Apple Donates Millions of Masks to Healthcare Pros in America and Europe (engadget.com) 74
An anonymous reader quotes Engadget:
Hospitals in numerous countries are struggling to provide basic supplies to healthcare workers, and tech companies are pitching in to address the shortfall. Tim Cook has revealed that Apple is donating "millions" of masks to healthcare professionals in Europe and the U.S.
Their article notes that Alibaba has also been donating masks, test kits, protective suits and face shields, while Elon Musk's companies are exploring the production of ventilators.
"It's part of a positive trend and suggests that tech companies may play a significant role in fighting the pandemic whether or not they have directly relevant expertise."
Their article notes that Alibaba has also been donating masks, test kits, protective suits and face shields, while Elon Musk's companies are exploring the production of ventilators.
"It's part of a positive trend and suggests that tech companies may play a significant role in fighting the pandemic whether or not they have directly relevant expertise."
Where/when did they get these masks? (Score:1)
Re:Where/when did they get these masks? (Score:5, Interesting)
They probably buy them for the same reason as our laboratories - for work. There are things that you do in a lab-like environment that require respirators. They are a large company that does a lot of materials research, prototyping and testing and they need to keep their lungs from whatever dust and debris are produced in the process.
Until the recent shortages, even the N95 respirators were often treated as disposable and used it only once. I personally tend to reuse them until they clog, but I'm one of the few who did that.
Since the masks are a lot cheaper in bulk, do not expire very quickly, and you burn through them fast if you change them after every use, it makes sense to buy more at once; if you're a large organization "millions" is not hard to imagine.
Re: Where/when did they get these masks? (Score:5, Informative)
Proper respirator placement covers both the mouth and the nose, so it doesn't really make much of a difference. Breathing through a it either way is not pleasant, you do it to protect your health.
The recent WHO advice on respirator use confirms that reuse is safe and that disinfection is appropriate. 60 degrees Centigrade for about an hour does the job.
But let me tell you, it is a lot easier to breathe if you're not a butt-hurt troll.
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I own one N95 respirator and reuse it. They're not really designed for sterilization, though. The "comfort fit" nosepiece became brittle and broke off after a couple times being steam-sterilized (although it still forms a tight seal around the nose... just fits a bit more awkwardly). Also, mine - being an industrial respirator, not a medical one, has a valve for exhalation. Good for protecting me from getting infected, and more comfortable to work in; not so good for protecting others if I were to get in
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That depends on the model. Our masks have metallic nose pieces and work fine after oven sterilization.
Sterilization is doable, but most of the time it is simply not necessary.
I see need to sterilize masks only if the person who is wearing it is in close proximity to people who are sick with the virus. The mask would be constantly bombarded with it and may become a source of contagion.
In all other circumstances this would be a very unlikely outcome - the droplets that carry the virus will be trapped insid
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I'm sorry, didn't you just finish lecturing us that the virus could not survive drying out [slashdot.org]? Why are you steam sterilizing your mask, Ca
Re: Where/when did they get these masks? (Score:2)
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Yah, what company wouldn't think to buy in bulk to save money?
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For a prototyping and manufacturing company they are not large, less than 20,000 engineers, only a fraction of who would need masks. Millions is very tough to understand.
You forget all the workers in the testing labs, and in some QA operations. A lot more of them than hardware R&D Engineers.
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But that is spread across all work sites. In one location, it's a bit harder, but not particularly unreasonable. Buying a quarter-year supply each quarter could easily leave a number of larger sites with well over a million in the store room.
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They probably buy them for the same reason as our laboratories - for work.
Or they're donating them in the sense of "placed an order for X million masks to be drop-shipped to places that need them." Many companies do good-will things like donate food to food-banks. Really it's the equivalent of cutting a check.
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Quite likely. And very likely that since Apple is a huge company compared to the people that need them (hospitals etc), Apple probably deals direct with 3M. Apple can very well say "3M, ship X million masks to these healthcare providers and send me the bill".
This way, 3M wil
Re: Where/when did they get these masks? (Score:1)
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Assuming this is direct Apple employees, and 30% are hardware engineers, and all of those people need masks for their jobs...
1e6/(.3*7e4)= 47.6 masks per hw engr.
That seems quite excessive, especially considering that it's prolly more like 3% of total headcount would need N95 PPE, and even that is crazy generous
WTF is wrong with you people?!?
You simply cannot just say "Good Job, Apple!", or even just say nothing.
No, with you fucking idiots, it always has to be some nefarious scheme if there is any connection with "Apple" whatsoever.
