Offshore software development outsourcing

B

Boris Olesiyuk

Guest
Dear Sir/Madam!

I would like to introduce Belasoft International FV, software
development company from Minsk, Belarus. Now I would like to propose
you our service in offshore outsourcing of software development.

Here is brief description of our company:

Belasoft Int. works in field of software design and development since
May 2000. We have 7 employees. Our high-educated professional staff is
experienced in development of small to medium scale solutions. We have
strong knowledge of following development technologies and products:

- Autodesk (AutoCAD 2000/2002/2004/2005, OnSite Desktop, OnSite View
and ObjectARX),
- Microsoft (Visual C++, Visual Basic, COM, ActiveX, ASP/IIS,
OLEDB/ADO, SQL Server, Access, .NET, C#),
- Java (J2EE, J2ME, JSP/Servlets, EJB, JDBC, Jini/Jiro, JavaMail,
JCE, JNDI, JMS, SOAP, WebServices, Hibernate).

We are experienced in database development supporting different
database engines (MS SQL Server, MS Access, Oracle DB, MySQL),
developing complex web-based interfaces and components, development
for mobile devices (WinCE, Symbian), works a lot in field of
geographical informational systems. We are ready to investigate new
technologies, tools and systems.

We have reliable and approved system of project management what
includes automated task-flow, time-tracking, source code versioning
and bug tracking processes. We have completed over 20 web and
application solutions for Italian, Canadian, Belarusian and German
customers. Detailed team references can be sent on your request.

We can offer today following services:

1. Project outsourcing. We develop project following customer's
specification. If needed we can develop specifications using
customer's business requirements. In this case we perform all project
management and development tasks. Customer can control development
flow thru intermediate results of development stages. Durations of
stages may vary from 1 week to 1 month depending of project scale.

2. HR outsourcing. Dedicated developers work directly with customer.
Customer defines which developers fit him better, performs target
setting and controls result. Developers and customers negotiate using
email and ICQ. The control is performed using our automated system of
daily reports, which has appropriate web-interface.

Our hourly rate is $10. I can send developers' resumes on your
request. We will consider any suggestions of yours but long-term
collaboration is preferable. If you are interested in this offer
please feel free to contact me obb@tut.by.

Sorry to trouble if our proposal is not interesting for you.

Yours sincerely,

Boris Olesiyuk
Team Leader
Belasoft International FV

37-88 Skariny av., Minsk, Belarus, 220003
tel: +375 17 2848804
e-mail: obb@tut.by
ICQ: 76130091
 
Boris Olesiyuk wrote:
Dear Sir/Madam!

I would like to introduce Belasoft International FV, software
development company from Minsk, Belarus. Now I would like to propose
you our service in offshore outsourcing of software development.

Here is brief description of our company:

Belasoft Int. works in field of software design and development since
May 2000. We have 7 employees. Our high-educated professional staff is
experienced in development of small to medium scale solutions. We have
strong knowledge of following development technologies and products:

- Autodesk (AutoCAD 2000/2002/2004/2005, OnSite Desktop, OnSite View
and ObjectARX),
- Microsoft (Visual C++, Visual Basic, COM, ActiveX, ASP/IIS,
OLEDB/ADO, SQL Server, Access, .NET, C#),
- Java (J2EE, J2ME, JSP/Servlets, EJB, JDBC, Jini/Jiro, JavaMail,
JCE, JNDI, JMS, SOAP, WebServices, Hibernate).

We are experienced in database development supporting different
database engines (MS SQL Server, MS Access, Oracle DB, MySQL),
developing complex web-based interfaces and components, development
for mobile devices (WinCE, Symbian), works a lot in field of
geographical informational systems. We are ready to investigate new
technologies, tools and systems.

We have reliable and approved system of project management what
includes automated task-flow, time-tracking, source code versioning
and bug tracking processes. We have completed over 20 web and
application solutions for Italian, Canadian, Belarusian and German
customers. Detailed team references can be sent on your request.

We can offer today following services:

1. Project outsourcing. We develop project following customer's
specification. If needed we can develop specifications using
customer's business requirements. In this case we perform all project
management and development tasks. Customer can control development
flow thru intermediate results of development stages. Durations of
stages may vary from 1 week to 1 month depending of project scale.

