Moody’s: adoption of 5G slow across Asia Pacific

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Moody’s: adoption of 5G slow across Asia Pacific

Tech June 27, 2019 18:19

By The Nation

Moody’s Investors Service says in a new report that a lack of demand and a clear business case for deployment are likely to slow the adoption and roll-out of fifth-generation (5G) mobile technology across Asia Pacific.

“Prospects for 5G investment are currently mainly related to increasing speeds and capacity for existing 4G networks, while more advanced applications – such as medical services, robotics and smart home devices – are still developing and require higher band spectrums to run efficiently,” said Nidhi Dhruv of Moody’s.

“Moreover, all rated companies which responded to our survey on 5G believe that implementation will require a reconfiguration of networks and a change in business models, further signaling that it will take time to unlock the full potential of 5G applications,” added Dhruv.

Korea, China, Japan and Australia pave the way for 5G services in Asia Pacific, with operators in these pioneer countries seeking to transition their subscribers at premium average revenue per user (ARPU). Operators in these countries have also benefited from strong government backing, inter alia in the form of spectrum-fee waivers, planned infrastructure and technology funding.

Meanwhile, early adopters in Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong and the Philippines are targeting commercial launch by the second half of 2020 and into 2021, with 5G and 4G likely to coexist for a long time and become indiscernible as the networks mature.

Finally, Moody’s expects the launch of 5G mobile technology will be credit neutral for Asia Pacific mobile carriers over the next three years.

Companies will limit the initial roll-out to densification of networks with small cells in high traffic urban areas, while financial flexibility, existing spectrum use and fiber assets will influence the pace of each carrier’s implementation.

Moody’s report covers 20 telecommunications services companies across 11 countries in Asia Pacific, and classifies these countries into pioneers, early adopters and late adopters.

Hacker used $35 computer to steal restricted NASA data

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Hacker used $35 computer to steal restricted NASA data

Tech June 25, 2019 08:43

By Agence France-Presse
Washington

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A hacker used a tiny Raspberry Pi computer to infiltrate NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory network, stealing sensitive data and forcing the temporary disconnection of space-flight systems, the agency has revealed.

The April 2018 attack went undetected for nearly a year, according to an audit report issued on June 18, and an investigation is still underway to find the culprit.

A Raspberry Pi is a credit-card sized device sold for about $35 that plugs into home televisions and is used mainly to teach coding to children and promote computing in developing countries.

Prior to detection, the attacker was able to exfiltrate 23 files amounting to approximately 500 megabytes of data, the report from NASA’s Office of inspector General said.

These included two restricted files from the Mars Science Laboratory mission, which handles the Curiosity Rover, and information relating to the International Traffic in Arms Regulations which restrict the export of US defense and military technologies.

“More importantly, the attacker successfully accessed two of the three primary JPL networks,” the report said.

“Officials were concerned the cyberattackers could move laterally from the gateway into their mission systems, potentially gaining access and initiating malicious signals to human space flight missions that use those systems.”

NASA came to question the integrity of its Deep Space Network data “and temporarily disconnected several space flight-related systems from the JPL network.”

The breach came about as a result of a system administrator failing to update the database that determines which devices have access to the network. As a result, new devices could be added without proper vetting.

In response to the attack, the JPL “installed additional monitoring agents on its firewalls” and was reviewing network access agreements with its external partners, the report said.

CAT tasked with expanding internet infrastructure

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CAT tasked with expanding internet infrastructure

Tech June 24, 2019 01:00

By JIRAPAN BOONNOON
THE NATION

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The Digital Economy and Society (DE) Ministry has disbursed Bt5 billion for the upgrade and development of Thailand’s internet infrastructure towards helping the country achieve its goal of becoming the digital hub of Asean.

Atcharin Phatthanaphanchai, permanent secretary of the ministry, said the government had assigned the project to CAT Telecom.

The state telecom agency has split the Asean Digital Hub project into three phases: increase network capacity on the borders, upgrade capacity of the nationwide network and the submarine cable system, and the laying of a new international submarine cable.

In the first phase, CAT expanded internet capacity by 2,300 giga bits per second (Gbps) in border areas connecting Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar with a Bt2-billion expenditure.

The CAT has invested Bt1 billion in the second phase of the project and is currently performing tests on the equipment installed at 151 communication stations nationwide. The agency has also increased the capacity of the existing submarine cable network by 770Gbps, linking Thailand with Singapore, China through Hong Kong, and the United States. The upgraded infrastructure can now handle 7,512Gbps of internet traffic for the entire country, a level sufficient for the foreseeable future.

