Google suspected of underreporting income in Korea

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People pass by the Google logo at the Web Summit in Lisbon on November 8, 2017. Europe's largest tech event Web Summit will be held at Parque das Nacoes in Lisbon from November 6 to November 9. / AFP PHOTO
People pass by the Google logo at the Web Summit in Lisbon on November 8, 2017. Europe’s largest tech event Web Summit will be held at Parque das Nacoes in Lisbon from November 6 to November 9. / AFP PHOTO

Google suspected of underreporting income in Korea

Tech December 25, 2017 11:47

By The Korea Herald/ANN

Google Korea reported less than 20 percent of its actual sales generated in Korea, according to local media reports Friday, prompting calls for the US search giant to properly disclose its sales and pay taxes here.

According to local broadcaster SBS, the Korean arm of Google reported sales of 267.1 billion won ($245 million) to tax authorities last year, much less than its estimated sales of 1.8 trillion won calculated by app analysis firm IGAWorks.

Such a low sales figure may be reported because the revenue generated in Korea — along with sales generated in other Asian nations — is sent to Google Asia Pacific, which located in Singapore, considered an Asian tax haven.

Figuring out actual sales generated in Korea is also difficult because Google Korea is not obligated to publicly disclose its sales or taxes here because it is set up as a limited liability company.

Google’s continued opaque business and its growing sales of Google Play in the nation has led to growing calls for more transparent business performance. Sales in Google Play accounts for 71 percent of the total content sales of the app market in Korea this year.

“Because Google Korea does not accurately disclose its service sales, doubts remain over whether the company properly pays taxes,” said Ahn Chang-nam, a professor at Kangnam University’s tax law college.

Globally, some nations have begun to take action to collect “unpaid taxes” from Google. The UK and Italy announced they would recoup 130 million pounds ($174 million) and 360 million euros ($424 million), respectively, in taxes from the search firm.

“Korea should also have legal grounds and join international movements of tackling BEPS to improve its bargaining power with global firms,” said Shin Min-soo, a professor at Hanyang University. Base erosion and profit shifting, or BEPS, refers to tax avoidance strategies that exploit gaps and mismatches in tax rules to artificially shift profits to low or no-tax locations.

Setting legal groundwork is ongoing here from both lawmakers and the government. Rep. Kim Sung-tae of the main opposition Liberty Korea Party has proposed a bill to revise the current Telecommunications Business Act to impose the same regulations on global companies as it imposes on local firms.

The government began reviewing how to regulate global companies, including Google, by creating a task force comprised of representatives of the ICT Ministry, Finance Ministry, National Tax Service and Financial Services Commission.

A Google Korea spokesperson said, “Gogle follows the laws and pays all applicable taxes in Korea. Information on Google Korea’s revenue and profit is regularly reported to the Korean tax authority.”

Mobike inks deal with Line Corp

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An employee (right) of Mobike addresses a visitor's inquiries at an exhibition held in Guangzhou, Guangdong province. The company ranks top in bike-sharing firms in China.
An employee (right) of Mobike addresses a visitor’s inquiries at an exhibition held in Guangzhou, Guangdong province. The company ranks top in bike-sharing firms in China.

Mobike inks deal with Line Corp

Tech December 25, 2017 11:37

By China Daily/ANN

BEIJING – Partnership with major Japanese social media provider to facilitate expansion.

Chinese bike-sharing top player Mobike Technology Co Ltd on Wednesday announced a strategic partnership with LINE Corp, Japan’s largest mobile social network service provider, to better facilitate its expansion in the Japanese market.

Under the partnership, LINE led an undisclosed Series A round of investment in Mobike Japan, the Beijing-based dockless rental company’s subsidiary in the country. LINE Corp, which operates Japan’s popular messaging platform LINE with 71 million local users, will own less than 20 per cent of Mobike Japan, taking the largest minority stake.

