Tiwaz wrote: Having engineers in your staff does not make your company engineering company. At least not even remotely in the same spirit as companies I listed (list would be far longer for Finland if I took equally lax attitude towards engineering company as you do).
If you check my list, each company designs and manufactures physical goods. Ship engines, elevator systems and so forth. Real, tangible products which are sold to others.
I don't care what you think it is the definition of engineering, but ship engines, elevator systems and other "tangible products" are just a part of engineering. You have a narrow mind about what engineering is (probably because you are not an engineer, you have not studied engineering and you are just going "with your feelings"
What you are using here is the "No true scotmans" fallacy. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_true_Scotsman
Wikipedia definition:
How does not a company like Telefónica does not fit the definition? Do they apply scientific, economic, social and practical knowledge to design, build and maintain structures, machines, devices, systems and processes? Obviously they do. Of course they do some other things, but in its core, they do engineering. Engineering of Telecommunication structures and networks. (And I know what they do because I have worked there!)Engineering is the application of scientific, economic, social, and practical knowledge in order to design, build, and maintain structures, machines, devices, systems, materials and processes. It may encompass using insights to conceive, model and scale an appropriate solution to a problem or objective. The discipline of engineering is extremely broad, and encompasses a range of more specialized fields of engineering, each with a more specific emphasis on particular areas of technology and types of application.
If you get picky about the other activities, then we could even conclude that Nokia is basically a "logistics company".
P.S. About the rest of your post, I am not even going to comment, since you attribute some phrases to me that I have not even said.