Ford Thailand adds six new Ranger variants

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Ford Thailand adds six new Ranger variants

Auto & Audio May 16, 2019 17:55

By The Nation

2,739 Viewed

Ford Thailand today announced the expansion of its Ranger lineup, adding six new variants and giving customers an even wider range of options to complement their work and lifestyles.

The six new Ranger variants fit across the lineup, including one Wildtrak, one XLT, and four XL and XL+. Customers now have a choice of 26 different Ranger variants in Thailand, including the off-road, high-performance Ranger Raptor.

“The expansion of our Ranger lineup further strengthens our offering in Thailand, and helps ensure that our Ranger customers are able to choose a model that perfectly complements their work, or their lifestyle, and often times both,” said Wichit Wongwatthanakan, managing director of Ford Thailand.

AIS dials up future in offering video services

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Startup_and_IT/30369596

Siwaporn Pengpol
Siwaporn Pengpol

AIS dials up future in offering video services

Tech May 18, 2019 01:00

By Asina Pornwasin
The Nation Weekend

WITH Thais spending so much time watching video on-demand streaming services, mostly on mobile devices, Advanced Info Service (AIS) has focused to offer video services under its AIS Play service.

Siwaporn Pengpol, head of the company’s video and broadcasting management unit, said it also offers a free TV broadcasting service.

The company’s mission is to establish AIS Play as the marketplace platform for the creation of a video-broadcasting ecosystem.

“We have created a platform for encouraging the the development of this ecosystem, and have not come in to be a rival to others,” said Siwaporn.

“Now, we play a role as a marketplace by providing support subscription and billing systems for partners. We have seven over-the-top-business partners.”

AIS Play service is available on set-top-box, AIS Play Box, and mobile application AIS Play App. AIS Play Box has around 50 per cent of the 900,000 AIS Fibre customers, while the AIS Play App has been around 9 million times, with 4 million active users.

Siwaporn said users spend around four to five hours a day watching content via AIS Play Box. And they spend an average of 15 minutes a day watching content via the AIS Play App.

Under the AIS Play service, the company offers free and paid models for video-on-demand and broadcasting content.

In the future, the company will provide an ad-video-on-demand model.

“We also have a plan to use artificial intelligence to handle content management system, such as for offering personalised services,” said Siwaporn.

The strength of its service, she said, owes to the wide range of content and packages.

It has over 100 TV channels, for free and paid offerings, as well as over 1,000 titles of on-demand content.

“The variety of content is our strength but on the other hand, it is also challenge because users cannot easily find the content they want,” said Siwaporn

“At this point, we plan to improve our content management system with AI.”

She said the company would also seek synergies for the AIS Play service with AIS’s other businesses. For example, it could offer product bundles with AIS Play and AIS Fibre, and with the AIS mobile service as well.

“The main challenge is to attract people to spend more time and stick with us as long as they can in a day,” said Siwaporn.

She said that the video and broadcasting business is a part of AIS’s digital services, including games, payment, cloud, and corporate solutions.

The company also plays a role in supporting the company’s mobile service business.

In the near future, the company will expand the AIS Play service on the website in order to attract users to those services based on the PC and smart TV.

“Our direction is to reach the mass market through all channels – set-top-box, mobile devices covering phones and tablets, PCs and smart TV.

“We will still retain the existing customers of AIS’s services, while acquiring new customers, and seeking the monetisation of potential revenue,” said Siwaporn.

“Such monetisation is one of our key areas of focus, but it is too early to commit to the goal. But this year, we will break even.”

Why CONNECTIVITY matters

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Startup_and_IT/30369597

  • Alexandra Reich
  • James Allan
  • Hakon Bruaset Kjol

Why CONNECTIVITY matters

Tech May 18, 2019 01:00

By Asina Pornwasin
The Nation Weekend

2,387 Viewed

CONTRIBUTION OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS TO ECONOMIC GROWTH HIGHLIGHTED IN STUDY

Telecommunications play an important role in modern economies, and developments in telecommunications networks have reflected the adoption of digital technologies throughout those economies.