The two companies will also work together to integrate Mobike service into the LINE app in a similar way as it did with WeChat in China. The integration will allow LINE users to rent Mobike shared bikes inside the chat app, simply by scanning the QR code on the bike and paying using their LINE pay account or other payment methods.

“LINE is the clear leader in Japan’s social media space, with a strong culture of innovation and creativity, and therefore, is the perfect partner to support our ambitious growth plans in Japan,” Mobike founder Hu Weiwei said in a statement. “Working together with LINE, we will be able to provide tens of millions of LINE users with a seamless and localized experience for finding, unlocking and paying for bikes with the LINE app.”

Takeshi Idezawa, president and CEO of LINE Corp, said via the new partnership, LINE was eager to offer additional value-added services that make life more convenient and comfortable for users.

“Through this capital investment and strategic business partnership with Mobike, we can support the expansion of Mobike’s service in Japan by leveraging our network that make use of our various activities and services,” he added.

The partnership marks Mobike’s latest move to further its global expansion strategy and to better integrate in local markets.

“Similar to WeChat in China, LINE is Japan’s most popular messaging service platform,” said Zhang Xu, a Beijing-based internet analyst. “Thus the integration will greatly benefit Mobike, providing a larger user base and enabling new ways of conveniently accessing the shared bike services.”

Founded in 2015, Mobike currently rents out more than 8 million bikes in more than 200 cities in 12 countries.

Under its ambitious goal to expand the services to 200 cities globally by the end of this year, Mobike began offering its services in the Japanese city of Sapporo in August. And it is set to officially pedal to Fukuoka this week.

Its top domestic rival, Ofo Inc, also expanded its bike-sharing services in Japan in August, with a similar global strategy, via a partnership agreement with Japanese technology firm SoftBank Commerce & Service Corp.

Google removes content for Vietnam

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(FILES) This file photo taken on November 20, 2017 shows shows logos of US technology company Google displayed on computer screens. /AFP PHOTO
(FILES) This file photo taken on November 20, 2017 shows shows logos of US technology company Google displayed on computer screens. /AFP PHOTO

Google removes content for Vietnam

Tech December 25, 2017 11:35

By Viet Nam News/ANN

HANOI – Vietnamese Government has so far requested Google to block and delete about 5,000 clips with bad content on YouTube, which is one of Google’s subsidiaries. Of which, 4,500 clips were erased from YouTube.

HANOI — YouTube has removed approximately 90 per cent of “toxic” video clips the Vietnamese Government complained about in 2017, Minister of Information and Communications Truong Minh Tuan claimed yesterday.

During a conference on the ministry’s performance this year and its agenda for 2018, Tuan said that the Government so far requested Google to block and delete about 5,000 clips with bad content on YouTube, which is one of Google’s subsidiaries.

Of which, 4,500 clips were erased from YouTube.

The largest social network in the world and also the most popular in Vietnam, Facebook,  removed 159 accounts smearing the reputation of officials and leaders or those posting anti-Party and State content this year, Tuan said.

Under Vietnam’s request, Facebook also deleted 107 fake accounts and another 394 advertising and selling illegal goods and services.

“One of the highlights of the (communications) ministry this year is making Vietnam one of those countries pioneering in implementing

measures to tighten management of enterprises providing trans-border services, particularly Google and Facebook,” the minister said.

“Vietnam is among those countries of which the rate of their (removal) demand stisfied by Google was the highest in the world,” he added.

In times of rapid technological development, Tuan said forces with evil intents would take advantage to deliver toxic information using foreign-based social services.

The mission of the communications ministry in 2018 is to improve mechanisms to monitor information on the Internet and manage foreign content service providers operating in Vietnam, while encouraging domestic firms to join the sector.

Communications growth

According to the Ministry of Information and Communications, the sector gained revenue of more than VND2.13 quadrillion (US$94.9 billion) this year, a growth rate of 9.34 per cent over 2016.

The information technology industry yielded about VNĐ1.7 quadrillion, about 80 per cent of the total sector’s revenue. .Communications service providers were far behind in the second place, with only VNĐ352 trillion in the year despite growth over 2016.