The capacity expansion of the domestic network is expected to stimulate Thailand’s economy, create more jobs and opportunities, decrease inequality in education, boost public health services, decrease internet costs and offer the public wider access to information and state services.

The third phase will see the laying of a new submarine internet cable connecting Thailand to the Asia-Pacific nations, including Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan, Thailand, China, Vietnam, Malaysia, Philippines, and South Korea.

The new submarine cable aims to boost the effectiveness of the Internet, enabling Thailand to become the Asean Digital Hub while increasing the capacity and quality of the country’s telecommunication infrastructure in preparation for the digital era,” said Atcharin.

Sanpachai Huvanandana, president of CAT Telecom, said the firm would sign investment and construction agreements with partners in July and August, adding that the new submarine cable will be in place within 2022.

He said the new submarine cable and upgraded infrastructure will significantly improve the stability of Asean connectivity and will play an important role in elevating Thailand to the status of Asean Digital Hub. It will enhance the country’s connectivity with China through Hong Kong as well as meeting the demands for economic expansion to the Asean subregion.

“Thailand is located in a strategic location, making it suitable to become a communication hub for the upper Asean region, comprising Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar with high internet traffic. Furthermore, Thailand is one of the top digital content consumers in the world. The volume of internet traffic and digital content consumption in the Kingdom is sufficient to attract major content providers to establish their data centres in Thailand, making use of the country’s communication infrastructure, such as the network of underwater cables, which have just been upgraded,” the president said.

Majority of net users watch online videos in China

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Majority of net users watch online videos in China

Tech June 23, 2019 20:25

By China Daily/ANN

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About 725 million internet users in China, or 87.5 percent of the total online population, watched online videos in 2018, while more than 230 million users have paid for membership of Chinese online video platforms, according to a report released on June 11 at the Internet Summit in Shanghai.

“The online audio visual industry is flourishing in the country, with more and more audio visual products of increasingly high quality being created,” said Cui Chenghao, deputy Party secretary of the research center of the National Radio and Television Administration, during the summit.

Cui, who is also the deputy editor of the report, points out that major online video platforms in China, including Tencent platform iQiyi, have been pouring capital into the production of original content and the quality of most works have reached a level that is comparable to those produced by broadcasting companies.

“For instance, most original online shows no longer depend solely on the star factor of famous personalities. More and more new actors are appearing in these programs,” he says.

Cui also claims that technological advancements have been driving growth in the online media market since 2018 when technology such as 4K (ultra-high definition) and 8K resolution as well as virtual reality started becoming more prevalent in the industry.

According to a joint survey conducted by the research center at the administration, the Center of Shanghai International Film and TV Festival and the audiovisual communication research center at Peking University, about 1,500 films were screened exclusively online in 2018, a drop from 2,400 in 2016.

The drop is partly a result of the rising budgets for online movies, which as the survey also shows, have grown a hundredfold, surging from several hundred thousand yuan in 2015 to tens of millions of yuan in 2018.

“We hope to see the quality of films continue to improve as more budget is allocated to such projects,” says Lu Di, director of the research center at Peking University.

Ma Zhongjun, founder of Shanghai-based Ciwen Media and a Chinese playwright, stated at the summit that some key elements of quality online works are innovation, either in characters or plots, and a smooth and rigorous film production process ranging from the choice of scripts to the completion of a film.

Ye Ning, vice-president of Huayi Brothers Media Group, says an excellent film should resonate with the audience, evoke emotions and create a new world in the viewer’s mind.

NetApp revolutionizes data fabric to Dominate Hybrid Multicloud

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NetApp revolutionizes data fabric to Dominate Hybrid Multicloud

Tech June 23, 2019 14:30

By The Nation

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NetApp, a data authority for hybrid cloud, has announced new solutions and services that allow customers to adopt and consume cloud on their terms.

With new solutions, NetApp is delivering a truly seamless hybrid multi-cloud experience that includes availability of NetApp Cloud Data Services on NetApp HCI, the ability to expand with persistent storage across the biggest public clouds, and the ability for customers to manage, use, and pay for cloud services the way they want to, the company said in a press statement.