A new Telenor Group-commissioned report outlines the impact of telecommunications on Thailand and Asia.

According to the study, called “The Mobile Effect: How Connectivity Enables Growth”, telecommunications is at the core of modern economies. Sectors that are intensive users of telecommunications generally contribute a greater proportion of gross value added (GVA) to those economies, and connectivity contributes to and enables social goods.

“Our study quantified these impacts across the Asian countries where Telenor is active – Bangladesh, Pakistan, Myanmar, Malaysia and Thailand,” said James Allan, the director of Frontier Economics, which conducted the study.

The report found that sectors driven by telecommunications contributed almost three-quarters of the economic growth in markets across Telenor’s Asia footprint.

Telecommunications provided direct benefits, social benefits and indirect benefits.

The sector’s direct contribution to the economy typically increases with that economy’s maturity. The contribution of telcos to Thailand’s growth is close to that of Malaysia and the OECD, at an average of 1.5 per cent.

Also, telecommunications is an enabler of economic growth. The economic contribution of telecom-intensive sectors in Telenor’s Asia footprint is between 65 and 75 per cent of GVA. In countries with substantial economic growth, the total GVA from telecommunications intensive sectors grew between 6 and 12 per cent per year from 2005 to 2015.

For example, in both Thailand and Pakistan the GVA contribution of telecommunications intensive sectors almost doubled from around US$350-$400 billion (Bt11.1–Bt12.6 trillion) in 2005 to almost $700 billion (Bt22.2 trillion) in 2015.

The GVA of telecommunications intensive sectors has also grown rapidly on a per-capita basis, increasing at approximately 4 to 11 per cent per annum from 2005 to 2015. In this case, Malaysia and Thailand were the two standout countries, where per capita GVA is between 2 and 5 times higher than in other countries. This is likely due to the more developed nature of the two economies, which translates into higher levels of economic growth and productive efficiency.

Telecommunications technology and the internet, in particular, have changed the ways in which people live, work and interact with others and their environment. Access to telecommunications services has created substantial economic benefits for users and society.

Telecom services can also help promote social benefits, including in healthcare, social inclusion, financial inclusion and agricultural productivity.

Telecommunications have enabled the use of digital communication technologies to deliver medical care, health education, public health services and health insurance at a distance.

Telecommunications have facilitated enhanced social participation, especially for people with various disabilities. Mobile technologies play a significant role in improving social inclusion. In Pakistan, for example, mobile apps encouraging social inclusion for the disabled include the “Tell Me” voice-guided app that helps visually impaired people navigate their surroundings, and the “Roll Out” app, which shares restaurants and hotels that cater to mentally and physically challenged people.

Telecommunications have enhanced access to basic financial services, particularly facilitating the collection of financial documents, the acceptance and disbursal of cash, the monitoring of loans, receipting and sending of remittances.

The most substantial impact has been seen in Bangladesh and Thailand where from 2014 to 2017, the percentage of people who made or received digital payments grew from 7 per cent to 34 per cent and from 33 per cent to 62 per cent respectively, and the percentage of people who held a mobile wallet grew from 3 per cent to 21 per cent and from 1 per cent to 8 per cent respectively.

That use of digital payments and mobile wallet accounts by people living in rural areas is comparable to the overall population in each country. Mobile financial services are helping to reduce the financial inclusion divide between urban and rural populations.

Moreover, telecommunications help to improve productivity, profitability, food security and employment in the agricultural sector.

The usage of telecommunications in agriculture helps in achieving such goals as spreading agricultural best practices, disaster management and early warning, enhanced market access, food safety and traceability, financial inclusion and implementing regulations.