Illicit sites dupe smartphones, PCs to mine digital coins

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Illicit sites dupe smartphones, PCs to mine digital coins

Tech December 25, 2017 10:19

By The Japan News/ANN

TOKYO – There has been a rapid jump in the number of illicit websites that manipulate people’s computers or smartphones to obtain virtual currencies such as bitcoin through a process called mining.

All virtual currency transactions are recorded on public ledgers called blockchain, which are managed jointly by PC users around the world. People can obtain the digital coins through mining — a process where remuneration is earned by adding new transaction records to the ledgers.

In many cases, high-performance PCs are used for this mining operation because it involves a huge volume of data calculation. There is also a method called pool mining, in which multiple PCs share the same task.

The illicit websites in question abuse this pool mining method. PC or smartphone users are directed to the illicit websites without their knowledge if they browse certain fake websites or ads. If their device’s operating software or apps have flaws, the device then automatically downloads a malicious program, which starts the mining operation. Any digital coins that are obtained are sent to the operators of the illicit websites.

PCs that run this mining program see a drop in their performance speed in some cases, but it is difficult for users to tell if their PCs are being used for mining.

Information security firm Trend Micro Inc. in Tokyo confirmed that there were a total of 1,749 such illicit websites from July to September, about 12 times the figure in the April-June period.One bitcoin, which had a value of about ¥100,000 at domestic exchanges at the beginning of this year, topped ¥1 million for the first time on Nov. 26 and ¥2 million earlier this month.

“If your PCs are used without your permission, that means you are forced to join in a plot by an illicit website operator to gain revenue,” a Trend Micro official said. The official called for keeping software up-to-date at all times, saying, “There is also a danger of viruses entering your PC.”

QR codes to aid barrier door operation on train platforms

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QR codes to aid barrier door operation on train platforms

Tech December 25, 2017 09:40

By The Japan News/ANN

4,982 Viewed

TOKYO – In a world-first, QR codes are being used in the operation of platform safety barriers at train stations — a development aimed at accelerating the installation of barriers and slashing the hefty cost.

 The new system also has the advantage of being able to handle trains with different door placements.

Safety barriers to prevent people from falling onto the tracks are being installed on station platforms ahead of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics. The Tokyo metropolitan government launched a practical demonstration of the new system on the municipal Toei Subway lines last month.

When a train pulls into the Toei Asakusa Line’s Daimon Station in Minato Ward, doors open in a safety barrier that has been temporarily constructed on the platform. Affixed to each train door window is a QR code sticker measuring about 15 centimeters by 15 centimeters.

“Cameras installed on the platform read the codes, and the barrier doors located in front of the train doors open and close in unison,” an official of the metropolitan government’s Bureau of Transportation said proudly.

The stickers display a geometric pattern similar to the QR codes that mobile phone users read with their device’s camera to connect to a dedicated website.

The metropolitan government worked with Denso Wave Inc., an Aichi Prefecture-based company that creates QR codes, to develop the world’s first method for operating safety barrier doors that uses QR codes. Trials of the new system began on Nov. 24.

Huge savings likely

One issue that has made installing safety barriers difficult is that trains in the Tokyo metropolitan area run through an increasing number of directly connected lines operated by different companies.

These operators run trains with differing numbers of cars and doors, so precisely opening and closing the correct safety barrier doors requires the installation of expensive communication devices in train cars.

Installation of safety barrier doors has not been completed on the Asakusa Line, which operates through services on four private railway lines operated by Keikyu Corp., Keisei Electric Railway Co., Hokuso-Railway Co. and Shibayama Railway Co.

Some trains on these lines have six cars, and others have eight. Some cars have two doors on each side, and others have three. With such a variety of train cars running on these lines, installing communication equipment needed the understanding of each rail operator — and for them to bear the financial burden.

