You think 6 weeks/year in China for someone that is trying to develop a business, talking to developers and/or suppliers is a lot?Thanks, so you agree that this company is basically likely to be a huge "China to UK lighting importation business"?
It seemed rather odd.
Why would the boss need to spend 6 weeks in China?...every yearHe is a Spy.
Why does treez need to spend so much time writing posts about a lighting company? :-//
As such, I will recomend he leaves the company , as he won’t be needed there.Wow. There could not be a more wrong way to read the situation.
Thanks yes i agree....but six weeks in China every year?.......i mean, surely you would have to be importing millions of lighting products from China to UK to need to spend that long in China?
Companies of type 4 may be less attractive employers for engineersThanks eBastler.
Each to their own I suppose. You'd have to offer me a lot of money for me to work over there: enough so I can pay of my mortgage and move back home within a couple of years.Thanks yes i agree....but six weeks in China every year?.......i mean, surely you would have to be importing millions of lighting products from China to UK to need to spend that long in China?
You really can't figure out why somebody would spend 6 weeks in China? Offer me time in Singapore and I'll be on the next plane with no intention of coming back. Same for Thailand! I don't know anything about China but I would be willing to give it a shot.
I'll give you a hint: It may not be job related!
His skills are simply not needed there.Why do they keep paying him a salary then?
Get a hobby.
I am surprised he is not talking part in the Detroit Street lighting failure thread. I was more surprised that someone else started it!!Get a hobby.
Maybe this is his hobby. The treez show.
I think his company is of your "type 4".
There's no need for skilled designers to work at type 4....anybody with a bit of training can do it. His company has enough people with general lighting knowledge to be able to do everything that could be required of them in a type 4 place. His skills are simply not needed there.
General lighting products from China are so good that there's not even need to be an engineer to import them.....his company buy T8 LED tubes and they hardly ever fail.
Each to their own I suppose. You'd have to offer me a lot of money for me to work over there: enough so I can pay of my mortgage and move back home within a couple of years.Thanks yes i agree....but six weeks in China every year?.......i mean, surely you would have to be importing millions of lighting products from China to UK to need to spend that long in China?
You really can't figure out why somebody would spend 6 weeks in China? Offer me time in Singapore and I'll be on the next plane with no intention of coming back. Same for Thailand! I don't know anything about China but I would be willing to give it a shot.
I'll give you a hint: It may not be job related!
Travel the world. See how other people live. It gives you a different perspective on life.Yes. Living somewhere else than you were born gives an unique perspective on the world. You can be a lot more attentive, a lot more resourceful on solving problems. I've met people from my high school, and all they did was: Buy a house two blocks down the road, get to the local college and finish it, get a job two blocks down the road in a used clothes shop (not even kidding) and spend Saturday evenings at the bar a block down the road, which closes at 23:00. They were talking about how the local supermarket changed it's price by 3% and they dont know how they will be able to cope with it. Or something along those lines. I was about to blow my brains out just because listening for the conversation.
I admit I haven't seen the UK in person, but I have seen Finland, Sweden, France, Italy, Japan, Pakistan, Italy, Peru, Germany, Russia/USSR, Mexico, Canada, Panama, Hong Kong (before UK gave it back), Jamaica, and a few others I transited through but didn't see much of. In several cases I stayed for months, and in two cases an entire year. Add all 50 states of the USA, most of which are bigger than many countries.
I could write a book on how to travel anywhere with 10 minutes notice, if I wanted to. That's how long it takes me to pack.
treez, I do not understand why you describe this like it's high treason for the boss to spend time in China. There are many business models for a British/European company which involve Chinese suppliers:Companies of type 4 may be less attractive employers for engineers (although even those may employ application specialists). Working at a company of type 1 to 3 should be perfectly fine for development engineers.
- You can design and produce products in Europe, and buy components or modules for them in China.
- You can design products in Europe and have them made in China.
- You can design and make complex products in Europe, and complement your portfolio with less complex products imported from China.
- And yes, you can be a pure importer and distributor of products from China.
I came close to paying off my mortgage while working in Singapore as an expat. A great time in my life.
treez, I do not understand why you describe this like it's high treason for the boss to spend time in China. There are many business models for a British/European company which involve Chinese suppliers:Companies of type 4 may be less attractive employers for engineers (although even those may employ application specialists). Working at a company of type 1 to 3 should be perfectly fine for development engineers.
- You can design and produce products in Europe, and buy components or modules for them in China.
- You can design products in Europe and have them made in China.
- You can design and make complex products in Europe, and complement your portfolio with less complex products imported from China.
- And yes, you can be a pure importer and distributor of products from China.
There is also Type 5 - Boss/Managers repeatedly use the company money to pay for their holidays, fix their cars and to pay/maintain a boat they use. All as business expenses.
treez, I do not understand why you describe this like it's high treason for the boss to spend time in China. There are many business models for a British/European company which involve Chinese suppliers:Companies of type 4 may be less attractive employers for engineers (although even those may employ application specialists). Working at a company of type 1 to 3 should be perfectly fine for development engineers.
- You can design and produce products in Europe, and buy components or modules for them in China.
- You can design products in Europe and have them made in China.
- You can design and make complex products in Europe, and complement your portfolio with less complex products imported from China.
- And yes, you can be a pure importer and distributor of products from China.
There is also Type 5 - Boss/Managers repeatedly use the company money to pay for their holidays, fix their cars and to pay/maintain a boat they use. All as business expenses.
sounds kind of like the mafia
Thanks yes i agree....but six weeks in China every year?.......i mean, surely you would have to be importing millions of lighting products from China to UK to need to spend that long in China?I'd say that your generally clueless and incompetent friend has found perfect company to work for.
The engineer was offering to leave the company, as it appeared to simply be a China to UK lighting importer…and nothing else…..but the boss then said he should not leave, and then set him an SMPS LED driver project…The boss gave a small PCB size, and requested lots of circuitry, so that the PCB layout was pretty dense. The boss then insisted that all of the “signal” resistors and capacitors should be 0402 size, even though there was room to make them all 0603 size.
The boss also insisted that the engineer would have to hand solder all of these 0402 resistors and capacitors onto the prototype PCB. The boss also insisted that the PCB should have no solder resist. The boss also insisted that the PCB should have no silkscreen.
It seemed rather odd.
The boss also insisted that the PCB only have two layers, and that LEDs should be on the top layer, and driver circuitry on the bottom, even though the tracking for the driver circuitry meant that there was virtually no room for thermal copper pours for the leds on the top layer.