Hakon Bruaset Kjol, the Telenor Group’s senior vice president of partner and external relations for Asia, said that due to its presence in Asia for more than 20 years, Telenor has connected 166 million people and brought $4.3 billion in economic value to its Asian markets in 2017. Meeting these connectivity demands requires significant investment, especially in networks, from the telecommunications players across Asia.

From 2014 to 2017, Telenor invested $6.2 billion in its five Asian markets, making the company one of the top three foreign investors.

In Thailand, Telenor has played an important role in using mobile technology to equip farmers with the tools they need to face challenges such as climate change, plant disease and soil moisture, Kjol noted.

In October 2018, Telenor’s DTAC arm launched its new “Farm Man Yum” service, a precision farming app that analyses various data sets from involved farms to resolve issues in a timely manner.

The service was designed to meet the needs of farmers who were reliant on precise weather forecasts to manage and plan their cultivation, increase yields and cut costs. The service incorporates personalised weather forecasts, which show area-specific data on an hourly basis including temperature, the likelihood of rainfall and the amount of rainfall.

It can also provide a seven-day forecast with the highest plot-specific precision available in Thailand. With the help of satellite imagery, the feature helps farmers to views aerial shots of their plots to locate irregularities and unhealthy plants. Finally, a Personal Assistant Service helps farmers understand and efficiently plan cultivation in each crop year with easy-to-understand infographics based on academic data from Kasetsart University’s Faculty of Agriculture lecturers.

Alexandra Reich, the chief executive officer of DTAC, said that innovation and investment by mobile network operators have contributed considerably to the social and economic growth of Asia and Thailand.

The mobile ecosystem, led by operators, will continue to address the barriers that prevent underserved people from gaining access to the mobile internet, especially women and low income people, as well as rural and youth communities. In the 5G era, mobile technology development will continue to have a profound and transformative impact on the world, said Reich.

Mobile connectivity has had a profound impact on society, chalking up many benefits in health, productivity and education.

Data-hungry consumers

“From the perspective of the telecom industry, what an incredible market to be in!” said Reich. “Thais consume a lot of data, more than many European countries in fact.

“I haven’t been here for a full year yet, and I’m still very much in the honeymoon period. I just love Thai people, their sense of family, their respect, their appreciation for the good life.” Thailand ranks in the Top 10 countries for usage on several social media platforms, including Youtube. Thais are also very demanding and knowledgeable about their mobile connectivity, she said.

“A lot of people here actually know what ‘spectrum’ is. I can tell you that in Europe, very few people care about or understand some of the things Thai consumers know very well,” said Reich.

Not only are Thais heavy and demanding users, they are also creative users, she said. When Instagram and Facebook launched in Thailand, entrepreneurial Thais immediately took these platforms and transformed them into e-commerce platforms. Shopping on Instagram was a thing in Thailand long before Instagram added shopping to its features. In fact, Thailand is where key new features in Facebook are often first tested out before being rolled out to other markets.

The DTAC NET Arsa programme has trained one million low-income earners on how to use social media accounts to generate new sources of income from their products. And its Farmer Info app has reached 120,000 smallholders, putting high-resolution images of their farms and hyper-local weather forecasts in the palm of their hand.

Mobile network operators have been a driving force behind the innovation and investment needed for these opportunities.

The company has contributed considerably to the social and economic growth of Asia and Thailand, said Reich.

“Today, we are once again at the centre of a technological leap forward. Thailand can greatly benefit from 5G’s mobile technologies. But 5G will not be built like previous mobile technologies. Our role as a telco will be to coordinate the various industry players needed to build viable use cases for 5G, which have yet to materialise as of now,” said Reich.

It is therefore an important time to take a full measure of why connectivity matters and what it can do for society, she said.

MFEC to transform itself to better serve S-curve industries

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Startup_and_IT/30369521

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MFEC to transform itself to better serve S-curve industries

Tech May 17, 2019 01:00

By JIRAPAN BOONNOON
THE NATION

2,158 Viewed

The IT services company MFEC expects to generate double-digit revenue growth by the end of this year. The firm will also expand its business to support S-curve industries.

