Hi guys,
I just came across a slashdot article ( http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/04/17/124244 ) which said that the user base of IBM Lenovo laptops is falling just because they are now being manufactured/owned by the Chinese. I just want to get your opinions. Some say that the quality has indeed deteriorated while others say its just psychological. Many feel that these people are just plain biased while some say that the Chinese are less accountable than their american counter parts.
Personally, I am not biased against the Chinese but Chinese goods tend to have the "cheap" feel to them and I think that they have definitely lowered the quality and have cut costs at the same time while trying to improve their margins.
What say the group?
-- Regards,
Dinesh A. Joshi
Well, our company just took a policy decision to move to Lenovo laptops instead of the Dells that we have been using for years now. And we order more than 20 every quarter.
Well Navneet, Dell is loosing its High Quality lesser price position rapidly. 2 years before practically everybody I met wanted to buy Dell however there have been so many faults in their systems shipped from 2004-6 that its rapidly loosing its market for the favour for HP and Acer.
About Lenovo I have a real bad experience. A friend of mine started a small company of desktop printing and publishing. He ordered 5 Lenovo m/c since he got a better deal than HCL and Dell. Its a year down the line and he hates somebody even mentioning the word Lenovo. Too many issues withing 6 months and no good support. Don't want to discourage you as such. But this could also be one isolated experience.
Thanks and Regards, Harshal Vaidya. http://www.lakhpatipage.com Cheapest way to advertise on the internet!
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Hi Dinesh and others,
--- Dinesh Joshi dinesh.a.joshi@gmail.com wrote:
said that the user base of IBM Lenovo laptops is falling just because they are now being manufactured/owned by the Chinese.
Even before Lenovo, the IBM Thinkpads were manufactured in China. Who knows it could have been Lenovo itself, until they completely sold it to them. My T41 shipped from Hong Kong ... (1)
get your opinions. Some say that the quality has indeed deteriorated
Lenovo Tapes: http://www.lenovo-tapes.com/
Personally, I am not biased against the Chinese but Chinese goods tend to have the "cheap" feel to them and I think that they have definitely lowered the quality and have cut costs at the same time while trying to improve their margins.
(1)
I am not in favor of Dell laptops because of their keys. They lose their spring action in a year or two.
Regards,
SK
-- Shakthi Kannan http://www.shakthimaan.com
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Sometime on Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 08:55:10PM -0700, Shakthi Kannan said:
Even before Lenovo, the IBM Thinkpads were manufactured in China. Who knows it could have been Lenovo itself, until they completely sold it to them. My T41 shipped from Hong Kong ... (1)
IIRC, There was this company called Legend which used to manufacture for IBM since past 4 years. Now it has rebranded itself as Lenovo and started worldwide advertising.
Anurag
get your opinions. Some say that the quality has indeed deteriorated while others say its just psychological. Many feel that these people are just plain biased while some say that the Chinese are less accountable than their american counter parts.
Haven't Lenovo always manufactured for IBM? I always thought they did.
Siddhesh -- http://siddhesh.tk
Dinesh Joshi wrote:
Hi guys,
I just came across a slashdot article ( http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/04/17/124244 ) which said that the user base of IBM Lenovo laptops is falling just because they are now being manufactured/owned by the Chinese. I just want to get your opinions. Some say that the quality has indeed deteriorated while others say its just psychological. Many feel that these people are just plain biased while some say that the Chinese are less accountable than their american counter parts.
Personally, I am not biased against the Chinese but Chinese goods tend to have the "cheap" feel to them and I think that they have definitely lowered the quality and have cut costs at the same time while trying to improve their margins.
What say the group?
To some extent the have brought down their quality. There was a time when people bought thinkpads because you would not need to worry about anything. If you have important stuff on the laptop and had the money, then you would always go for a thinkpad. They had some important features that made them superior and therefore carried a premium. Acer was the one you bought to get Value for Money provided you are willing to live with a little bit of problem. Now Lenovo has lowered the price to compete with Acer. The only way they could do that was to strip off the advanced features.
Take a look at any of the older thinkpad. They had a heat-sink made of some fancy metal with fabulous heat conductivity. IBM engineers used to demonstrate by connecting extenders into a glass of water and show it boiling in 15 seconds. The lenovo thinkpads use normal copper for heat-sink. They also earlier used padded hard disks for shockproofing it to prevent damage in accidental drops. Now that is quietly removed from all but the top end of their laptops.