The public cloud has created a new standard for IT that all industry leaders must match to provide the experience that users enjoy in the cloud and now demand on their premises. To be successful, organizations must fuel data-driven innovation by leveraging the cloud and modernizing their IT, bringing the power of the cloud to every part of their business through a seamless hybrid multicloud experience. Only NetApp, with its data fabric strategy, has what customers need to build a unique data fabric designed for their business—in any cloud, in one experience.

“NetApp’s data fabric offerings enable enterprises to seamlessly manage data across a multitude of IT infrastructures, covering on premises and multiple public cloud service platforms,” said Deepak Mohan, research director, Infrastructure Systems, Platforms and Technologies, IDC. “IDC research shows that the gap between businesses that embrace data and those that do not has dramatically widened over the past 3 years. As the c-suite increasingly prioritizes data as a strategic asset, NetApp’s new multi-platform offerings empowers IT organizations with the flexibility and consistency needed to maximize the value potential of their data.”

“Overall speed and flexibility between on-premises and cloud environments has been key to our adoption of NetApp’s tech and Data Fabric strategy,” said Konstantin Kostenarov, Ducati CTO. “As Ducati becomes a lifestyle brand and further expands our business across the world, our approach to data informs everything from strategy on the racetrack to how we design our products and engage with customers. NetApp is leading the charge in hybrid multicloud, and they are one of the best partners we trust to keep up as Ducati transforms on and off the racetrack.”

“The way organizations invest in and consume IT resources continues to evolve—hybrid multicloud is clearly now the de facto IT architecture,” said NetApp CEO George Kurian. “This is a reality that NetApp has been preparing for many years with our Data Fabric strategy. Our close partnerships with major public cloud providers, historical leadership in storage and data management, and groundbreaking approach to creating hybrid multicloud environments with Kubernetes and advanced data services represent an important milestone. It is an exciting foundation for our customers to drive IT transformation today and for further innovation in the years to come.”

 

Bring the public cloud experience on the premises to free developers to build anywhere

NetApp offers users a true hybrid multicloud experience with a consistent service consumption model across public clouds and on the premises. Now, customers can simplify effective infrastructure-as-a-service delivery on the premises and deliver new services and applications faster with NetApp Cloud Data Services on NetApp HCI, including:

NetApp Kubernetes Service on NetApp HCI. Provides an automated Kubernetes deployment engine, Application Marketplace, and Application Orchestration, now with NetApp HCI as a deployable region. Customers can meet the demands of the business by automating management complexities and without sacrificing performance for scale limits, freeing developers to move from idea to deployment in record time.

Cloud Volumes on NetApp HCI.  High-performance persistent storage, delivered through a streamlined and simplified user experience, in all major public clouds, now extended on the premises with NetApp HCI. Now, customers can simplify how they deploy and manage services across their premises and the public cloud in a frictionless, cloudlike consumption experience.

NetApp Cloud Data Services help customers transform their businesses by enabling them to take advantage of cloud innovation with enterprise data services that are consistently delivered across their choice of cloud. New enhancements in NetApp Cloud Data Services announced today include:

– New beta release of Cloud Volumes Service for Google Cloud, along with Microsoft Azure’s announcement last month of Azure NetApp Files, fulfills availability of fully managed, pay-as-you-go data services across your choice of the leading cloud providers.

– New Cloud Volumes ONTAP for Google Cloud offers the performance, availability, and data protection capabilities that organizations need to run their business-critical applications in Google Cloud.

A data fabric provides a common framework for a seamless hybrid multicloud experience. NetApp helps customers build their unique data fabric to discover, integrate, automate, optimize, protect, and secure their data, applications, and resources. New solutions and services introduced include:

– New fabric orchestration toolset, the Fabric Orchestrator, provides a cloud data service to help customers discover, manage, automate, and govern all of their data, no matter where it resides.

– New pay-per-use offerings give customers the flexibility to manage, use, and pay for their hybrid multicloud environments. These new cloudlike, on-premises offerings are available in two options:

— Cloud Consumption for NetApp HCI. On-premises systems delivered as a radically simple, monthly payment model.

— Cloud Volumes Service On Premises. Fully managed, pay-per-use, on-premises NetApp data storage service.

– NetApp Cloud Insights is now available as a “freemium” offering with a free Basic edition for NetApp systems that includes NetApp HCI and NetApp AFF systems. The service also includes monitoring and placement optimization for NetApp HCI and NetApp Kubernetes Service in addition to real-time dashboards.