Siriwat Vongjarukorn, the chief executive officer at MFEC Public Co Ltd, said the firm is this year has planning to expand and transform its business into new S-curve businesses, including blockchain, artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), cybersecurity, internet of thing (IoT) and cloud computing technologies.

“Formerly, MFEC did its business in terms of a system integrator, focusing on hardware. This year, we are transforming our business through digital transformation and will invest in startups, so that we can utilise disruptive technology to support market demand in the digital era,” said Siriwat.

The firm has meanwhile also launched the Ex Academy in order to provide a collaborative and  knowledge-sharing platform that gathers IT and business experts from various industries to share their technology, knowledge, know-how and ideas to help business catch up with digital disruption in Thailand.

“MFEC conceived the idea to set up the Ex Academy, allowing IT gurus to share their technological knowledge in various fields, including management tips and techniques, so that it could help businesses enhance their potential and capabilities through innovative approaches and catch up with changing technology landscapes,” said Siriwat.

The Ex Academy targets three main groups – professionals, who want to upgrade their skills to cater to transformation, students who want to get equipped with digital skills and businesses that need to boost their competitiveness by leveraging technology, he said. Ex Academy will host a wide range of activities including short courses, and executive courses using forums, workshops and talk shows.

In the first step, the firm will also provide cybersecurity, system engineering and Ex Academy data related to the data platform and data analytics.

He said that the firm by the end of this year expected to generate double-digit revenue growth with revenues exceeding Bt3 billion.

NBTC briefs PM on progress with spectrum sale

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Startup_and_IT/30369538

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NBTC briefs PM on progress with spectrum sale

Tech May 17, 2019 01:00

By   THE NATION

2,098 Viewed

THE National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) has updated Prime Minister General Prayut Chan-o-cha on the progress of its plan to sell slots of the 700MHz spectrum, the commission’s secretary-general Takorn Tantasith said.

He said that a public hearing on the NBTC’s draft plan for the 700 MHz spectrum allocation, to be held on May 22, would see a great number of people taking part in the event.

Takorn said that he is still confident that each of the three 900MHz telecoms operators would purchase a spectrum lot.

These operators are subsidiaries of Advanced Info Service, True Corp and Total Access Communication.

The NBTC will put on sale three 700MHz spectrum slots, each priced at Bt17.584 billion, according to the completed draft of the 700MHz spectrum allocation plan. Each slot will comprise bandwidth of 10MHz.

The licence term will be 15 years and the payment for it can be divided into 10 instalments.

The slots will be put on sale on June 19 and the proceeds will be used to compensate the six digital TV broadcasters that last week informed the NBTC of their intention to return their broadcasting licences.

The NBTC wants the telecom operators to provide 5G wireless broadband services on the 700MHz band.

The sales of the three slots are related to the junta’s launch of the relief measures last month to ease the financial burden of the three 900MHz telecom operators and the digital TV broadcasters.

However, the junta’s relief measures include a condition that makes it mandatory for any of 900MHz licence holders taking up the assistance to purchase the NBTC’s 700MHz spectrum slots.

The licence holders can inform the NBTC that they want to avail themselves of the junta’s relief measures but can later opt not to buy the 700MHz licence slots.

However, by doing so, they would lose the longer instalment facility and would have to pay as per the original payment schedule.

The three 900MHz operators last week informed the NBTC of their interest to take up the relief measures, but said they wanted to see the terms and conditions of the 700MHz licence sales before making a final decision on whether to purchase these licences.

Takorn added that the NBTC has no power to force all three of them to buy the 700MHz spectrum lots if, in the end, there is only operator or even two operators that purchase the lots on June 19.

For the NBTC’s plan to compensate the six broadcasters that last week declared their intention to return the licences to the NBTC, Takorn said that the NBTC’s subcommittee looking into a compensation method has set a framework that requires the six to submit plans for how they would compensate their customers. The NBTC would assess these proposals.