What they are doing makes business sense. Most of the consumers and business buyers want cheaper notebooks and do not want to pay for these extra features. IBM's pride did not allow them to provide strip down models.
Anyway, the HP (being an american company) has screwed up quality and the sub-terranian levels to which they have dropped, I will actually be willing to pay a premium for a Chinese brand if the alternate is to buy HP. so it is not whether you are american or chinese, it is quality v/s price. 5 years of having Florina as the CEO has moved Compaq / HP's laptops from being the most desired to the most shunned.
Regards Saswata
-- Regards,
Dinesh A. Joshi
so, what laptap would you recommend ?? how would you rate the current indian market scenario with the local brands like wipro etc ?
Ananth
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
Ananth,
so, what laptap would you recommend ?? how would you rate the current indian market scenario with the local brands like wipro etc ?
I will heartily recommend a Toshiba. It's a premium brand and the quality of hardware is impeccable. I own a Toshiba myself and after three years of extremely heavy duty use (Compiling GNOME, Linux on a daily basis) and a fair amount of travelling, it still rocks. Regards, BG
- -- Baishampayan Ghose b.ghose@ubuntu.com Ubuntu -- Linux for Human Beings http://www.ubuntu.com/
1024D/86361B74 BB2C E244 15AD 05C5 523A 90E7 4249 3494 8636 1B74
Baishampayan Ghose wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
Ananth,
so, what laptap would you recommend ?? how would you rate the current indian market scenario with the local brands like wipro etc ?
I will heartily recommend a Toshiba. It's a premium brand and the quality of hardware is impeccable. I own a Toshiba myself and after three years of extremely heavy duty use (Compiling GNOME, Linux on a daily basis) and a fair amount of travelling, it still rocks. Regards, BG
Even I have same opinion about Toshiba. For corporates HCL is giving very good support in Mumbai. No idea about their quality of service towards the home segment.
/Benoy
Ananth A wrote:
so, what laptap would you recommend ?? how would you rate the current indian market scenario with the local brands like wipro etc ?
Ananth
This is a highly disputed topic. If you are a budget buyer, Acer gives the best value for money. At entry level, most of the vendors are giving laptops close to the Rs. 30,000 mark.
If money is not a question, go for a Sony Vio, then for a toshiba and then you can chose between Lenovo & Acer.
I am sure Dell comes somewhere, but never found their models worth the price. HP, as I said in a previous mail should not be touched.
Regards Saswata
On Tue, 2006-04-18 at 21:42 +0530, Dinesh Joshi wrote:
Personally, I am not biased against the Chinese but Chinese goods tend to have the "cheap" feel to them and I think that they have definitely lowered the quality and have cut costs at the same time while trying to improve their margins.
What say the group?
Its not a bias. No matter what, Lenovo will find it very hard to match the quality and reliability of an IBM. Besides, remember all the new machines have to be designed by them, That said, with the purchase, they also picked up the IBM workforce that worked in the PC division.
I would take a cautious approach though, This was a Major factor in me deciding to pick up an ACER laptop instead of the thinkpad. And for the last 3 months I do not regret it @ all
....I should add an interesting note. All the SUN engineers down in australia work with acers 64 bit machines. Apparently the acer amd64 laptop is a very popular machine @ Sun Micro (for the engineers in australia at least). So much so, that Solaris code is now written by the engineers on these machines (personal laptops) and then ported onto SPARC...
-Erle
On 4/20/06, Erle Pereira biz@erlepereira.com wrote:
....I should add an interesting note. All the SUN engineers down in australia work with acers 64 bit machines. Apparently the acer amd64 laptop is a very popular machine @ Sun Micro (for the engineers in australia at least). So much so, that Solaris code is now written by the engineers on these machines (personal laptops) and then ported onto SPARC...
All the Sun employees in bangalore have a nice Ferrari machines .....i meant the Acer model with 2gig ram n amd64bit etc ;=)
Ananth
All the Sun employees in bangalore have a nice Ferrari machines .....i meant the Acer model with 2gig ram n amd64bit etc ;=)
Have I subscribed to Laptop list or Linux list?
Best Regards,
Mukund Deshmukh. Beta Computronics Pvt Ltd 10/1, IT Park, Parsodi, Nagpur-440022 Cell - 9422113746
Have I subscribed to Laptop list or Linux list?
The thread is marked [OT] :))
Otherwise also this list has many non linux threads, like in last two month,
1. Laptop 2. Webhosting in India 3. MTNL 4. PCQ Linux 5. GPL voilation 6. Disclaimer on Qmail. 7. OSS Philosophy 8. Dialup Connectivity
And others....