2. HR outsourcing. Dedicated developers work directly with customer.
Customer defines which developers fit him better, performs target
setting and controls result. Developers and customers negotiate using
email and ICQ. The control is performed using our automated system of
daily reports, which has appropriate web-interface.

Our hourly rate is $10. I can send developers' resumes on your
request. We will consider any suggestions of yours but long-term
collaboration is preferable. If you are interested in this offer
please feel free to contact me obb@tut.by.

Sorry to trouble if our proposal is not interesting for you.

Yours sincerely,

Boris Olesiyuk
Team Leader
Belasoft International FV

37-88 Skariny av., Minsk, Belarus, 220003
tel: +375 17 2848804
e-mail: obb@tut.by
ICQ: 76130091
Try www.elance.com

Ogie
 
Ogie Ogelthorpe wrote:
Boris Olesiyuk wrote:

Our hourly rate is $10. I can send developers' resumes on your
request. We will consider any suggestions of yours but long-term
collaboration is preferable. If you are interested in this offer
please feel free to contact me obb@tut.by.

Sorry to trouble if our proposal is not interesting for you.

Yours sincerely,

Boris Olesiyuk
Team Leader
Belasoft International FV

37-88 Skariny av., Minsk, Belarus, 220003
tel: +375 17 2848804
e-mail: obb@tut.by
ICQ: 76130091


Try www.elance.com

Ogie
In the US, for $10 per hour, you can eat, or live indoors but not
both.

We need to start applying duties and tariffs to this stuff.

It annoys me that I cannot get small runs of PC boards made here in
the US as cheaply, or as easily, as I can get them made by Olimex
in Bulgaria; yet they can ship to the US duty and tax free.

If anyone knows of a US PC house that provides the level of quality
and service of Olimex, I would like to know about it so I can switch.

-Chuck
 
On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 08:37:52 -0500, the renowned Chuck Harris
<cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote:

Simon Peacock wrote:
Don't you just love capitalism !!!

Simon

Why yes, I do.

But I also like having a better than a third world standard of
living. The only way I can compete against $10/hour folks in
Eastern block countries is in quality of service. But their
quality of service is rapidly improving, and it is really cutting
into my business.
But, you see, old chap, being forced to pay $70/hour for $5 or
$10/work would really cut into the business of others. That's why, for
example, candy manufacturers have abandoned the US in droves- they
can't get sugar (their main ingredient) at anything close to world
price, yet they have to compete directly against those who can.
Erecting trade walls around a country is believed to cause really
serious problems in the long run. Cutting you loose is just the lesser
of two evils.

There is a rather big gulf between the standard of living they can
earn for $10 per hour in Belarus, and what I can get for $10
per hour in the US. They can live like the professional engineers
that they are for that money in Belarus. I would have to live
in a group house, like a checker at Walmart.
Probably true.

We need to level the playing field, but I am not willing to do it
by lowering the standard of living I have earned through my very
hard work.
Right, so you need to do something else if you're competing directly
with $0.50/hour, $10/hour or $20/hour labor. Note that the $10/hour is
their "shop rate", the actual workers wouldn't make that princely sum.

The guys in Belarus either need to start charging $70/hr, or we need
to levy $60/hour in duties and tariffs.
I don't think that's going to happen (barring disaster). The
protectionist types in both US parties are nowhere near power. It's
like climate change or someone starting a war, or massive deficits and
currency devaluation- you can try to stop it, but in the end the
forces are too large, and you just have to adapt and live with it (and
hopefully prosper). Wherever there is such change and upheaval there
are also massive opportunities somewhere.

I refuse to get a job where I have to say, "Do you want fries with that?"
-Chuck Harris
You can always clean plugged toilets. we have a neighbor who does that
(well, sort of, industrially), and he looks to be every bit as
affluent, and works more limited hours, takes long exotic vacations
etc. At least until telepresence robots operated from Bangalore or
Chengdu come along.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
--
"it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward"
speff@interlog.com Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com
Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com
 
On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 15:45:40 -0500, the renowned Chuck Harris
<cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote:

Spehro Pefhany wrote:

But, you see, old chap, being forced to pay $70/hour for $5 or
$10/work would really cut into the business of others. That's why, for
example, candy manufacturers have abandoned the US in droves- they
can't get sugar (their main ingredient) at anything close to world
price, yet they have to compete directly against those who can.
Erecting trade walls around a country is believed to cause really
serious problems in the long run. Cutting you loose is just the lesser
of two evils.