They also have to propose plans dealing with how they would compensate those employees that would be laid off after the licences are returned. The terms should be more generous than those required by the labour law.

The operators also have to submit statements for their annual financial performance from the onset of the operations until April 11 this year.

5G to make first appearance in late 2020

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5G to make first appearance in late 2020

Tech May 17, 2019 01:00

By The Nation

2,177 Viewed

According to a report from IoT analysis company Berg Insight, 5G will make its first appearance in the market in late 2020.

The first 5G cellular internet of things (IoT) modules will become available to developers this year, enabling early adopters to create the first IoT devices based on the standard.

Based on the experience of previous introductions of new standards, 5G will however not be an instant hit. By 2023, Berg Insight forecasts that 5G will account for just under 3 per cent of the total installed base of cellular IoT devices.

“5G still has some way to go before it can become a mainstream technology for cellular IoT”, said Tobias Ryberg, principal analyst and author of the report. “Just like 4G when it was first introduced, the initial version of 5G is mostly about improving network performance and data capacity. This is only relevant for a smaller subset of high-bandwidth cellular IoT applications like connected cars, security cameras and industrial routers. The real commercial breakthrough will not happen until the massive machine type communication (mMTC) use case has been implemented in the standard.”

 mMTC is intended as an evolution of the LTE-M/NB-IoT enhancements to the 4G standard. Since NB-IoT has only just started to appear in commercial products, there is no immediate demand for a successor. Over time, fifth generation mobile networks will, however, become necessary to cope with the expected exponential growth of IoT connections and data traffic.

The report identifies homeland security as an area where 5G cellular IoT can have a major impact in the early 2020s. “5G enables the deployment of high-density networks of AI-supported security cameras to monitor anything from security-classified facilities to national borders or entire cities,” says Ryberg. “How this technology is used and by whom is likely to become one of the most controversial issues in the next decade.”

Traveloka allows multi-city bookings in one transaction

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Tourism/30369524

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Traveloka allows multi-city bookings in one transaction

Tourism May 17, 2019 01:00

By The Nation

2,018 Viewed

Traveloka, a leading technology company that provides online travel and lifestyle products for domestic and international destinations, has officially announced its newest flight feature innovation, Multi-city.

The new service allows users to book flight tickets to several destinations in one transaction.

With the Multi-city flight feature, users can easily add two additional destinations from and to several international destinations, such as Japan, South Korea, Australia, China, Europe and the United Kingdom.

Growth in outbound travel is predicted to continue.

According to Mastercard Future of Outbound Travel in Asia Pacific (2016 to 2021) data, Thailand is expected to record annual outbound travel growth of 4.8 per cent during this period with the number of tourists expected to exceed 9.1 million people in 2021.

How geek was PROGRAMMED to succeed

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Corporate/30369567

Anothai
Anothai

How geek was PROGRAMMED to succeed

Corporate May 18, 2019 01:00

By ASINA PORNWASIN
THE NATION WEEKEND

2,132 Viewed

STUDYING marketing kept Anothai Wettayakorn busy during his student days, but it was computer programming that fired up his imagination.

Anothai, now 48, fell in love with computers when he first encountered them on his university campus.

Despite his workload as a marketing student he felt driven to learn all he could about computer programming. He even worked as a teaching assistant at computer lab. These were his first steps on a path that would take him to the vice president’s office for Asian emerging markets at Dell Technologies.

After graduating with his marketing degree from Assumption University (ABAC), he lost no time in finding work a sales person for a Thai computer company, SVOA, where he stayed for three years.

By that time, he made good on a plan to become an entrepreneur. He joined with a friend to set up a local brand PC company and ran the business for two years. With that taste of entrepreneurship behind him, he returned to the corporate world, joining Compaq Company in its product and marketing department.

