blazorthon
Glorious
[citation][nom]beoza[/nom]You might want to rethink your definition of a manufacturer. Sure the hardware that goes inside is made somewhere else. But I do know for a fact that Dell assembles their own computers (with hardware from other countries) in a small town just outside of Reno NV called Clark (it's about halfway between Reno/Sparks and Fernley NV). Having driven truck I picked up a load of computers there to deliver to a UPS DC in So. California. Now Dell may not do all their assembly here in the US, but to say they don't manufacture the final product here is misleading. You can manufacture items in the US with parts made else where. Subaru cars are a good example, the car is assembled at plant in Indiana but the parts are made in another country. You don't have to make the parts that go inside your product to be called a manufacturer, you just have to assemble the collection of parts you buy to build your product. So technically anyone who has ever assembled their own PC is a manufacturer.[/citation]
Assembling and manufacturing aren't really the same in this sense, I didn't say that Dell and HP don't assemble anything in the USA, and I didn't say that none of this companies assemble within the USA anyway. I said that they don't manufacture, as in create, their machines. They can assemble them all that they want and where ever they want (within practical limits and hopefully with relevant laws obeyed), but it's not the same as manufacturing the parts that are being assembled. Manufacturers are the sources of the hardware in this scenario. OEMs, Apple, and such can assemble the parts into computers after those parts have been manufactured, but they still aren't manufacturers. I suppose that this might be an argument in semantics more than in anything else at this point, but I think that the point is made.
Assembling and manufacturing aren't really the same in this sense, I didn't say that Dell and HP don't assemble anything in the USA, and I didn't say that none of this companies assemble within the USA anyway. I said that they don't manufacture, as in create, their machines. They can assemble them all that they want and where ever they want (within practical limits and hopefully with relevant laws obeyed), but it's not the same as manufacturing the parts that are being assembled. Manufacturers are the sources of the hardware in this scenario. OEMs, Apple, and such can assemble the parts into computers after those parts have been manufactured, but they still aren't manufacturers. I suppose that this might be an argument in semantics more than in anything else at this point, but I think that the point is made.