Best Regards,
Mukund Deshmukh. Beta Computronics Pvt Ltd 10/1, IT Park, Parsodi, Nagpur-440022 Cell - 9422113746
Best Regards,
Mukund Deshmukh. Beta Computronics Pvt Ltd 10/1, IT Park, Parsodi, Nagpur-440022 Cell - 9422113746
On 21/04/06, Mukund Deshmukh betacomp_ngp@sancharnet.in wrote:
Have I subscribed to Laptop list or Linux list?
The thread is marked [OT] :))
Otherwise also this list has many non linux threads, like in last two month,
- Laptop
- Webhosting in India
- MTNL
- PCQ Linux
- GPL voilation
- Disclaimer on Qmail.
- OSS Philosophy
- Dialup Connectivity
if novice asks questions learned fellows direct them to google.com i get ur point about OT threads ... but imagine they r not there and then our list will have only 10-20 mails per month.
and who says that the topics[marked OT] are not at all related in some or other way to linux/open source ?
regards, Ranjeet Walunj ------------------------------------------ hum bolega to bolte hain bolta hain ! ------------------------------------------
On 4/21/06, Mukund Deshmukh betacomp_ngp@sancharnet.in wrote:
- Laptop
- Webhosting in India
- MTNL
- PCQ Linux
PCQ Linux is not about linux ??? hmm... interesting... :=)
sorry... coudnt help noticing it... imo its better to have some discussion going on than none!
Ananth
PCQ Linux is not about linux ??? hmm... interesting... :=)
Read the thread carefully, you will find your answer.
sorry... coudnt help noticing it... imo its better to have some discussion going on than none!
Then should we discuss following also, 1. Job quota in private sector (where linux is used) 2. Receipi of pizza and coffee (needed while linux is installed) 3. Life Insurance Policy (beacuse LIC uses Linux)
Best Regards,
Mukund Deshmukh. Beta Computronics Pvt Ltd 10/1, IT Park, Parsodi, Nagpur-440022 Cell - 9422113746
On Friday 21 April 2006 05:51, Mukund Deshmukh wrote:
- Laptop
- Webhosting in India
- MTNL
- PCQ Linux
- GPL voilation
- Disclaimer on Qmail.
- OSS Philosophy
- Dialup Connectivity
I dont remember what each thread dealt with but the following topics certainly aren't off topic.
- PCQ Linux
- GPL voilation
- Disclaimer on Qmail.
- OSS Philosophy
On Thursday 20 April 2006 02:43 pm, Erle Pereira wrote:
On Tue, 2006-04-18 at 21:42 +0530, Dinesh Joshi wrote:
Personally, I am not biased against the Chinese but Chinese goods tend to have the "cheap" feel to them and I think that they have
Given the prices they seem to have a much more expensive finish than many of the "branded" goods around here.
definitely lowered the quality and have cut costs at the same time while trying to improve their margins.
What say the group?
Its not a bias. No matter what, Lenovo will find it very hard to match the quality and reliability of an IBM.
And what exactly is the magik that IBM has?. IBM has been outsourcing since the past three decades (maybe earlier). First Japan, then Taiwan and now China. Could be India or thailand or Burkina Faso. And the very same arguments were bandied about 25 yrs ago and will be in the future. Notice how nobody talks about bad quality if it is made in Ireland or "East Germany". IT is a cultural bias. Given the same amount of monetory inputs any one would produce quality, and has very little to do with location (and by implication people).
On Thu, 2006-04-20 at 16:00 +0530, jtd wrote:
And what exactly is the magik that IBM has?. IBM has been outsourcing since the past three decades (maybe earlier). First Japan, then Taiwan and now China. Could be India or thailand or Burkina Faso. And the very same arguments were bandied about 25 yrs ago and will be in the future. Notice how nobody talks about bad quality if it is made in Ireland or "East Germany". IT is a cultural bias. Given the same amount of monetory inputs any one would produce quality, and has very little to do with location (and by implication people).
I Agree totally, but the Implication is not really about Location or People but about skewed company polices. IBM has proven that it can get a good laptop out in the market. It remains to be seen if the same can be achieved under lenovo leadership.
Yes, Lenovo has indicated that they are keen too, they have invested millions of $$ in their research parks etc...
Even with the same resources (a lot of which lenovo acquired during the purchase), It still needs to be seen, no matter how good lenovo products might be
are the Lenovo thinkpads == IBM thinkpads. only time can answer this one. I hope they are.