You're just morons.
Re: Where/when did they get these masks? (Score:1)
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If you use 1 per day, that's 200 each for those who need it. Apple probably buys in bulk and ensures that they have a ready supply.
And yes, you can bet most of those people will probably go through
Re: Where/when did they get these masks? (Score:1)
Re: Where/when did they get these masks? (Score:2)
Theyâ(TM)re industrial masks for protecting people against chemicals and dusts in manufacturing processes. At very least Iâ(TM)d expect they go through a shit ton prototyping new devices.
Re: Where/when did they get these masks? (Score:1)
Private charity versus public problems? (Score:1)
Your question deserves a positive moderation, though I'm not sure what it should be. I think you needed to go farther to reach insight... For example, do you know if any of Apple's AI projects may have given them the tip to buy the masks?
My main problem with the charity approach is different. Private charity is simply not an adequate solution for public problems. In the best case, the private charity is going to provide more resources than needed, but that's only likely for relatively minor problems that ge
Re: Private charity versus public problems? (Score:1)
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Well, I basically agree, though I'd be strongly tilted toward the prevention side because we don't have even an ounce of cure for Covid-19. I think the emergency focus should have been on keeping the food moving. Basically that seems to be what the Chinese did. Not a "voluntary social distancing" or polite quarantine approach, but rather Xi just came out and arrested 60 million people and focused on keeping them fed and alive until ALL of the active cases of Covid-19 could be found. Yeah, they set up specia
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ah, what did microsoft buy for my grandma ?
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Typical ignorant Apple-hater comment. Don't you know only the supervisors get respirators?
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Why is Apple hoarding millions of N95 masks? Can they send one to me? My hardware store is out of stock.
It's not really hoarding if you buy them for normal use during non-disaster times.
Someone may buy a 48 pack of toilet paper once a year, but they aren't "hoarding" if they happened to buy it a few months ago and have 45 rolls in the closet today.
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They aren't hoarding, they just purchased these on the open market. Unlike what you heard, there is no shortage of masks. There was a shortage of medical-grade masks, from a production perspective, the medical and non-medical grade are made the same way in the same factories, just different labelling. So you can buy the tons of construction and laboratory masks from Home Depot if you need them.
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Depends what you call medical-grade masks ... masks that are supposed to protect medical personal are completely different than typical surgery masks or masks for consumers.
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Why is Apple hoarding millions of N95 masks? Can they send one to me? My hardware store is out of stock.
They aren't hoarding them.
They are donating them.
Kind of the opposite thing...
Self interest? (Score:1)
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That's not far from the mark though. Dead people don't pay taxes, contribute to the economy, keep the flow of goods and services moving.
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That's only relevant to Democrats though, right now the Republicans are in power.
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The incidence of voter fraud in the U.S. is minuscule, even the Trumped up commission Doofus entrusted to ferret out vote fraud headed by that fraud from Kansas turned up squat. Of course, maybe he was too incompetent to manufacture fake instances.
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You haven't had to pay funeral costs have you?
Yet.
Latest Apple Promotion (Score:4, Funny)
20 free N-95 masks with every purchase over $1K
maybe an app... (Score:2)
maybe they should produce an app to help reporting...
LOTS of under reporting is going on...
Level 3 meta required for apple post (Score:1)
*chomp* [youtube.com]
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Okay, time for a stand-up. We're Agile. [youtube.com]
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Did you just Rickroll [youtube.com] us?
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No, mine are much more on topic, as well as better musical taste.
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How have you been on the internet this long without an adblocker?
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The good optics of been seen to do something.
WTF (Score:3)
Apparently Apple mistook N95 masks for a IP addresses.
Can you have Class A N95 address space?
Stop buying into the propaganda (Score:1)
I wonder how many masks could be purchased for the money Apple tax dodges every year...
Payback? (Score:1)
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And the alleged administration's culture accelerated the propagation of the virus to the rest of America. They had two months warning and did diddly-squat. The intelligence agencies warned the alleged administration with its alleged president at the end of January not to rely on what the Chinese were saying and that this was a dire threat the U.S. Yet, the alleged president's response was that he trusted what Jin-ping was telling him. He did this on his firm belief that the intelligence agencies were out to
My favorite (Score:1)
If i was a billionaire filantropist.. (Score:2)
I would donate positive pressure suits to the doctors worldwide.
Those are being exposed much more to the thing than anyone else, and if they collapse, we lose the "game".
Or they could pay their taxes like we do (Score:1)