To resolve this problem, the metropolitan government approached Denso Wave in 2015. The QR codes contain information including the number of cars in each train and the number of doors on each car.

Scanner cameras mounted on the platform ceiling read the QR codes, and this newly developed technology opens and closes the safety barrier doors located in front of the train car doors.

The cost of installing communication equipment, which according to a bureau official could amount to “tens of millions of yen for each train car formation,” can now be replaced by the cost of affixing stickers on each train car.

Platform safety barriers featuring this new technology will be installed in four of the Asakusa Line’s busiest stations — Shinbashi, Daimon, Mita and Sengakuji — before the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. They likely will be installed in the line’s 16 other stations after the Games.

Other types being tried

The central government and railway operators aim to install platform safety barrier doors at 882 stations across Japan by fiscal 2020, when the Tokyo Olympics will be held. As of the end of March this year, they had been installed at 686 stations. However, at the 260 stations used by 100,000 or more people daily, only 84 had barriers.

Installing the barriers can often involve extending and strengthening the platforms. Rail operators are making various efforts to overcome these problems.

In 2016, East Japan Railway Co. started an experiment involving a new type of door at Machida Station on the Yokohama Line. The doors have a frame made from metal pipes that reduce the overall weight by about 30 percent. This will reportedly eliminate the need for major strengthening work on some platforms.

Keikyu trialed a new type of platform barrier at Miurakaigan Station in Miura, Kanagawa Prefecture, until September. Trains with differing numbers of doors use this station. The new platform barrier can adjust the position of its doors so they line up with the train doors.

“The test revealed problems such as the sensor reaction speed and the length of time needed to open and close the doors,” a Keikyu public relations official said. “We’ll continue to consider how we can put the new system into practical use.”

Why it’s time consumers ask tough questions about data privacy

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Why it’s time consumers ask tough questions about data privacy

Tech December 24, 2017 12:17

By MONTRI STAPORNKUL
SPECIAL TO THE SUNDAY NATION

2,325 Viewed

TODAY in Thailand, the word “privacy” doesn’t hold a lot of meaning for some people. On the contrary, many people feel almost flattered by their data being leaked.

They go to the shopping mall and they get a push message saying, “You’re close to our shop and we have a special, exclusive discount for you. Come visit us.” That makes them feel very special. It’s almost like being famous. It’s not perceived as “creepy.”

I think this is going to change, though. There’s a new story about identity theft or “phishing” every second day in the news. People are starting to hear more often about getting scammed or robbed online. They start to realise that their information is out there for anyone to see.

Certainly, at some point, the awareness levels will increase. A quick look at Pantip or blognone, reveals that they now have pop-ups asking for consent to use your data. That didn’t exist last year.

If you’re ready to improve the safety of your data, know that there are two sides to data privacy: the side you control and the side you don’t control. It’s up to you whether you want to check into every single venue you visit and share every dish you eat, or even your photos of the toilets when they’re particularly fancy. You can control that.

Then there’s the personal data that you’ve handed over to companies because you needed to use their services. For example, your bank or mobile service provider has your ID number, address, and phone number. Your bank would also know all your transactions, while your mobile service provider would know who you’ve called and which websites you’ve visited.

That is a lot of data for them to hold and with it comes a great responsibility. And it begs the question: what is being done with that data? Are you confident it is safeguarded carefully? Is everything being done to protect it? Or are they just ticking off the boxes to meet bare legal requirements?

If you’re counting on your data being |protected by legal requirements, know that the only requirement is “consent”. That form you signed ages ago, or those boxes you ticked on a website – that’s all the law requires.

Everything else depends on the commitment of individual organisations. I’ve worked in a number of them and I can tell you I’d say the average local company gets a two out of five rating on privacy, even the very big ones. The ones with a global footprint usually do better, even if their presence here is small. Size isn’t what matters.