He recalls that the PC market had been dominated by local brand PCs, with such brands making up 80 per cent of the market. In that environment it was difficult for premium brands to gain market share.

But, when the Asian economic crisis struck in 1997, the PC market shrank rapidly. His company slashed the ranks of its employees until it was just Anothai left on his own in his department. He turned that crisis into an opportunity by carrying out a marketing strategy of his own creation. He hit upon the idea of bundling the products with a broadband internet service, provided by another company. That helped make to revive sales and he was rewarded with a promotion to manager of the consumer PC business unit.

He continued to work for Compaq and helped to deliver healthy growth as he moved upwards in his career path. His company acquired the rival Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), leading to his promotion as the executive overseeing the consumer and corporate markets as well as the business market. Then, when the company was acquired by Hewlett Packard (HP), he was promoted to the role of PSG director, overseeing the whole PC business of HP. Three year later, he moved to Dell as country manager of Dell Thailand.

From overseeing only Thailand, in 2010 he was also made responsible for the Indochina market, on the way to being put in charge of 32 emerging markets in the Asia Pacific region. He is the first Thai executive in the global technology company to be assigned such an extensive reach in marketing.

His role is to deal with the multicultural dimensions of the company in terms of markets, employees, and partners. He prides himself on getting along well with people of all cultures and backgrounds, he says. Anothai says a childhood in a military family, involving moves around the country, saw him get used to meeting a variety of people and build his interpersonal skills.

As his role as vice president for Asian emerging markets at Dell Technologies, he has promoted his Thai teams to oversee the market, naming members as country managers overseeing Indochina, with individual country managers for Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar.

Across the 32 countries, the two main business of Dell Technologies are commercial and consumer businesses covering commercial PCs, notebooks and enterprise business. Dell’s business also includes the South Asia consumer division that takes in the Philippines and Indonesia.

“In APJ, Asia Pacific and Japan, Dell has six regions – Japan, South Korea, India, Australia and New Zealand, Southeast Asia – and the rest are emerging markets,” says Anothai.

He says that when it comes to moulding a successful operation, what’s important are the right attitude and mindset, together with patience and a sense of endeavour. He has practised all of these qualities and has sought to imbue his with staff with them.

He says he is focused on goals, not rewards, so he is always striving to optimise in every way, rather than merely meet the targets. A key motivation is to turn the spotlight on Thailand.

“I am pleased, but not satisfied, when my staff meet the target. I always advise them to have sense of entrepreneurship, to strive to optimise and not just to meet the target,” Anothai says.

“We need to put pressure on them but always with showing respect towards them. We need to push them to gain a sense of ownership with responsibility and accountability. Having a sense of entrepreneurship

means we will not stop simply because we meet the target; we will go beyond that.”

When he started working at Dell, Thailand was a third-tier market for the company, but now it has grown into a first-tier market. The size of business at that time was just a tenth of what it is now.

As with any business, he says, the core strength rests with the people. Dell’s business expansion requires not only gaining the trust of customers and partners, but also the employees.

“The team is very important since they work for the company, They need to be motivated and have a growth mindset. We need to learn the differences in culture and people, and to motivate and support them,” says Anothai.

He regards problems as challenges and enjoys resolving them. Problems, he says, are part of life. He believe any problem has its own cycle; after it arises it will ultimately disappear.

“We need to have the right consciousness to deal with and solve such problems. And even after a problem disappears, it will come again,” Anothai says. “We just have to realise that and deal with it. So, mindset and attitude are very important. Luckily, we can practise what is needed. I do not believe it is a born-to-be skill.”

As work keeps him busy, he prefers not to talk about a work-life balance; instead, he speaks of work-life integration. Since he travels a lot, he is always working and living life at the same time. He loves local food, history, culture and people when he is on business trips, and he often stay longer to experience a given city and its people.