No doubt, but as I recall, you too are engaged in the engineering field.
What do you plan to do to steel yourself from forced retirement?
Me? I'm reasonably busy with interesting real design work at the
moment. Some of the instrumentation and other specialized design
requires a lot of background knowledge that isn't fast or cheap for
newcomers to acquire. But I'm also doing other things... perhaps
actually facilitating in a small way (so far) the seismic changes that
are occurring in the business by building bridges between continents
and cultures. Plus, I won't have to worry about that many more decades
into the future, as an 18-year-old would. That's without even doing
the 2nd career thing.

OTOH, my young son is learning Chinese.

Every single field I can think of that is technical in nature is being
attacked by current trade and immigration policies.
Yet some people are making metric scads of money, and corporate
profits continue to do well. The policies you speak of do not harm
profits, they actually enable higher profits. To the extent we all own
bits of companies, this helps all of us.

I don't think plunging toilets is going to do it, because we have more
than enough resident aliens in this country that are willing to do that
for less money than your friend.
At least the resident alien has to pay the same prices as you do for
services and stuff. Pays at least some taxes. And is exposed to
similar societal pressures to send kids to good schools and own an SUV
or whatever.

It strikes me that the only hope is for the US dollar to be come so worthless
that we cannot afford to buy $10 per hour Belarus labor, and will have to
settle for $100 per hour US labor.

-Chuck Harris
Fortunately, people don't make decisions on hiring engineering labor
or consultants based solely on price per hour. I like doing
fixed-price quotes.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
--
"it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward"
speff@interlog.com Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com
Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com
 
Spehro Pefhany wrote:
On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 15:45:40 -0500, the renowned Chuck Harris

No doubt, but as I recall, you too are engaged in the engineering field.
What do you plan to do to steel yourself from forced retirement?


Me? I'm reasonably busy with interesting real design work at the
moment. Some of the instrumentation and other specialized design
requires a lot of background knowledge that isn't fast or cheap for
newcomers to acquire. But I'm also doing other things... perhaps
actually facilitating in a small way (so far) the seismic changes that
are occurring in the business by building bridges between continents
and cultures. Plus, I won't have to worry about that many more decades
into the future, as an 18-year-old would. That's without even doing
the 2nd career thing.
Possibly so, but it is said that the first person to live to be 1000 years
old is 60 years old today.

I used to think the security devices I designed for the US Army were
not readily outsourced, but of late I find that more and more of that
kind of work is getting done to spec in former soviet bloc countries.

So don't be real surprised when they come for your job. They will.

OTOH, my young son is learning Chinese.


Every single field I can think of that is technical in nature is being
attacked by current trade and immigration policies.


Yet some people are making metric scads of money, and corporate
profits continue to do well. The policies you speak of do not harm
profits, they actually enable higher profits. To the extent we all own
bits of companies, this helps all of us.
The only folk making metric scads of money are those that already had
metric scads of money. The US economy is stratisfying into the rich and
the poor. The middle is mostly getting shoved down.
I don't think plunging toilets is going to do it, because we have more
than enough resident aliens in this country that are willing to do that
for less money than your friend.


At least the resident alien has to pay the same prices as you do for
services and stuff. Pays at least some taxes. And is exposed to
similar societal pressures to send kids to good schools and own an SUV
or whatever.
No, he doesn't. Typically, they don't file for tax refunds, so in that way
they are contributing more than their fair share, but also typically they
live 5 or 6 families to a single family home. As a result, the local property
taxes are getting short changed. In Maryland, the property taxes pay for the
schools and public services. In my county, we have just had all of our houses
appraised at a 65% higher value.

It strikes me that the only hope is for the US dollar to be come so worthless
that we cannot afford to buy $10 per hour Belarus labor, and will have to
settle for $100 per hour US labor.

-Chuck Harris


Fortunately, people don't make decisions on hiring engineering labor
or consultants based solely on price per hour. I like doing
fixed-price quotes.
Don't worry, they will beat your fixed price quotes by a similar margin.
I have already felt the sting.

