Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Factory closure in China could affect Mac notebook shipments

Add as a preferred source on Google

macbook-air-13-3-display-angleThe partial closure of a factory in China due to environmental concerns could have an impact on the supply of Apple’s notebook computers.

According to an FT report on Monday, the facility was closed by local officials following complaints by people living nearby of a strange odour, apparently coming from the factory.

Recommended Videos

The production plant, located in Suzhou province in eastern China, is operated by Taiwan-based Catcher Technology, one of the world’s leading manufacturers of metal computer casings. The company is a big supplier of the unibody aluminum cases used for Apple’s MacBook Air and MacBook Pro notebooks.

Speaking at a news conference, Catcher Technology’s president Allen Horng said, “Shipments to our customers will inevitably be affected. We already asked them to make adjustments to their (casings) procurement.”

The Wall Street Journal reported that Horng was unable to say how long the closure would last for, but that the company’s total shipments would fall by 20 percent in October and, if the situation continued, by around 40 percent in November.

Analysts have suggested that the other major supplier of metal computer casings, Foxconn, could receive an increase in orders as a result of the problem at Catcher Technology’s Suzhou factory, although it’s not clear by how much this would ease any strain on the supply chain.

On Tuesday Apple will release its third quarter financial results. Some analysts expect record figures to be announced, helped partly by healthy sales of the MacBook Air, which received a refresh in July.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Canva Code 2.0 just made vibe coding way less intimidating for everyone
Canva Code 2.0 feature

Coding used to be reserved for developers who spent years learning complex languages. That has slowly changed with vibe coding, which lets you build apps and websites using simple, plain-language prompts. 

The problem is that most of these tools still feel intimidating for regular folks, as they still need to understand the code to make any meaningful changes. If not, everything you make tends to look the same.

Read more
Windows users can finally pick when updates stop with Microsoft’s latest patch
From pausing updates on your own schedule to rolling back a broken PC in one click, here's everything new in Windows 11's July 2026 update.
Windows 11 Laptop

Patch Tuesday updates are usually a shrug-and-install affair, but Microsoft's July 2026 release actually gives you something to be excited about.

You can grab this update, tagged KB5101650, right now through Settings, or manually via the Microsoft Update Catalog if you'd rather not wait for it to roll out.

Read more
Can AI audiobooks narrate better than humans? This study says many listeners think so
New study finds listeners favor AI narrated audiobooks over traditional human narration in blind testing.
Audiobooks on Spotify on an iPhone.

You might assume most listeners would pick a real human voice over a synthetic one, but a new study says otherwise. Edison Research at SSRS surveyed 1,005 fiction audiobook fans in May 2026 for a study commissioned by AI audio company Spoken. The twist is that listeners rated the AI narration higher, and they did not even know it was AI until after they heard it (via Variety).

Why listeners favored the AI narration

Read more