“I always integrate work into life and life into work. I do not wake up to go to work; I wake up to spend my life. If we have an attitude like this, we will never be bored working every day of the week,” says Anothai.

He says everyone and every business in the era of digital disruption need to adjust their attitudes and mindsets as well as prepare themselves for the changes ahead. The winners are those businesses that can adjust themselves quickly, regardless of their size.

“In the span of every five years, technologies will become powerful and notch advancements at the rate of 10 times. Therefore, in the next 15 years, we can expect to see 1,000 times more advances in technologies. This principle is the same as what happened in the last 15 years,” he says.

“In the next 15 years, nobody knows how the world will be, but one thing is sure – it will be never the same and we cannot escape that conclusion, no matter what people think about that.

“For example, artificial intelligence, robotics, automation, and the Internet of Things will play important roles, absolutely. Thai businesses and corporates need to be aware of this and prepare themselves to avoid the risk of being disrupted.”

As for individuals, he says, people need to make adjustments. Even though he has worked at Dell for 16 years, he says it feels as if he has worked for different companies over that period – such is the pace of change.

“Dell always adjusts itself, such as when it expanded from being a hardware provider to offering solutions as well as end-to-end solutions. Now, Dell Technologies offers a lot of solutions for data centres and the cloud, says Anothai.

He says Dell has always offered reskilling and upskilling for employees. For example, it has quarterly training, with its own university, Dell Sales University, providing the courses. Employee need to pass the core courses in order to move up.

Dell places great importance on people development.

“As a company, Dell has also always adjust itself. It started with direct model, but today it relies on a hybrid mode with channels. It changed from a model of built-to-order to be build-to-stock – all while retaining its DNA that is effective supply chain management,” Anothai says.

Dell created a big impact on the PC industry with its direct model and supply chain management that pulled down prices for PCs.

“Dell is still creating an impact, now with data centres and the cloud with the recent launch of Dell Technologies Cloud Platform,” Anothai says. “The company spends around US$4 billion on research and development each year. The vision of the company is to supply the advanced technologies that help our customers make the transformation to the digital era.”

Ooredoo Myanmar joins China’s ZTE in 5G push

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Corporate/30369575

Alok Verma, acting chief executive of Ooredoo Myanmar, third from left, with ZTE Corporation’s Mei Zhonghua after signing an MoU on 5G cooperation. (Photo courtesy of Ooredoo Myanmar)
Alok Verma, acting chief executive of Ooredoo Myanmar, third from left, with ZTE Corporation’s Mei Zhonghua after signing an MoU on 5G cooperation. (Photo courtesy of Ooredoo Myanmar)

Ooredoo Myanmar joins China’s ZTE in 5G push

Breaking News May 17, 2019 20:15

By Khine Kyaw
The Nation
Yangon

2,182 Viewed

With growing interest for fifth-generation or 5G technology in Myanmar, Ooredoo Myanmar has recently taken another step forward to bring the latest development to the nation by signing an agreement with China’s ZTE Corporation, said the firm’s acting chief executive Alok Verma.

He told The Nation on Friday that the collaboration would ensure that the telco is ready to evolve to 5G, despite speculation that it will be tough for the four telecom operators in Myanmar to launch 5G services this year.

“Technically, we are ready for some upgrades and spectrum allocations. Plus we have ongoing discussions with PTD [Posts and Telecommunications Department] for 5G development in Myanmar,” he said.

“We will ensure that our network is ready for 5G technology while we’re waiting for government approval.”

According to Verma, the deal signed with ZTE Corporation on Wednesday is the first of its kind in Myanmar, helping the country realise its potential for leapfrogging in technological terms. The partnership would leverage the expertise of ZTE Corporation and support Ooredoo’s efforts to provide an excellent telecom infrastructure in Myanmar.

“We are the first in Myanmar to launch initiatives towards 5G development, recognising the potential of 5G, which will unlock the next generation of wireless technology with high speeds, ultra-low latency and greater capacities,” Verma said.

