. Corporations aren't moving production from China for political reasons, though they would like us to believe that. They're doing it because labor costs have gone up in China because their population expects it. The great firewall keeps them insulated from a lot of information, but one thing it doesn't hide from them is western lifestyles, and essentially everyone wants those (or at least, the idealized Hollywood view o

      • They thought they found their crown jewel because the "workers" (slave labor) can't really demand more in wages because the CCP will just off them, and replace them with someone else. But, not with the political fallout, the corporations looked for a place and they found India.

        Weird, you were doing so well there and then you pretended reality didn't apply to China. Corporations aren't moving production from China for political reasons, though they would like us to believe that. They're doing it because labor costs have gone up in China because their population expects it. The great firewall keeps them insulated from a lot of information, but one thing it doesn't hide from them is western lifestyles, and essentially everyone wants those (or at least, the idealized Hollywood view of them delivered in the media they consume.)

        I think it is actually a bit of both.

        IMHO, China's policies and demands are truly tiresome and fundamentally offensive to U.S. Corporations; but rising labor costs are a real thing, too.

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