There is no implication of geographical bias in this.
-Erle
--- Erle Pereira biz@erlepereira.com wrote:
I Agree totally, but the Implication is not really about Location or People but about skewed company polices. IBM has proven that it can get a good laptop out in the market. It remains to be seen if the same can be achieved under lenovo leadership.
There is no implication of geographical bias in this.
Bull. Ofcourse there is a race bias here.
Why is it so difficult for people to digest the fact that an "Indian" or a "Chinese" company can be truly world class; i.e. Global in all respects? I find it a bit immature and presumtous(sic) when you think that Lenovo, a multi billion $ conglomerate may possibly not know their shit. Just because the majority shares of that division by held by a company which is ethnically chinese, but in all respects global, you are thinking that its a chinese company. Even if it is, so what? You think they'll have general Mao's screensavers default?
And the "Cheap feel" chinese goods that you talk about ARE cheap. and they are not branding/marketing them as ever lasting. You get what you pay for.
Could you elaborate on some of these skewed company policies please?
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Why is it so difficult for people to digest the fact that an "Indian" or a "Chinese" company can be truly world class; i.e. Global in all respects?
I've worked with people from many countries around the world. I've sat in pubs and had drinks with techies from all these places. Some observations I've made...
Language causes communication problems everywhere, some people work around it and others make it the reason for their failure. I've seen guys in Korea who couldn't speak a word of English (and therefore couldn't read most documentation available), but they learnt PHP by reading and writing code, and are excellent programmers. OTOH, I've seen Indian devels who after 7 years of PHP experience do not know the difference between GET and POST. In general, I've seen more programmers from China, Singapore, Hong Kong and Korea who are keen on learning than in India. Indians seem to want people to tell them what to do and they'll gladly do it.
Internet resources are available equally to everyone if you understand the language. Web standards, accessibility, new trends are available online for anyone to study and build prototypes. Yet, I see more people from the US and UK, and even Taiwan trying these things out than from India. When interviewing candidates in India, I've found so few webdevs that have even heard that an HTML and HTTP specification exists that it's amazing. In the UK, US and Korea, people are so well versed with the specs that they crack jokes about it in pubs. Again, this has to do with how keen people are to learn rather than being told what to do.
I'm not really interested in the reasons. I just find that Indians in general do not like to take the initiative. They're very good at doing what they're told to do as long as you don't tell them to think. Needless to say, this reflects in the number of people I've rejected during interviews (I've pursued something like 5 people in 2 years).
So, to answer the question - people can't accept the fact that an Indian company is truly world class, because it isn't. It's not like there are no bad/lazy engineers in other countries (I've encountered a few terrible American engineers), it's just that in India, it's far more likely to encounter a bad engineer than it is to encounter a good one.
Philip
Hi,
I was extremely happy to read your e-mail, Philip. I concur with your statements.
My thoughts below:
--- Philip Tellis philip.tellis@gmx.net wrote:
In general, I've seen more programmers from China, Singapore, Hong Kong and Korea who are keen on learning than in India.
I agree. You can also include Americans, Europeans, Russians and the Japanese.
During my MS I have worked/done projects with students from different parts of the world, and I really found them all to be very, very, very hard-working. They also have their fun when they have to.
Indians seem to want people to tell them what to do and they'll gladly do it.
This "need to be spoon-fed" culture comes from the current education system in most institutions. Some thoughts that I had written:
http://shakthimaan.com/misc/to-students.html
Web standards, accessibility, new trends are available online for anyone to study and build prototypes. Yet, I see more people from the US and UK,
I agree.
From all the colleges/universities that I have visited
so far:
* Out of say 40-60 students in a class, only 5-6 students are serious about "learning".
* Most of the students waste their time with gossip, movies, sports and they live in their own "shell", without knowing the world around them.
* Management themselves don't know about "quality" education/research and simply get an ISO standard because everyone has to.
* Faculty are not motivated to contribute/learn for themselves or to help their students *learn*.
* Some colleges motivate faculty to do a M.Tech. or PhD so they can show off that they have x number of PhDs, but, really don't contribute to the community or do research thereafter.
* People are lazy and have a very "indifferent" attitude towards their own country.
and even Taiwan trying these things out than from India.
Taiwan is a country that is a big player in VLSI fabrication, next to Japan, considering that even China doesn't have fabs. They, again, are very hardworking people.
In the UK, US and Korea, people are so well versed with the specs that they crack jokes about it in pubs. Again, this has to do with how keen people are to learn rather than being told what to do.
