mondeo
New member
Now if they would just f'ing let us buy f'ing booze on a f'ing Sunday or after 9PM...Connecticut just got a little bit nicer.
Welcome to AlpineZone, the largest online community of skiers and snowboarders in the Northeast!
You may have to REGISTER before you can post. Registering is FREE, gets rid of the majority of advertisements, and lets you participate in giveaways and other AlpineZone events!
Now if they would just f'ing let us buy f'ing booze on a f'ing Sunday or after 9PM...Connecticut just got a little bit nicer.
My new drumset is 100% made in the USA... South Carolina...
Looking for the next wave? Screw solar and wind, they'll never be able to fulfill all that much of the world's energy issues.
Article in Wired a monh or so ago about al the quality control issues coming out of China, especially for smaller orders. When a low saleable yield from an order is combined with delays caused by both shipping and having larger customers bump you out of the queue and higher shipping costs due to fuel prices, all of a sudden manufacturing inteh US starts to get more competitive. Interesting ideas- I know therre's still a lot of jobber manufacturing done in the midwest, and there's actually a surprising amount of small batch contract electronics manufacturing going on.
Maufacturing's not dead in theStats, it's just generally not large scale, I guess.
We're actually moving some of our lower volume circuit board assemblies out of a contract manufacturer in Mexico to a different one in Arizona. Not because of cost, but because of performance. The Mexican plant is not able to produce our high mix at low volumes very effectively, nor do I think they really want to. They're more setup to run higher volumes.
I'm suspicious of that. I'd be surprised if, considering increasing energy requirements as well, 40% is even a reasonable mark. And once solar and wind are built out, the percentage of energy requirements they can fulfill will start dropping.Depends on you who you ask. This report states that 80% of the world's power needs could be supplied by renewable resources by 2050 with the proper investment.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/may/09/ipcc-renewable-energy-power-world#history-link-box
Sounds more like a problem of the organization choosing the wrong contract manufacturer for the expected job than whether the manufacturer is in the US or Mexico.
Plus I want a Mr. Fusion.
Now if they would just f'ing let us buy f'ing booze on a f'ing Sunday or after 9PM...
Oh, and manufacturing has increased by 50% in the U.S. since 1980.
I came across it when I was looking through stuff for my previous post, can't remember exactly where. It might be value of exports, which would make sense seeing as how the U.S. is focused on stuff we're better at now. $1bn in airplane exports doesn't support nearly as many manufacturing jobs than $1bn in cheap clothing exports. But the jobs it does produce are much higher paying (when's the last time you heard of a $100K/year seamstress?)Source for this data?
Maybe production has increased based on productivity driven by technology, but I guarantee you the number of manufacturing jobs has decreased just as dramatically over that span. It's great to have better productivity, don't get me wrong, I'm all for that. But we need jobs for the middle- and working-class people that they can live on. Guys in my hometown used to work at the local paper mill and they employed guys pushing brooms and painting walls at a liveable wage. Not any more.
Goes to my point that if you young-uns don't pick the right college major, you're going to get squeezed out in the information/technology-driven employment market. I know too many graduating kids that want to be photographers or social workers instead of accountants or engineers. Living in Mom & Dad's basement in the future......
It's tough to do even with a conscious effort. I enjoy shopping at a certain big box store because they give priority to American made products.
But yeah, the culture in this country got wrapped up way too much in too long a period of prosperity. People were comfortable, so they told kids to do what makes you happy, not what makes you money. Too many liberal arts majors.