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Showing posts with label Replace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Replace. Show all posts

Microsoft to replace Metro branding

Microsoft has been using the term Metro for Windows 8 and Windows Phone to describe its design language used in the new operating systems. However, Microsoft seems to have run afoul of another company in Europe, and a memo has surfaced where Microsoft tells employees to stop using Metro branding. The order to stop using Metro branding is for both Windows 8 and other Microsoft products such as Windows Phone.

The Microsoft memo says the decision was reached after “discussions with an important European partner.” The memo also tells employees that they have to adhere to the no more Metro ruling effective immediately. Additionally, the memo notes that Microsoft is “working on a replacement term.” That replacement term is expected in this week.

Considering that today is Friday, the new term could be unveiled today. Until that the term is coined, Microsoft is telling employees to refer to the Metro style user interface as “Windows 8 style UI.” Apparently, the memo doesn’t spell out what the reason for banning Metro branding is, but presumably, one of Microsoft’s partners raised some sort of trademark conflict in Europe.

Microsoft calls out a “partner,” which is a very vague term that could mean anything from a developer to a reseller of software. It’s also interesting that Microsoft is only now figuring out that it needs to change branding after promoting the Metro UI for so long.

[via TheVerge]

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Apple hikes battery replace fees for MacBook Pro with Retina Display

Apple has increased the cost of replacing the integrated battery in the MacBook Pro with Retina Display by more than 50-percent over its predecessor, increasing the fee to $199. The new model – which features the slimmest casing in a unibody Pro chassis to-date, relying on tightly-squeezed batteries to do so, is the most expensive model under Apples battery replacement program, according to the company’s own support documentation.

In the US, swapping out the battery in the new MacBook Pro with Retina Display will cost $199 pre-tax. In contrast, switching the non-user-replaceable battery in the old-design MacBook Pro 13- and 15-inch models – also updated in the past week – remains at $129 pre-tax. The larger battery in the 17-inch MacBook Pro, discontinued as of WWDC 2012, is $179 pre-tax to replace.

Apple has not explained the reasons for its fee increase, though early teardown information about the new notebook does give some indications as to why it might be higher. The battery packs are individually glued into place, sandwiching the trackpad cable between them and the chassis in the process, and making for a tricky challenge when it comes to replacing them.

Nonetheless, Apple claims that – with an appointment – the MacBook Pro with Retina Display battery can be switched out at an Apple Store Genius Bar. Alternatively, the notebook can be sent in for servicing (in the US and Japan only) with a 3-4 business day turnaround.

According to Apple’s own figures, the newest MacBook Pro’s battery can be recharged around 1,000 times before the total charge it will hold drops to 80-percent. That suggests a roughly two year, nine month period assuming a daily recharge.

There’s more on the Retina MacBook Pro in our full review.

[via ComputerWorld]

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Chinese Company Continues Plan To Replace Workforce With 500,000 Robots

Possibly the largest electronics manufacturer in the world, Foxconn plans to add a half million robots to its assembly lines.

How to deal with the rising cost of running your factory? Get rid of all those inefficient humans and hire robots instead. Citing labor shortage and rising wages Hon Hai, the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer, recently announced that it intends to build a robot-making factory and replace 500,000 workers with robots over the next three years.

Supervisors will never have to hear about bathroom breaks again.

Hon Hai, parent company of manufacturing giant Foxconn, which assembles the iPhone and iPad for Apple as well as products for Sony and Nokia. Hon Hai already has 10,000 robots busy at work in its factories, and they’re not wasting any time with their plan to increase the number of robots to one million by 2013. Earlier this month the company announced their plans to build a $3.3 billion “intelligent” technology park in Taichung, Taiwan. That intelligence will come from CNC (computerized numerically controlled) devices, servo drivers and motors, and robots.

Part of the driving force behind the company’s robotization is China’s booming economy. With about 800,000 employees and a yearly revenue of about $60 billion, Foxconn may be largest electronics maker. The company has made its name largely on cheap national labor. But as China’s economic growth has led to increases in worker wages and, at the same time, increased demand for the electronics that Hon Hai makes. Hon Hai’s company chairman Terry Gou, among China’s richest men, spoke at a ceremony where he signed a letter of intent to invest $3.3 billion in greater Taichung. He said the robots will increase the production value of Foxconn by about $4 billion over the next three to five years and create about 2,000 new jobs.

Rumors in the past had pointed to FRIDA as Foxconn’s robot of choice, made by the Swiss robotics company ABB. But evidently Foxconn isn’t going to wait around for the robots to come to them. And considering the sheer number of robots they plan on building and putting in their factories, it makes more sense for the company to custom-design and build themselves. The program’s initial cost is estimated to be about $223 million, but it should pay off in the long run.

After a spate of jumping suicides, Foxconn began setting up nets like these.

Foxconn is long due for some positive change. A string of suicides at several Foxconn campuses have drawn international scrutiny and criticism. The companies factories are models of efficiency, with a production line scheme designed in such a way that “no worker will rest even one second,” Li Quang, executive director of the labor rights group China Labor Watch, told the New York Times. Between March and May of 2010 nine Foxconn employees leapt to their deaths from Foxconn factory rooftops. Foxconn responded by installing catch nets around their high-risk buildings. Over the past 15 months 14 Foxconn workers have died in what looks to be suicides. Of course, installing half a million robots will most likely lead to much of Foxconn’s workforce looking for other jobs. But the company insists its intention is not to replace humans, but to move humans from jobs that are “dangerous and monotonous” and free them up to do jobs that take more thoughtful research and development. I’ll believe that when I see it.

If his workers might not be, Gou is certainly excited about his company’s coming robot revolution. “The investment marks the beginning of Hon Hai’s bid to build an empire of robots,” read a statement from the Central Taiwan Science Park authorities. At the ceremony, Gou declared that Hon Hai will build an “intelligent robotics kingdom” in the coming years.

“Empire of robots”…”robotics kingdom”…I wonder if Mr. Gou has some bigger plans for his army of robots. Sorry, probably a bad choice of words.

When the robots roll out onto the factor floor, they’ll join the warehouse floor-scooting Kiva and other robots that are revolutionizing industry automation. Pretty soon it’s going be strange to see a human on a factory floor. But at least they’ll still need humans to do the more intelligent and creative decision-making jobs. You know, the kind that Watson is studying for right now.

[image credits: Wired, Google, and MS-NBC]
image 1: Foxconn
image 2: Foxconn2
image 3: Foxconn3

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