At DTAC, privacy is not just a principle and a policy posted on our corporate website. It goes beyond that. You have to look at the users, the people at the operations level. They are the most risk exposed. For the month of November, we trained 700 people across eight 2.5-hour sessions. And we’re continuously producing internal campaigns online, on our in-house radio and on billboards.

Training is key because of the ambiguities surrounding privacy. If you just look at the code of conduct, well, how do you interpret it? The code of conduct says that our employees should not reveal, disclose, sell or distribute company secrets in any form. So if I go into a company’s records and look at my girlfriend’s file, I’m not revealing, disclosing or selling any information, am I? And yet, it’s clearly not okay. These are the kind of scenarios we have to cover in training. I use real-world examples to show the risks that can come with consulting information other than for work-related reasons. And I remind our teams that there are better avenues to do this without infringing on privacy. Want to consult your elderly grandparents’ phone bill? Ask them for their password and use the DTAC website. Don’t do it using your employee privileges.

But training without a control system is not enough. Every access to information at DTAC has to be reconciled with a customer’s request for that information. If we spot any unreconciled access, our managers will investigate it, and I randomly investigate the managers, too.

Finally, full data protection is actually a combination of data privacy plus data security. We’ve made big changes on who can access what. A single password won’t get you access to everything anymore. And it’s impossible to download staff records in bulk, which is what happened in a hacking attack on a competitor last year. You’d have access to one or two records at most.

I really hope consumers will demand more regarding their data protection. If someone steals your identity and commits a crime, you could get in serious trouble. There is no 100-per-cent protection, but do ask yourself: Is your data held by a company that is watching, a company that cares, and a company with systems in place to spot anomalies?

Montri Stapornkul is an assistant |vice president, policy governance culture department, DTAC.

Financial inclusion is in your hands

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Apirut Vancha-Am
Apirut Vancha-Am

Financial inclusion is in your hands

Tech December 24, 2017 12:04

By Apirut Vancha-Am
SPECIAL TO THE SUNDAY NATION

6,491 Viewed

SRI OWNS a tiny noodle shop outside of Bangkok. On a good day, she can earn a substantial sum from selling her Michelin-worthy noodle recipes. About one-third of what she earns each day goes into buying ingredients.

Life was good for Sri until she fell ill for a few days. After recovering, Sri found herself short of the cash needed to reopen the shop. Due to a lack of credit and only needing a small sum, Sri couldn’t go to a bank, and so turned to a loan shark. What happened next was the kind of story we all know but, perhaps, never really care enough about – high interest rate and debt collection methods that border violations of human rights.

Fintech refers to tech companies that use new technologies to offer new and more user-friendly forms of financial services. The Millennial Disruption Index – a survey done by Viacom Media Network in 2013 – showed that more than 70 per cent of the millennials believed financial innovation would come from outside the industry, and were more excited about new financial service offerings from Google, Amazon, or Paypal than from the banks. The index showed that Fintech was popular among the younger generations back when it was started.

However, there have been rapid shifts in the domination of financial technology by the tech companies in recent years. Most commercial banks, including those in Thailand, now have a division focusing on fintech and financial innovation to come up with new financial products and services that leverage the same cutting-edge technologies, such as mobile computing, machine learning and blockchain, to compete with the tech competitors. Some banks went so far as to create new organisations, outside of the parent organisations, that think and work like a tech company. In doing so, they transformed their situation from being disrupted to becoming a disrupter. A good example of this is Kasikornbank’s KBTG.

Aside from offering new innovative financial services to their existing customers, the use of Fintech also allows banks to serve potential |customers – those considered “underbanked” and “unbanked” – who in the past did not have access to financial services due to costs, lack of credit or access. The ability for the banks to serve everyone is known as “financial inclusion.” According to the World Bank, around 2 billion people don’t use |formal financial services and over 50 per cent of adults in the poorest households are unbanked.

Financial inclusion is a key enabler to reducing poverty and boosting prosperity. The president of the World Bank Group has called for universal financial access, where everyone can have access to financial services, by 2020. A report from Thailand’s Ministry of Finance in 2016 shows that 56 per cent of Thais received micro finance from special financial institutions and less than 9 per cent from commercial banks. Clearly, most Thais often turn to non-bank providers for small sums of money.

