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  • #61
    r those of you Interested, the SONY & NIKON camera plants have reopened in a limited capacity

    Floods? What floods? Seagate to open new Thai disk fab
    Pumps $33m to soak up drive demand
    http://www.channelregister.co.uk/201...gate_thailand/
    By Chris Mellor €¢ Posted in PC Builder, 12th December 2011 10:19 GMT

    Despite the devastating and deadly floods in Thailand, Seagate will spend $30m (£19.1m) to finish building a new disk read-write head plant in the south-east Asian nation.

    The 29,800m2 plant will be in Nakhon Ratchasima province in the country's north east. This region has been hit twice by severe flooding, once in October 2010 and again this year.
    []

    Seagate's disk drive and component plants in Thailand were not affected by this year's rising waters, but disk drive output has been limited by component droughts from flooded suppliers downstream in the supply chain. However, a lot of money has already been spent on the new factory and walking away from the project, even if it had been inundated, would have been costly.

    The 1 billion baht ($33 million) project involved erecting and equipping a new building, which, with the latest $30 million investment, should be opened in February 2012. It will "potentially create several thousand new jobs when the plant is fully operational and running at maximum production capacity".

    The Bangkok Post quotes Jeffrey Nygaard, Seagate's VP in charge of its Penang and Thailand operations, as saying: "With this new investment, we will be able to increase current read/write-head production by up to 40 per cent running at maximum capacity. This will serve the increasing world demand for hard-disk drive storage."

    Seagate is of the opinion that disk drive supply will be limited for the next few quarters, with 110 to 120 million drives shipped in the final 2011 quarter. The difficulties should ease quarter by quarter next year. ®

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    • #62
      An update. Just when you think it's dry. The story seems to have gone off the radar but it's still VERY wet.

      Two comparison Sat pictures at the link.

      http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Nat...w.php?id=76913

      Several months after flooding struck the region, Cambodia۪s T̫nl̩ Sab (Tonle Sap) and Thailand۪s Chao Phraya River remained visibly flooded. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA۪s Terra satellite captured the top image on January 8, 2012. For comparison, the bottom image shows the same region one year earlier, on January 3, 2011.

      These images use a combination of visible and infrared light to better distinguish between water and land. Water ranges in color from electric blue to navy. Vegetation is green. Bare ground and urban areas are earth-toned. Clouds vary in color from pale blue-green to white.

      Compared to the previous year, higher water levels are apparent northwest of Bangkok in January 2012. Water levels are also higher in Tônlé Sab. CARE Cambodia described the floods as the worst in Southeast Asia in over a decade, and reported that 1.5 million people throughout the region had been affected.

      As central Thailand slowly dried out, authorities and residents coped with a new round of flooding in the southern part of the country, were some areas were under more than a meter (3 feet) of water.

      References
      CARE. (2012, January 6). CARE Cambodia continues providing relief to thousands affected by floods. ReliefWeb. Accessed January 9, 2012.
      Government of Thailand. (2012, January 5). Southern floods update. ReliefWeb. Accessed January 9, 2012.

      NASA images courtesy LANCE/EOSDIS MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC. Caption by Michon Scott.

      Instrument:
      Terra - MODIS

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      • #63
        Many interesting tidbits at the link

        WD soaks up $2bn in Thai flood aftermath
        http://www.channelregister.co.uk/2012/01/24/wd_q2_2012/
        Coyne still faces HGST deal approval
        By Chris Mellor €¢ Posted in IT Channel, 24th January 2012 14:03 GMT

        Western Digital and its supply chain have pulled out all the stops and delivered a decent profit in the last quarter of 2011, the one in which some of its Thailand plants were inundated by deadly flooding.

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        • #64
          Over? but not forgotten...

          Thai floods derail Hadron-colliding antimatter boffinry
          http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/03...disk_shortage/
          CERN experiment runs low on hard disks

          Still very little news in MSM about how Thai people have recovered from being under water.

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