– New NetApp Professional Services for the Data Fabric are now available to provide customers with the expertise and skillsets they need to design, implement, automate, and orchestrate a data fabric designed to meet their specific business needs.

Robot used in remote diagnosis and treatment in Vietnam

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Robot used in remote diagnosis and treatment in Vietnam

Tech June 23, 2019 12:00

By Viet Nam News/ANN

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HAI PHONG – The Children’s Hospital in Hai Phong City has launched a clinical trial simulation using a robot with the help of Korea’s Children’s Hospital.

The trial aims to gradually improve robotic application in training, remote diagnosis and medical treatment to improve the efficiency of treatment and patient care.

“The clinical trial simulation will help accelerate hi-tech applications in diagnosis and treatment,” said Dr Bui Van Chien, director of Hai Phong Children’s Hospital.

“In the near future, doctors in Hai Phong will be able to discuss directly with their Korean peers about different cases around the clock,” said the director.

Training courses and seminars between the two hospitals will also be organised with the assistance of the robot.

In the future, the use of robots in diagnosis and treatment will be applied in hospitals nationwide, especially in remote, mountainous areas and islands.

Dr Pham Thu Xanh, director of Hai Phong’s Healthcare Department, said the use of robots was considered the first step of using artificial intelligence in healthcare services.

China steps up food safety with Internet technology

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China steps up food safety with Internet technology

Tech June 23, 2019 11:04

By China Daily/ANN

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BEIJING – China is aiming to improve food safety by applying an Internet Plus model and big data technology.

The proposal was raised during the China Food Safety Publicity Week, which is jointly initiated by 23 departments, including the food safety commission of the State Council and the National Health Commission.

China has been pushing hard to enhance food safety. A total of 25 enterprises were rewarded as national model units for their innovative moves in improving food safety, according to a meeting held amid China Food Safety Publicity Week.

China should focus on helping the food service industry improve management in supply chain, purchasing and food processing, and therefore, allows administrations in multiple levels to conduct inspections, real-time analysis and precautions, according to Li Li from the Chinese Academy of Inspection and Quarantine.

The China Food Safety Publicity Week is an annual event initiated in 2011. The campaign will last from June 18 to 30 this year.

Fraud battle spurs INNOVATION

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  • Joe Cunningham, head of risk in Asia Pacific for Visa
  • Chris Clark, the regional president for Asia Pacific at Visa

Fraud battle spurs INNOVATION

Tech June 22, 2019 13:06

By Asina Pornwasin
The Nation Weekend
Shanghai

5,251 Viewed

In bid to outsmart the cheats, Visa puts range of technologies to work amid enthusiastic embrace of credit by Thais

WITH the goal of halving the fraud rate by 2025, Visa aims to lead a new phase of payment security by collaborating with stakeholders in the payment ecosystem and continuing efforts to protect “deep value”, enhance data collection and empower consumers.

The development of digital payments has spawned a proliferation of data that attracts an increasing number of cybercriminals. According to Juniper Research, fraud is projected to cost retailers worldwide US$130 billion (Bt4 trillion) over the next five years.

Chris Clark, the regional president for Asia Pacific at Visa, said that innovation, data and technology will power the next generation of fraud management solutions.

“We are on the cusp of the fourth payment revolution,” said Clark.

Visa’s three-fold security strategy is to empower the consumer; protect, harness and devalue data by investing in intelligence and technology; and secure the future of payment.

“Our vision is to see a significant reduction in the fraud rate by 2025,” said Clark.

The core components of the payments ecosystem are data, people and infrastructure, he noted.

The digital era has led to an astonishing proliferation of data and data endpoints for criminals to exploit. The most challenging attacks exploit human vulnerabilities rather than technological ones.

The payment infrastructure is rapidly expanding, giving rise to an increasingly sophisticated criminal infrastructure.

Visa has claimed that the use of artificial intelligence (AI) within Visa Advanced Authorisation (VAA)

has helped financial institutions prevent an estimate $25 billion (Bt771 billion) in annual fraud, and made the global payment ecosystem

safer for both retailers and consumers.

When data analytics is used with authentication methods like biometrics to verify the cardholder, payment security is further enhanced.

Last year, Visa processed more than 127 billion transactions between merchants and financial institutions on VisaNet and employed AI to analyse 100 per cent of the transactions, each in about one millisecond.

Financial institutions can therefore approve legitimate purchases while quickly identifying and preventing fraudulent transactions.