The K Plus Shop is an example of fintech for financial inclusion from KBank. It is a mobile application designed to be a one-stop solution for micro businesses such as small shops and street vendors. The app is a point of sale, sales tracking, sales reports and PR tool combined into one app that anyone can download and use free of charge on any smartphone – iOS or Android. With K Plus Shop, the vendor can receive QR payment from any customer using K Plus, other mobile banking or e-Wallet applications via the standard QR for PromptPay, as well as from WeChat Pay and Alipay. The vendor can also use the app to create and send out promotions to nearby customers in real time at no cost. The real beauty of K Plus Shop in terms of financial inclusion comes with the use of machine learning to create behaviour-based credit models based on sell information. A variety of new financial services using the app can be offered to the vendors over a period of time. For example, Sri can choose to borrow Bt2,000 and return it in seven days from the app with instant approval. As a lifelong practitioner in |information technology, I have never been so |excited by the potential of technology as a means to make a difference. The fact that we now have super computers that are always connected to the Internet in everyone’s hand allows business and technologies to really make profound impacts on people’s lives. The poorest households are more likely to have access to mobile phones than to toilets or clean water, the World Bank has said. This underlines the significance of mobile technology and its potential in making the world a better place for everyone. We can all make good apps to make the rich richer. But what about making apps that can make life better for those who have always been underserved? Banks are not for charity, you might say. A study done by Accenture and CARE (care.org) found that serving the unbanked is a US$380 billion (nearly Bt12.5 trillion) market opportunity worldwide.

Apirut Vancha-Am is the principal visionary |architect, Kasikorn Business-Technology Group.

Pioneering tech solutions for the future

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Sarun Sumriddetchkajorn
Sarun Sumriddetchkajorn

Pioneering tech solutions for the future

Tech December 24, 2017 12:01

By JIRAPAN BOONNOON
THE SUNDAY NATION

3,809 Viewed

NECTEC PLANS RESEARCH TO DRIVE THE ECONOMY |AND IMPROVE LIFE FOR THAIS IN THE 4.0 ERA

THE NATIONAL Electronics and Computer Technology Centre (Nectec) will focus its attention on five areas to support Thailand 4.0 scheme.

Sarun Sumriddetchkajorn, director of Nectec said that the agency next year will focus on five areas: agriculture, smart manufacturing and services industries, health and medicine, energy and environment, and education, including lifelong education and learning.

For agriculture, the agency has developed a Food and Agriculture Revolution model, a “smart farm” solution to support the country’s farmers. The smart farm will focus on technology, management and application to increase on-farm production and help to reduce costs, while also upgrading agricultural standards to fit the digital economy.

In the area of smart manufacturing and services industries, the agency will utilise innovation and technology to support machine monitoring systems, and production-line health monitoring systems, in order to maintain performance and support efficiency.

It can closely monitor data indicating the state and performance of the machines, and so help to reduce machinery maintenance costs. The monitoring could also improve energy management for different sections of the production line, thus contributing to high productivity in the manufacturing sector.

The agency works with the Office of the National Economic and Social Development Board and the Digital Economy and Society Ministry to develop data integration of poverty analytics. The resulting data about basic social welfare needs is integrated with other relevant data and processed through big data analytics, data integration, global positioning and network and graph analysis to help find optimal policies to improve the quality of life for the nation’s people.

For health and medicine, the agency will focus on developing a personal health record system, an information technology system able to enhance the efficiency of provincial health services. The system will also facilitate management of health data interfaces with immediate interchangeable standards in a precise and quick manner. It would allow users to access the system via tablets and smart devices, and for doctors to send feedback to the clinic.

The agency also developed an e-referral system in Bangkok and metropolitan areas in order to transfer patient treatment data between community medical clinics and the main hospitals, so that doctors could carry on treatment for patients who are moving between facilities.

