(3) Bruce Einhorn and Olga Kharif, Intel's Vietnam Engineering Talent Pipeline.
www.businessweek.com/articles/20 ... ing-talent-pipeline
Quote:
"Intel opened a $1 billion plant in 2010 [in Vietnam]. The facility is Intel’s largest for testing and assembling chips, and the company says its 1,000-employee staff will triple in the next few years.
"Samsung Electronics accounted for 18 percent of the country’s exports, according to the official Nguoi Lao Dong newspaper. Samsung says it will make more than 40 percent of its phones in Vietnam by 2015; the government in June approved its $1 billion plan for a plant in Ho Chi Minh City’s tech park.
"Since launching its Intel Vietnam Study Abroad Program in 2009, the $150 billion [market capitalization] company has spent $7 million to sponsor 73 students’ bachelor’s degrees at PSU. With Intel now focused on ramping up production at the Vietnam plant, the company says it won’t be sending more students to Portland. 'The program met our need to build a strong foundation of engineering talent,' says Trang Nguyen, Intel’s higher education program manager in Vietnam. 'We are now turning our attention towards machine operators as we fill the factory.'
Note:
(a) summary underneath the title in print: Women dominate its final batch of scholarships in Portland, Ore
(b) Portland State University (in Portland, Oregon [most populous city in Oregon; 2010 census: 583k]; Founded in 1946)
is one of the three largest state-supported Universities in Oregon--the other two are University of Oregon and Oregon State University.
(c) Người Lao Động : Labour or The Worker (name of the newspaper in English, according to en.wikipedia.org)
Vietnamese English dictionary
Người (n): “man, person, people” (人)
Lao Động (n): “labor” (勞動)
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