I agree. They are self-motivated.
I'm not really interested in the reasons. I just find that Indians in general do not like to take the initiative.
I agree. Its always, "Why do I care, why should I do it? Let him/her do it" attitude.
They're very good at doing what they're told to do as long as you don't tell them to think.
:)
So, to answer the question - people can't accept the fact that an Indian company is truly world class, because it isn't.
Indeed. Most of the IT hype is probably just to keep the share-holders happy?
One of my friends, Prof. Visweswaran, former Professor, Purdue University, West Lafayette campus, told me this:
"If you take the complexity of problem solving in a scale of 0.0 - 10.0, then:
< 1.0 = Service industry (majority in India) 3.0 = Simulation of an aeroplane projectile 5.0 = Embedded systems/VLSI 8.0 = Simulation of a nuclear fission reaction"
So, if you see what most people do in India, the complexity of problem solving is nothing and doesn't require much thinking.
India, it's far more likely to encounter a bad engineer than it is to encounter a good one.
I agree.
I always explain the "indifferent" attitude amongst students in India in all my presentations/workshops, to show them what real "education" is in other countries, and why we are not in par with anyone else, and how we can use FLOSS to change all this. I don't know if we can change this in India, but, my efforts will continue ...
SK
-- Shakthi Kannan http://www.shakthimaan.com
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On Thu, Apr 20, 2006 at 07:58:02AM -0700, Shakthi Kannan wrote:
This "need to be spoon-fed" culture comes from the current education system in most institutions. Some thoughts that I had written:
You have brought out the points very well. The Indian (that includes our neighbours too) social setup is based on the 'guru-shishya' and obedience (fall at my feet) tradition. This is irrespective of any religion or caste so this is a neutral opition in general, no offence to anyone. Right from the time of birth, everything is planned out for us by our elders and society. Breaking tradition and thinking independently is forbidden and anyone who 'dares' to do so may face a violent backlash from society or even family members. As individuals we are not expected to think or question, we have to simply obey and follow till we grow up and then make the next generation do the same.
This makes us more safety and security oriented and kills the adventurer within us. Thats why in history too, we find more travellers and adventurists in the western countries rather than India.
Regards,
Rony.
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On Thursday 20 April 2006 13:21, Philip Tellis wrote: *snip*
So, to answer the question - people can't accept the fact that an Indian company is truly world class, because it isn't. It's not like there are no bad/lazy engineers in other countries (I've encountered a few terrible American engineers), it's just that in India, it's far more likely to encounter a bad engineer than it is to encounter a good one.
[rant] I guess your observation is 100% correct. But 150 years under the British whip does that to you. I am glad that I am not one of them. I am one of the new breed Indians that think for themself, take initiative and have enthusiasm.
BUT I've found this country and its people are more bent on following the beaten track than think out of the box. You know what that does? It kills whatever enthusiasm, initiative that we have. Most of us succumb to doing what we are being told - no more and no less. It's a vicious cycle that nobody is ready to break.
Nobody comes forward and says "To hell with the reservations, to hell with everything we will take in only talent". My friend and I were denied admission to a programming contest, hosted by a very well known institution, since we were too *young* ( a couple 7th graders couldn't compete. The min requirement was 9th grade ). I am not saying that we would've won but at that age we were doing some pretty amazing stuff like writing GUIs ( using VESA ) in Qbasic and starting out with C. While the typical 9th grader was still trying to understand what a FOR...NEXT loop does. What kind of sick country kills its talent?
And we aren't getting wiser by the day. Introducing quotas in our premier institutions which shelter the little talent that we have is going to see to it that we are going to completely fail as a society in the not-so-far future.
I had the rare opportunity to meet Dr.Nagarjuna and spend a few hours understanding the Gnowsys project. During one of his wonderful explanations he told me about the kind of testing that will help judging the real merit of a person. Yet nobody adopts this kind of testing ( forget about our schools. what about IT companies? )
Its simple to criticize than to change the situation. I dont know you personally but I surely hope that you do something to change the situation. There are bad engineers in India only because nobody is ready to take the lead in creating an atmosphere that will harbor talent rather than kill it. May be I am ignorant or naive. If someone knows of such an institution please let me know. [/rant]
Getting back to the topic, many people seem to have misunderstood my point. Lenovo is now under a Chinese management. The general outlook towards the Chinese is that they produce cheap ( as in Cost as well as Quality ) goods. Will the Chinese be able to maintain the brand image that IBM Thinkpads had? Ever since they have taken over, more and more people have migrated to other machines and the existing ones dont have much faith in them. People were aware of the fact that their machines were manufactured in China while the company was owned by Americans. Now that the ownership + manufacturing is in China, will people trust the Lenovo brand as much as they trusted IBM?