Meanwhile in the area of energy and the environment, the agency has partnered to develop energy analytics systems to monitor electricity demand, and to analyse and design energy management ranging from the energy consumed by individuals to the use of renewable energy, including energy preservation and enhancement of energy usage. The agency will also develop and set up EV charging stations in order to increase public confidence in the use of these vehicles.

Addressing the area of lifetime edu-cation and learning, the agency is developing massive open online courses and open education resources to support and improve the education sector. It will provide KidBright, a board developed to stimulate the potential of systematic and creative thinking among children through a learn-and-play method. The board is equipped with a display and simple sensors that operate in compliance with the function commands. The learners can design and create the block-structured programming commands via an application on their smartphones.

Nectec’s Sarun noted the agency’s researcher teams would work together with partners under the concept of “practical research, springboard innovation.” The concept will guide them as they utilise research findings, technology, knowledge and digital innovation to produce new services and products to support and promote business growth, create added value, and bring in new income.

The result, said Sarun, would be sustainable social and economic development within the country. In doing so, it will also conduct research that will help make choices that become a significant springboard to uplifting the country into a Thailand 4.0 future.

Last year, the agency enjoyed success in developing new innovation and technology in five main areas: big data and analytics, image processing and optical imaging, machine learning, CT scans and X-rays, as well as reluctance motors and switches. It developed over 286 prototypes and provided 398 papers.

“Science, technology, research and innovation can be important tools to develop the country in various dimensions,” said Sarun. “It would improve the quality of life for Thai people as a whole and drive the country’s Thailand 4.0 scheme.”

World’s first AI-powered voice assistant for meetings

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World’s first AI-powered voice assistant for meetings

Tech December 22, 2017 19:49

By The Nation

2,566 Viewed

AI-powered voice assistants are changing the way we live. Hundreds of millions of people use these assistants regularly to check the weather, wake up on time and find their way around town.

Yet there have been no virtual assistants to help us at work … until now.

Cisco Partner Summit announced on Friday the Cisco Spark™ Assistant, which it says is the world’s first enterprise-ready voice assistant for meetings.

It will be available first on the Cisco Spark Room Series portfolio, including the new flagship Cisco Spark Room 70, which was also announced at the same time.

Cisco Spark Assistant is the latest innovation on the Cisco Spark platform. Unlike all-purpose voice assistants, Cisco Spark Assistant has one goal: to help you have great meetings that run more smoothly.

“During the next few years, AI meeting bots will be joining our work teams. When they do, people will be able to ditch the drudgery of meeting set-up and other logistics to become more creative than ever,” said Rowan Trollope, SVP and GM, Applications Group, Cisco.

“The future of great meetings is Spark with AI and our partners have an incredible opportunity to help customers take advantage of this game-changing technology.”

Netflix now supports HDR on Windows 10

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Netflix now supports HDR on Windows 10

Breaking News December 22, 2017 11:30

By The Nation

Netflix announced Friday the addition of High Dynamic Range (HDR) support on Windows 10 for both the Edge browser and the Netflix app.

Netflix members who have a supported device and a premium plan can now enjoy movies and shows in HDR.

That means more vibrant colours in “Chef’s Table”, more terrifying depths in the Upside Down in “Stranger Things 2”.

More than 200 hours of HDR entertainment is currently available and next year more HDR PCs will be on the market.

This feature is the culmination of a multi-year collaboration with industry partners.

Intel CPUs of seventh generation and up provide the capability to play Netflix HDR10 encodes. Both Intel and Nvidia developed GPUs that use 10 bits per channel for each of the RGB colours, increasing the colour space that can be represented.

With the new hardware available on consumer PCs, Netflix and Microsoft partnered to put the software pieces in place.

Microsoft added the necessary operating system and browser changes in its Windows 10 Autumn Creators Update, and Netflix engineers integrated the APIs to complete the video-player work.