Apple's Chinese manufacturer is in hot water again about working conditions at its factories.
Foxconn, after recent years' work condition scandals, has suffered another setback.
Manufacturing giant Foxconn recently fired an employee for taking too many sleeping pills. Was this grounds for his termination?
Foxconn has announced a nationwide recruitment freeze, to readjust factory lines to production demand.
China is Apple's top supplier, but it accounts for less than half of its parts -- where else do Apple's products come from?
Emphasizing the return of business to America in his address, Obama mentioned that Apple will once again build Mac computers in America.
Hewlett-Packard has issued new guidelines on the use of student workers by its suppliers with manufacturing operations in China.
Apple may release two iPhone 5 successors in 2013, and Foxconn sources have posted photos of the alleged devices online.
A false report was made of an employee strike in Beijing. Will Foxconn ever be able to rehabilitate its image?
Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL), said its year-old commitment to improving conditions for workers at Chinese contract manufacturers has seen results.
A strict new policy limiting toilet time at a factory led to a hostage situation in Shanghai.
Apple could release a larger iPhone version, dubbed iPhone Math, alongside the long-rumored iPhone 5S in June, with a much bigger 4.8-inch screen.
IBTimes looks at some of the worst media mishaps of the year, including screw-ups from CNN, ABC, FOX, AP, the New York Post and IBTimes itself.
Apple's seventh-generation iPhone and fifth-generation iPad may feature ultra-thin, ultra-sharp display technology from Sharp Inc.
China's Foxconn decreased its employees' overtime hours, but employees are saying the restricted hours don't let them make enough money.
After Tim Cook told Brian Williams of his "intense interest" in the TV set, supplier Foxconn says two models are in the works.
Apple TV rumors are continuing to circulate as a new report has said that one of Apple's primary suppliers could be testing designs for the device, the Wall Street Journal reports.
Apple CEO Tim Cook said the company may return some manufacturing to the States, hasn't lost its moxie and still has momentum.
Sharp Corp. (TYO:6753) said Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) agreed to invest as much as 9.9 billion yen (US $121 million), in it.
Samsung Electronics, the No. 1 seller of smartphones, acknowledged “inadequate practices” in its plants in China.
Samsung Electronics Co. will get another chance to convince a U.S. trade agency that Apple Inc.’s iPhone, iPad iPod touch infringe its patents.
Japan's Sharp Corp. (Tokyo: 6753), a major supplier to Apple Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL), warned of “material doubt” it can survive as a public company.