Foxconn to replace some workers with 1 million robots within 3 years

“Taiwanese technology giant Foxconn will replace some of its workers with 1 million robots in three years to cut rising labor expenses and improve efficiency, said Terry Gou, founder and chairman of the company, late Friday,” Xinhua News reports.

“The company currently has 10,000 robots and the number will be increased to 300,000 next year and 1 million in three years, according to Gou,” Xinhua News reports. “Foxconn, the world’s largest maker of computer components which assembles products for Apple [and other companies]… currently employs 1.2 million people, with about 1 million of them based on the Chinese mainland.”

Full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Readers “Fred Mertz” and “Edward W. for the heads up.]

44 Comments

    1. There are several foremost industrial robot manufacturers in the world, one of which is ABB of Switzerland, Fujitsu in Japan and a few smaller ones in the U.S. and Canada, but these specialize in wafer fabrication robotics and to a smaller extent warehouse distribution and stacking. ABB & Fujitsu manufacture assembly line robotics which are currently used in car and to a smaller extent truck assembly.

    2. -> Michael A. Robson

      迈克尔罗布森您好,我的名字是史蒂夫鲍尔默,微软的董事总经理。我是Mac的秘密情人,所以我访问我的Mac新闻网站。

      1. The only difference between conservatives and liberal on economics is their method of welfare; conservatives with Corporate welfare and Liberals with Social Welfare.

        Conservatives are against taxing the job creators but don’t mind dumping taxes on consumers who buy the goods, you know, the middle class who buy goods – the other job creators.

        You can only cut taxes and interest rates for so long until their is nothing left to cut. Then what do you stimulate the economy with? Under conservative theory they seem to imply the economy with always be great with no taxes.

        That’s non-sense… plus, without taxes we either give up all public services like parks, libraries, highways or turn them all into tollways and charge admission.

      2. @ Data

        You might want to watch the new version of BattleStar Galactica. The robots turned on their makers after being treated like shit for too long.

        I’d be careful what you say about robots.

    1. How would that help or change much of anything? I actually thought there would be more vaginal defecation splattered on that topic by now. Oh it’s the Sabbath, nevermind.

  1. A lot of Chinese workers stand to lose their jobs over the next three years. This is the type of thing that is going to happen worldwide over the next decade. Better learn to design, program, or maintain robots.

  2. The article I read went into more detail “Foxconn has created a new division to develop and manufacture the robots called Skynet. The 1st models are T100’s but the new division plans on a series of models including T800 and T1000’s. The company has received permission from Apple to use the company’s recently purchased patents in liquid metal, especially ones dealing with mimetic polyalloy.”

  3. Although China’s labor cost is in upward trend at an increasing rate, China still present a HUGH opportunity for AAPL (and others)

    If AAPL able to bring iPhones and iPads to the remaining 2 China telecommunication companies (however all 3 are owned by China’s Communist Party!!), AAPL shareholders will be rewarded extremely handsomely 🙂

  4. Working an assembly line is a mind numbing experience. If you have ever done it you know what I mean. I’ve always felt sorry for Foxconn and other assembly line workers who do the same thing over, and over, and over, and over and over all day long.

    Loosing your job, something I also know about first hand, is not desirable either.

  5. Slightly worrying, this trend. Where do people of the future earn their living, to buy the stuff the robots make? We can’t all work in software, Sainsburys supermarket or Starbucks… back to the land maybe?

      1. No, can’t do that either. Coal is a fossil fuel and will be made too expensive by the Cap and Trade Bill and the EPA when electricity rates “necessarily skyrocket”.

        1. Coal is already too expensive to compete with natural gas. EPA regulations are making both fuels more expensive, but gas would have an even bigger advantage in a free market.

    1. Legit question. Economics boils down to three factors: Land, Labor and Capital. Historically, Land has been owned by a few, Capital by even fewer and the vast majority of us have been Labor. Despite drawing minute distinctions (i.e. is the hourly worker in a bank part of Capital or Labor?), it is pretty much the same today. Where do we (Labor) go in a world where much labor is provided by machines? Some of us will tend the machines, but where are the limits of how much the machines produce and who will be able to consume that much stuff? I’m seeing shorter work weeks and more public services. WWJWD? (What Would John Wayne Do?) Ride off into the sunset, clean his guns, pray? Tough questions. Much more important than gay marriage.

      1. Marion would hide under the bed during wartime, then appear on screen 30 feet high defeating entire countries single-handed while berating children for not voluntarily turning themselves into cannon fodder for Exxon.

  6. The Taiwanese company, which manufacturers laptops, mobile devices, and other hardware for Apple, Hewlett-Packard, Dell, and Sony, plans to replace factory workers with more than 1 million robots, according to a state news agency Xinhua report. Terry Gou, founder and chairman of the company, told employees at a dance Friday that the move is designed to improve efficiency and combat rising labor costs.
    http://www.technews5.com/2011/08/foxconn-to-work-with-1-million-robots.html

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