VAA is a layer of fraud prevention that can help drive down risk and fraud for financial institutions and retailers, while helping to reduce friction due to false declines for account holders, said Clark. More than 8,000 financial institutions in 129 countries use VAA.

Asia Pacific generates $18 trillion (Bt555 trillion) in payment volume, about 23 per cent of Visa’s global business. However, huge cash opportunities of 55 per cent or around $6.1 trillion remain in the region, given that electronic payments make up about 45 per cent of transactions.

Meanwhile, digital payments continue to grow across Asia Pacific as consumers become more active users of e-commerce and rapidly adopt cashless methods of transactions.

Joe Cunningham, head of risk in Asia Pacific for Visa, said almost every government in Asia Pacific is focused on driving a digitalisation agenda, reducing the reliance on cash and cheques.

This has created huge opportunities for digital payment innovations. The payment industry generates significant amount of data, some of which is sensitive and attractive to criminal organisations.

Asia Pacific’s e-commerce sales are expected to reach $3.5 trillion in 2021, further cementing the region as the biggest market in the world for online shopping. Technologies like tokenisation will help to ensure no token details are transmitted during an online transition, said Cunningham.

Visa’s token service option replaces sensitive account information, such as the 16-digit account number, with a unique digital identifier called a token.

This token allows payments to be processed without exposing actual account details that could potentially be compromised.

“We envisage a future from passwords, where consumers benefit from the advanced technology to authenticate their identity. A future with less fraud and less friction,” said Cunningham.

However, Clark added, we are now in the fourth revolution in payment, in which payment is driven by emerging technologies including quantum computing, artificial intelligence (AI), internet of things (IoT) and biometrics.

Some of these have already been implemented in public transportation, media, telecommunication, retail, healthcare, banking and payment. These innovative payment methods also led to the evolution of fraud in the fourth evolution as well.

In the lingo of security experts, the fourth evolution of fraud is experiencing emerging threat vectors.

Southeast Asia offers the largest opportunity for cash payment in Asia Pacific. E-payment will be available through many forms including plastic cards, but also watches, smartphones and IoT devices.

According to Gartner consultancy, by 2021 the number of connected devices worldwide will be roughly 25 billion, causing issuers and retailers to respond to consumer demand for greater convenience through access and use of payment account information across multiple channels and devices.

“Visa is helping to safeguard the payment ecosystem through a multilayered approach to payment data safety, with solutions and services based on global security standards, protecting and devaluing sensitive data,” said Clark.

Shivakumar Sriraman, Visa’s chief risk officer for Southeast Asia, said that hyper-connectivity is creating new ways to pay.

The use of 21 billion connected devices by 2020 potentially creates a $600 billion cybercrime business, with the average data breach costing $1.2 million, according to Kaspersky Lab.

This is also known as the chaining attack landscape.

Visa’s security strategy is to empower consumers, banks and merchants; to invest in intelligent ecosystem assets; to establish a governance process; and to promote a strategic vision for security to be a catalyst for growth, enabling responsible innovation and enhanced convenience, said Sriraman.

He added that Visa had already launched its Asia Pacific Security Roadmap in many countries, including Thailand.

The security roadmap is a set of market-specific initiatives and goals backed by Visa rules, mandates and incentives. It is also collaboratively agreed with clients and regulatory bodies so as to drive improvements in the security of the industry.

“According to our security roadmap, we are now on track with tokenisation and are moving forward to the card-on-file tokenisation by 2022,” said Sriraman.

Thailand actively engaged

Thailand is among the countries mostly actively engaged in digital payment, led by e-commerce and transit.

Shirley Yu, Visa’s group general manager for Greater China, said that China is No 2 in the world for consumers who made a purchase with their phones over the past month, twice the penetration level of the United States. Thailand is No 1 in the world for consumers who made a purchase through their phones.

Meanwhile, most Thais were using contactless payment for transit.

According to the latest Consumer Payment Attitude Study by Visa, 42 per cent of Thai consumers were carrying less cash than in the previous two years. This represents a huge increase compared to the 26 per cent recorded in the previous study. It demonstrates a willingness to go digital, with 73 per cent of Thai respondents citing convenience as the top reasons they increased their cashless payments, especially when using cashless payment for transit.

New trends and digital payment solutions are inline with the Thailand National e-Payment agenda, pushing the Kingdom a step closer to a cashless economy, including through transit solutions, e-commerce solutions, digital solutions, tokens and mobile payments.

