 | This Week: RFID is Big in China; There are Always a Few That Just Don't Get It; Repair to Nation's Infrastructure Won't Be Cheap; Shipping Costs Make Steel a Heavy Load to Bear |
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 | This Week: Lights Out for Samsung's NAND Flash Memory Chip Plant; Wal-Mart Expects Growth in Electronics Sales; Michelin Opens Its Wallet to Upgrade Tire Building Factories; Addressing Food Safety Concerns in China Will Cost Big Bucks |
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 | This Week: Japan's Shrinking Workforce; Demand for Oil Signals Higher Prices; Handheld RFID Reader Leaves Bar Code Scanner in the Dust; Lucrative Compensation for Procurement and Supply Management Officers |
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 | This Week: U.S. Port Efficiency Falls Short; Warranty Extension Could Create a Pain in the Wallet for Microsoft; Booming Investment in China in 2007: Good for the Economy/Bad for Quality; Large Company DIO Up in 2006 |
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 | This Week: World Oil Reserves are Flat; It Takes Lots of Parties to Make a Product in China; Double Digit Compound Growth in World Trade Since 1990; How Many Vendors Are RFID Tagging for Wal-Mart? |
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 | Supply Chain By the Numbers this Week: The Economic Impact of Counterfeiting, Top Supply Chain Strategies, Savings in Order Picking from Bucket Brigades, Wal Mart has Few Stores in California |
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 | Big Sign-on Bonuses at Amazon Sortation Hub; Container Volumes Soaring at Most US Ports; US Manufacturing Rises in July, still Down from Pre-Pandemic; Amazon Dept. Stores? |
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