-Chuck
 
On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 21:20:59 -0500, the renowned Chuck Harris
<cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote:

The only folk making metric scads of money are those that already had
metric scads of money. The US economy is stratisfying into the rich and
the poor. The middle is mostly getting shoved down.
"to turn $100 into $110 is work, but to turn $100 million into $110
million? that's inevitable".
-- Edgar Bronfman



Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
--
"it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward"
speff@interlog.com Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com
Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com
 
On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 15:45:40 -0500, Chuck Harris
<cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote:

Spehro Pefhany wrote:

But, you see, old chap, being forced to pay $70/hour for $5 or
$10/work would really cut into the business of others. That's why, for
example, candy manufacturers have abandoned the US in droves- they
can't get sugar (their main ingredient) at anything close to world
price, yet they have to compete directly against those who can.
Erecting trade walls around a country is believed to cause really
serious problems in the long run. Cutting you loose is just the lesser
of two evils.

No doubt, but as I recall, you too are engaged in the engineering field.
What do you plan to do to steel yourself from forced retirement?
I moved to Asia. All these people need training! :)

Not to mention that you can live quite well here on US$10/hour.

Dave

The email address used for sending these postings is not valid.
All replies to the group please.
 
On Wed, 02 Feb 2005 12:21:35 +0800, the renowned Dave Baker
<newsgroup_poster@jodael.com> wrote:

On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 15:45:40 -0500, Chuck Harris
cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote:

Spehro Pefhany wrote:

But, you see, old chap, being forced to pay $70/hour for $5 or
$10/work would really cut into the business of others. That's why, for
example, candy manufacturers have abandoned the US in droves- they
can't get sugar (their main ingredient) at anything close to world
price, yet they have to compete directly against those who can.
Erecting trade walls around a country is believed to cause really
serious problems in the long run. Cutting you loose is just the lesser
of two evils.

No doubt, but as I recall, you too are engaged in the engineering field.
What do you plan to do to steel yourself from forced retirement?

I moved to Asia. All these people need training! :)

Not to mention that you can live quite well here on US$10/hour.
Dave
Malaysia? Nice country.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
--
"it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward"
speff@interlog.com Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com
Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com
 
On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 09:59:05 -0500, Chuck Harris
<cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote:

Cliff wrote:
On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 08:37:52 -0500, Chuck Harris
cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote:


The guys in Belarus either need to start charging $70/hr, or we need
to levy $60/hour in duties and tariffs.


What do you have against free trade republicans?

Fascinating! The NAFTA and GATT laws that made this possible were the
spawn of the Clinton administration.
Some neocons been whispering in your ear?

Bush-I did the first NAFTA, Bush-II expanded it.

"President Bush signed the NAFTA agreement on December 17, 1992"
"George W. Bush wants to expand NAFTA. He currently is negotiating a
Free Trade Area of the Americas agreement that will expand NAFTA to 34
Central and South American countries as soon as 2005."

Etc., etc., etc.

Bush-II is the one wanting to import slave labor at very low wages
from Mexico as well.

I have heard Bubba called a lot
of things, but never a republican.
Sadly, Clinton was a conservative.

Looks like the neocons are outsourcing Hillery's
new helicopters (Marine one fleet of 23) too.

Hillary won't be getting one. They are part of the presidential fleet.
Exactly my point <G>.

She may run for president in 2008, but she won't win.
Looke like the neocons will have worn out the old fleet
(going on all those taxpayer-paid vacations) so she will
need a new one.
--
Cliff
 
well Capitalism is the best we have for the time being.. but its too short
sighted to consider everything said in the many comments following

Simon


"Chuck Harris" <cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote in message
news:7vadnRKaM-upG2LcRVn-pA@rcn.net...
Simon Peacock wrote:
Don't you just love capitalism !!!

Simon

Why yes, I do.

But I also like having a better than a third world standard of
living. The only way I can compete against $10/hour folks in
Eastern block countries is in quality of service. But their
quality of service is rapidly improving, and it is really cutting
into my business.

There is a rather big gulf between the standard of living they can
earn for $10 per hour in Belarus, and what I can get for $10
per hour in the US. They can live like the professional engineers
that they are for that money in Belarus. I would have to live
in a group house, like a checker at Walmart.

We need to level the playing field, but I am not willing to do it
by lowering the standard of living I have earned through my very
hard work.

The guys in Belarus either need to start charging $70/hr, or we need
to levy $60/hour in duties and tariffs.

I refuse to get a job where I have to say, "Do you want fries with that?"