Visa has a transit programme that is dedicated to the expansion and acceleration of the use of debit, credit and prepaid accounts for mass transit fees.

Robert Walls, Visa’s head of hub consumer products & digital solutions in Asia Pacific, said the company over the past year helped to launch contactless transit solutions in 20 cities across 12 countries, with more than 150 projects currently underway.

“If people start using a contactless card to pay, it would support the wider adoption of contactless payments and set the foundation for future ways to pay. Getting around by public transpiration is something a lot of people do every day,” said Walls.

Major cities have enabled open-loop payment cards for public transport including London, Sydney, New York and Singapore. The project with Singapore was one of Visa’s largest implementations for contactless acceptance for transit, with 30,000 acceptance points.

The first step to enabling the use of credit and debit cards at the turnstile is to enable open-loop payment, Walls added.

The open-loop payment in transit refers to the acceptance of payment methods that are not proprietary to the transportation network in question. In Bangkok, the Rabbit card is an example of a “closed-loop” payment system because it can only be used for travel on the BTS Skytrain.

These payment methods often require a customer to convert their money to transit-only funds stored in the card, which is then used to travel. For example, if a tourist comes to Thailand and wants to travel on the BTS, he or she will need to buy a transit fare card to board the train. This requires waiting in line to buy a card at the ticketing machine and having the necessary cash on hand to pay the fare. The customer also needs to carry the additional card with them on the ride.

Visa’s role in transit is about providing the right standards and solutions to make it easier for transit operators to accept contactless at their fare gates, and importantly, it is to fully transform the passenger experience.

“We have dedicated speci

Apple recalls some older MacBook Pros

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Apple recalls some older MacBook Pros

Tech June 22, 2019 12:05

By The Nation Weekend

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Apple has announced a voluntary recall of a limited number of older generation 15-inch MacBook Pro models that contain a battery which may overheat and pose a safety risk.

The units were sold primarily between September 2015 and February 2017 and can be identified by their product serial number.

The recall does not affect any other models.

Apple said that, because customer safety is a top priority, it is asking customers to stop using affected 15-inch MacBook Pro units. Customers should visit the Apple website for details on product eligibility and how to have a battery replaced for free.

“To confirm which model you have, choose About This Mac from the Apple menu in the upper-left corner of your screen. If you have a MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Mid 2015), enter your computer’s serial number on the programme page to see if it is eligible for a battery replacement,” said the company.

Apple revolutionised personal technology with the introduction of the Macintosh in 1984. Today, Apple says it leads the world in innovation with iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch and Apple TV.

Apple’s four software platforms – iOS, macOS, watchOS and tvOS – provide experiences across all Apple devices and let people use services including the App Store, Apple Music, Apple Pay and iCloud. “Apple’s more than 100,000 employees are dedicated to making the best products on earth, and to leaving the world better than we found it,” the company said.

NBTC links with more universities for 5G testing

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Representatives of NBTC and three universities and witnesses pose together in the press conference yesterday
Representatives of NBTC and three universities and witnesses pose together in the press conference yesterday

  NBTC links with more universities for 5G testing

Tech June 21, 2019 01:00

By   SIRIVISH TOOMGUM
THE NATION

THE National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) yesterday signed a collaboration with Chiang Mai University, Khon Kaen University, and Prince of Songkla University, to set up a 5G testing centre at each of their campuses.

The NBTC has already joined with Chulalongkorn University to set up a 5G wireless broadband technology testing centre at that university.

These moves are part of the |regulator’s continued preparations to get 5G off the ground next |year.

Among the use-case testing that Khon Kaen University will focus on is smart agriculture, while Prince of Songkla University will concentrate of long-distance telehealth and smart security.

Chiang Mai University will focus on telemedicine, smart city, virtual reality and robotics.

NBTC secretary-general Takorn Tantasith said that each of the campuses, including Chulalongkorn University, were expected to begin testing in the next few months.

The regulator will grant a budget of around Bt56 million to Chulalongkorn University to fund its testing centre, and is expected to match that grant for each of the other three campuses.

The three major telecom operators are in support of the testing at all the universities.

The NBTC on Wednesday allocated a 700MHz licence to each of Advanced Info Service, Total Access Communication (DTAC), and True Corp to provide the 5G service. The licence becomes valid starting in October 2020.