02-17-2021, 05:40 AM
(02-10-2021, 04:39 AM)Tharadash Wrote:(02-10-2021, 02:45 AM)fpb4 Wrote:(02-05-2021, 05:37 PM)Luke Wrote: [February 5, 2021] Mobian CE PinePhones destined for all of European countries, bar the UK, will be dispatched on February 8th from the EU warehouse. This means that all those in Europe (minus UK) should receive their PinePhones by February 21.
Mobian CE PinePhones destined for the USA, Canada, Australia and other destinations will be shipped between February 22 and the 28th from Hong Kong. We initially hoped to ship all Mobian CE PinePhones prior to Chinese New Year (starting February 9th), but unfortunately logistics issues with the KDE CE and other factors prevented this from happening. Stay tuned for further news after CNY.
Thx for the update - Switzerland considered Europe? Didn't get notification neither from the Pine store nor DHL reg. #167343 thus far.
I'd second that.
As far as I am concerned, due to the bilateral agreements, Switzerland should be treated as a member of the EU customs union in that regard.
Not to be snarky, however, this probably is going to come out that way; it's more off topic, however, in my attempt to understand the EU and how countries like yours fit into it, I'm asking:
I see the EU is a nothing more then an attempt to have the same "method" of trade and leadership we enjoy here in the US, however, I feel it's probably not going to work.
Here's my thinking, in the US, we all started from the same "place" a single country that was governed by a single point of leadership, you want to be a state, the new state is "controlled" by the central governemnt for a fair length of time, then after they have abandoned all their internal "national" identity, they become a state.
In the EU, you have many points of leadership, very strong national identity's, and it's very hard to change the course of these government. While adding new "states" to the EU, you still have these national identity's to deal with, while we in the US we don't have this same issue.
I see these shipping issues that we'd see in the US if some company decided that they wouldn't serve XYZ state due to their local laws - customs as an example.
Now that I've thrown out my understanding, how do things work concerning non-EU countries? Is it like me shipping something to Canada, or China shipping something to me; normally no customs fees, however, it does go through Customs, and Canada did shut down all shipping from the US for a while last year.
To further add to my confusion, I see Brexit as Texas getting fed up with the way the US is going, and deciding they are not going to "play" anymore. Texas would now have their own Customs and Trade issues to deal with - Brexit's current issues.
I see this whole proccess as very fascinating; you guys have buildings older then the US has been a county.
Thanks,
Denis