-Chuck Harris
 
Cliff wrote:
On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 11:53:09 -0500, Spehro Pefhany
speffSNIP@interlogDOTyou.knowwhat> wrote:


There is a rather big gulf between the standard of living they can
earn for $10 per hour in Belarus, and what I can get for $10
per hour in the US. They can live like the professional engineers
that they are for that money in Belarus. I would have to live
in a group house, like a checker at Walmart.

Probably true.


If you make over US$ 200,000 per year you got a huge
tax cut though.
Everyone else will happliy pay for it with their US$ 8/Hr jobs
and higher prices for energy, food & basic housing & local
tax hikes. Unless the Mexicans get their jobs. They already
make too much, right?
One person making $200,000/year will pay in excess of $67,000 in taxes
to the Fed's alone.

One person making $8/hour, 16hours/day will pay at most $9000 per
year in Fed taxes.

All you socialists get your calculators out, and try and figure out
which one is paying for more of the Fed government's upkeep.

-Chuck
 
On Wed, 02 Feb 2005 01:13:35 -0500, the renowned Cliff
<Clhuprich@aol.com> wrote:

On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 11:53:09 -0500, Spehro Pefhany
speffSNIP@interlogDOTyou.knowwhat> wrote:

That's why, for
example, candy manufacturers have abandoned the US in droves- they
can't get sugar (their main ingredient) at anything close to world
price, yet they have to compete directly against those who can.

Most have moved to Canada where they can get Cuban sugar.
They still sell the candy in the US.
Nah. As a sugar exporter, Brazil is much more of a factor than Cuba-
by almost 10:1 in terms of metric tons per year (15,000 vs. 1,700).
Cuba represents only about 5% of world sugar exports. It's ALL the
massive subsidies and restrictive trade barriers.

Right now, unlike with goods, generally, there is world-wide free
trade in most types of *information*. It's particularly to the benefit
of post-industrial economies like the US, Canada and Western Europe to
keep things that way.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
--
"it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward"
speff@interlog.com Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com
Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com
 
Cliff wrote:

Fascinating! The NAFTA and GATT laws that made this possible were the
spawn of the Clinton administration.


Some neocons been whispering in your ear?

Bush-I did the first NAFTA, Bush-II expanded it.

"President Bush signed the NAFTA agreement on December 17, 1992"
"George W. Bush wants to expand NAFTA. He currently is negotiating a
Free Trade Area of the Americas agreement that will expand NAFTA to 34
Central and South American countries as soon as 2005.
GHW Bush started the process, Clinton pushed it through congress and
signed it into law:

"But Clinton’s real emphasis in foreign policy was on what could be called economic globalism. He believed that the
country’s
security and prosperity depended upon removing barriers to trade
with other nations and upon stabilizing nations with economic troubles.
Despite opposition from members of his own party, Clinton pushed
two major trade agreements through Congress in his first term:
the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), in 1993, and,
the following year, a global trade agreement that created
the World Trade Organization." - MSN Encarta
The organization we call GATT has been around since the '40s, but the
treaty that did all of the damage was Clinton's.

Etc., etc., etc.

Bush-II is the one wanting to import slave labor at very low wages
from Mexico as well.


Hillary won't be getting one. They are part of the presidential fleet.


Exactly my point <G>.


She may run for president in 2008, but she won't win.


Looke like the neocons will have worn out the old fleet
(going on all those taxpayer-paid vacations) so she will
need a new one.
You are making no sense!

-Chuck
 
Michael wrote:
One person making $200,000/year will pay in excess of $67,000 in taxes
to the Fed's alone.



anybody making $200k that pays $67k in taxes needs to fire his accountant
and get a better one
You are imagining things! Clearly you have never been in this bracket.

-Chuck
 
"Chuck Harris" <cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote in message
news:3uOdnQFKmoymdp3fRVn-tA@rcn.net...
Michael wrote:
One person making $200,000/year will pay in excess of $67,000 in taxes
to the Fed's alone.



anybody making $200k that pays $67k in taxes needs to fire his
accountant
and get a better one



You are imagining things! Clearly you have never been in this bracket.

-Chuck
according to the IRS, the MAXIMUM federal tax (no deductions of any kind)
due on an income of $200k is $53,030.