The development of 5G would unleash new possibilities in mobility, manufacturing, healthcare, transportation and several other industries, he added.

To kick off the partnership, Ooredoo Myanmar and ZTE Corporation will be considering potential test environments to deploy the telco’s 5G network. The test environments will be used to evaluate the performance of 5G network and technology to ensure that best-in-class service is achieved once the network is operational.

Verma said Ooredoo Group has been working towards bringing 5G technology to all the markets it operates in since 2014. It made history when it became the world’s first operator to launch a live 5G network in Qatar in May last year.

“Over the next few months, we have been planning to reach more world-firsts by testing 5G mobile and networks through user trials and commercial launches across the world, and Myanmar is no exception,” he said.

According to Verma, Ooredoo Myanmar has been building a strong cooperation with ZTE since 2014, and both companies are excited to move further together.

“Both parties believe that it will be a great opportunity to further strengthen our cooperation in the future, as we explore and discuss the path to 5G,” he said.

He added that the telco has chosen ZTE as its strategic partner due to the Chinese giant’s proven record in solid 5G cooperation with more than 40 operators worldwide.

“With the aim of keeping our business growing in the long run, ZTE will be the best partner to help us build the first 5G in Myanmar. We are confident that ZTE’s 5G end-to-end commercial products will support the full-band, full-scenario deployment needs,” he said.

Yet, Verma did not reveal how much the telco would invest in its efforts to bring 5G to Myanmar in the near future.

“We are still in discussions with PTD and we still don’t know about the costs yet,” he said.

Airbnb and GSB launch partnership to support local homestays

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Corporate/30369570

Airbnb and GSB launch partnership to support local homestays

Breaking News May 17, 2019 19:03

By The Nation

Airbnb, the world’s leading community-driven hospitality company, and the Government Savings Bank, Thailand’s state-owned bank, on Friday announced a partnership to help promote Thai hospitality entrepreneurs, starting with local homestay owners.

A press release on Friday said that through the partnership, GSB will help ensure better funding for hospitality entrepreneurs by providing flexible-interest rate loans and instalment plans.

Airbnb will work with GSB to help build capacity through hospitality and hosting training while connecting homestay owners to its worldwide platform and marketplace network of over 500 million guests.

Dr. Chatchai Payuhanaveechai, GSB President and CEO, and Mike Orgill, Airbnb General Manager for Southeast Asia, Hong Kong and Taiwan, jointly launched the partnership on Friday.

As part of the launch pilot, Airbnb and GSB trained GSB officials and 29 local homestay groups, including the participants of GSB’s ‘Smart Homestay 2018 Competition’, which recognised outstanding homestays in different provinces across Thailand.

The partnership will support local sustainable tourism while diversifying income distribution to communities across Thailand, in alignment with the Thai Government’s initiative to drive local economic growth in secondary cities through tourism. Specifically, both GSB and Airbnb pledged to expand business opportunities for Thai hospitality micro-entrepreneurs to help generate income for local communities.

GSB will provide a special loan package – providing grassroots customers with smaller, flexible loans – to hospitality micro-entrepreneurs who meet the Bank’s requirements. Airbnb will conduct a series of train-the-trainer model capacity building sessions to equip GSB officials with the skills to navigate and utilise Airbnb’s global platform efficiently, and cascade this knowledge to homestay owners under GSB’s programmes.

On Friday, participants took part in a series of sharing sessions about Thai tourism and its opportunities, as well as an Airbnb host onboarding and activation workshop for homestay owners. The high-speed fiber optic Internet for the workshop was provided by state-owned telecommunications company TOT Public Company Limited.

Airbnb Superhost, Nitaya Laisuwan, who hosts in a homestay in Bangkok, also shared her personal story and best practices. The passionate host and mother of two is a full-time English teacher who welcomes guests in her 4th generation traditional Thai wooden home, located by Bangkok’s Chao Praya river.