Most have answered my question. The brand loyalty as fallen.
Sometime Today, DJ cobbled together some glyphs to say:
I guess your observation is 100% correct. But 150 years under the British whip does that to you. I am glad that I am not one of them. I
Then our freedom fighters have failed. Their spirit has not carried on to the masses. Then again, it's probably the spoon-fed attitude of the masses. Once there was nothing left to fight for, they just went back to going with the flow.
situation. There are bad engineers in India only because nobody is ready to take the lead in creating an atmosphere that will harbor talent rather than kill it. May be I am ignorant or naive. If someone knows of such an institution please let me know.
One of the reasons I gave up teaching. It was very frustrating dealing with students who didn't want to learn. I didn't have to worry about the few who wanted to learn because they learnt even without me, and it didn't seem like I was cut out to help the others. All I can do now is incite people to rebel against the system - whether it's at work or when I talk at conferences.
On Thursday 20 April 2006 16:46, Philip Tellis wrote:
One of the reasons I gave up teaching. It was very frustrating dealing with students who didn't want to learn. I didn't have to worry about the few who wanted to learn because they learnt even without me, and it didn't seem like I was cut out to help the others. All I can do now is incite people to rebel against the system - whether it's at work or when I talk at conferences.
You chose to walk away? Teaching is a gift. Not everyone has it. I personally would've loved a teacher who knew what he was teaching. I have learnt through hardship & manuals ( something that people today aren't accustomed to ). You should atleast teach those who really want to learn. You can save them a lot of work and wasted efforts.
On 20/04/06 23:07 +0000, Dinesh Joshi wrote:
On Thursday 20 April 2006 16:46, Philip Tellis wrote:
One of the reasons I gave up teaching. It was very frustrating dealing with students who didn't want to learn. I didn't have to worry about the few who wanted to learn because they learnt even without me, and it didn't seem like I was cut out to help the others. All I can do now is incite people to rebel against the system - whether it's at work or when I talk at conferences.
You chose to walk away? Teaching is a gift. Not everyone has it. I
He didn't. He just walked out of the formal teaching system.
Devdas Bhagat
On Thu, Apr 20, 2006 at 09:41:13PM +1000, Erle Pereira wrote:
On Thu, 2006-04-20 at 16:00 +0530, jtd wrote:
IT is a cultural bias. Given the same amount of monetory inputs any one would produce quality, and has very little to do with location (and by implication people).
I Agree totally, but the Implication is not really about Location or People but about skewed company polices. IBM has proven that it can get a good laptop out in the market. It remains to be seen if the same can be achieved under lenovo leadership.
I agree on this point. Its not about bias but a general reputation that goods manufactured in certain countries create. Bad export attitudes, corruption in the Govt., lax quality laws, local attitudes towards customers play an important role in quality. A company may be a global one but it will procure its raw material locally as much as possible to reduce costs. Raw material manufactured in the third world and in the developed nations may differ in quality. The very reason to set up production units in third world nations is to reduce costs otherwise what is wrong with USA or Europe for production? Another factor is the importance given to R&D. The developed nations are far ahead of the developing ones in research and innovation.
One other factor that I will take a risk to mention is the attitude of managers in Indian companies and their response to suggestions and improvements. A firend of mine works for an MNC at the management level and he travels abroad on assignments to its international offices. He finds a big difference in attitudes of managers here and outside and very often gets frustrated by the local politics and stubborn attitudes.
An example of local attitudes towards customers is our own country where even the MNCs from developed nations give sloppy service and the customers have to accept whatever is dished out to them. The mechanism to thrash them is not as strong as in the developed ones. So the country of manufacture does make a difference. Having said that, now practically everything is made in China, so it is the brand that will make the difference not region. Hope Lenovo lives up to IBM's quality or even better.
Regards,
Rony. Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger.yahoo.com
On Thursday 20 April 2006 10:30, jtd wrote:
And what exactly is the magik that IBM has?. IBM has been outsourcing since the past three decades (maybe earlier). First Japan, then
No "magik". Chinese are much less responsible than their American counter parts. I can vouch for that. Just take a look at the Bajaj "Gulsar" case ( Gulsar isn't a typo ).