Like I said--fire your accountant
 
The question is do enought own a North American car or do we have a foreign
car.

Hmmm which North American cars are made in the third world, what % of the
rest contain a majority of forign parts?

Personally, I drive a Chev Astro?

Do we own third world produced stuff (I DO), are we willing to pay ten or
twenty dollars for those dollar store items.

Either we all must accept these developments or we must try to buy from our
companies its not a pick (Buy 3rd world, limit outsourcing )and choose.
Are we going to choose not try to save $$$$ personally, not too likely.


Most of us are guilty, we should change, but will we?
:(
"Chuck Harris" <cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote in message
news:Z_mdnS383sqCbWPcRVn-sg@rcn.net...
Ogie Ogelthorpe wrote:
Boris Olesiyuk wrote:

Our hourly rate is $10. I can send developers' resumes on your
request. We will consider any suggestions of yours but long-term
collaboration is preferable. If you are interested in this offer
please feel free to contact me obb@tut.by.

Sorry to trouble if our proposal is not interesting for you.

Yours sincerely,

Boris Olesiyuk
Team Leader
Belasoft International FV

37-88 Skariny av., Minsk, Belarus, 220003
tel: +375 17 2848804
e-mail: obb@tut.by
ICQ: 76130091


Try www.elance.com

Ogie

In the US, for $10 per hour, you can eat, or live indoors but not
both.

We need to start applying duties and tariffs to this stuff.

It annoys me that I cannot get small runs of PC boards made here in
the US as cheaply, or as easily, as I can get them made by Olimex
in Bulgaria; yet they can ship to the US duty and tax free.

If anyone knows of a US PC house that provides the level of quality
and service of Olimex, I would like to know about it so I can switch.

-Chuck
 
On Wed, 02 Feb 2005 15:20:58 GMT, the renowned "Michael"
<mbush@light-deletedashtodash-houseoptics.com> wrote:

"Chuck Harris" <cf-NO-SPAM-harris@erols.com> wrote in message
news:3uOdnQFKmoymdp3fRVn-tA@rcn.net...
Michael wrote:
One person making $200,000/year will pay in excess of $67,000 in taxes
to the Fed's alone.



anybody making $200k that pays $67k in taxes needs to fire his
accountant
and get a better one



You are imagining things! Clearly you have never been in this bracket.

-Chuck

according to the IRS, the MAXIMUM federal tax (no deductions of any kind)
due on an income of $200k is $53,030.

Like I said--fire your accountant
If the same $200K was distributed to 12 people making $16,666 per
year, they'd pay more tax, wouldn't they? ;-)


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
--
"it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward"
speff@interlog.com Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com
Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com
 
Michael wrote:

You are imagining things! Clearly you have never been in this bracket.

-Chuck


according to the IRS, the MAXIMUM federal tax (no deductions of any kind)
due on an income of $200k is $53,030.

Like I said--fire your accountant
I can't fire myself. I was working from recollections from the last
time I earned that much. Back then, there was a 33% tax bracket.

Regardless, the point I originally made is still valid, a person
earning $200K per year, and paying $54K per year in taxes is supporting
a whole lot more of the government than one who earns $30K per year.

-Chuck
 
Misha wrote:
The question is do enought own a North American car or do we have a foreign
car.

Hmmm which North American cars are made in the third world, what % of the
rest contain a majority of forign parts?

Personally, I drive a Chev Astro?

Do we own third world produced stuff (I DO), are we willing to pay ten or
twenty dollars for those dollar store items.

Either we all must accept these developments or we must try to buy from our
companies its not a pick (Buy 3rd world, limit outsourcing )and choose.
Are we going to choose not try to save $$$$ personally, not too likely.


Most of us are guilty, we should change, but will we?
Given the opportunity, I always buy American made products. However,
I am not always given the opportunity.

It used to be possible to buy a new car that was entirely made in the USA. Now,
you cannot. It can be difficult to even find a car that has the majority of
the parts of US manufacture. Including your Chevy Astro.

The car I am currently driving is made from 51% US made parts, and was assembled
in the USA... Which of the big 3 do you think it is made by?

WRONG! It's a Subaru. The Japanese cars are frequently more made in America
than the cars made by the big 3. The small Fords are made by Mazda (owned by Ford).
The big Fords are made in Canada, Brazil, Mexico, and even partly in the US.

-Chuck
 

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