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Ukiyoto Publishing (Singapore) Starts Year 2021 with Mega Thrillers & Bestsellers

February 8, 2021 by bizhub.vn

SINGAPORE - Media OutReach - 8 February 2021 – Ukiyoto Singapore Pte Ltd. starts out the year 2021 with exciting releases ranging across mystery thrillers, memoirs, biographies and culinary reviews. With its focus on literary activities in Asia, this season of Litteratura, The Literary Magazine slated for release end Feb’21 covers few of the best authors and writers from Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore and India.

In Q3 FY20-21, Ukiyoto had tied up with a chain of mega bookstores such as Kinokuniya, MPH, Times, LitBook Cafe via distributor Gerakbudaya in Malaysia to source books for placement at their stores. Several outdoor activities such as book launch, book reading, award ceremonies and others are planned in the second half of 2021 based on government decisions with regards the pandemic.

To mark the Chinese New Year 2021, an online live Panel Discussion is scheduled on 14th Feb, 12:30pm PHT on the topic, “Scope of Literature in Asia post Pandemic”. The panel comprises writers from Philippines — Lia de Jesus, Nicole Narvato, Karmela Mirriam Ebreo and Anne Marla moderated by best selling author, Shrutidhora P Mohor from India.

Christine Musa, author from Philippines says, “My book entitled, ‘I Escaped the Narcissist: Memoirs of an Empath Supernova‘ was the very first ever published book that I have, all thanks to Ukiyoto Publishing for making my dream of becoming a published author finally come true!

Christine’s future plans as a published author is to produce more content which are focused around having a peaceful life away from any form of abuse and a truthful life away from any pretentions driven by the desire to have a picture-perfect ideal life.

Karmela Mirriam Ebreo, a Filipina by blood and birth is a lawyer by profession and a blogger by passion. An active member of Soroptimist International, a global volunteer organization working to economically empower women and girls, she started Mirriam Dictionary back in 2009 when she was about to graduate college. Life had a few surprises along the way and she ended up in law school. Her recently released title, Life Un-Counselled supposed to be a collection of her musings and life hacks — That is what the title is really about, life counselling. Since she is not a psychologist but a case counsel — not an expert on life in general, it was tweaked to be “un-counselled”. However, upon consultation with Ukiyoto, she was advised that it was best to feature her craft projects for her first book with the subtitle: a case of quick craft projects.

Mirriam loves DIYs and everything crafting but hates long and complicated ones. In a nutshell, the book is for those who are like her — a lazy type of crafter.

“I am all for women empowerment. Women and girls have so much to offer this world, and when they are empowered, they can contribute more to society. Most women are inherently creative but sometimes they are discouraged by complexities. In a way, Life un-counselled: a case of quick craft project seeks to inspire these creative hearts to begin. That is also why extremely easy projects are featured in the book. From here, they can start a small business too like paper crafts or party favors. If they do that, they are one step closer to becoming economically empowered women, the goal of the organization I am in– Soroptimist International. The book somehow tries to achieve that too.” as Mirriam tells us.

Vartika Sharma Lekhak, our author from India is a post-graduate in History from JNU, an educator by profession and a travel writer.

She is the author of the book — Bra Strap, and two anthologies — When Women Speak Up and The Take Off. The short-story collection Bra Strap — The stories hidden beneath the strings gives voice to the subdued tales of women from different walks of life. It highlights the message that everyone has a story to tell, some of them are magnificent, while some are ordinary. But every story needs to be told. The Anthology ‘When Women Speak Up’, published by Women’s Web, features leading women voices in India including her contribution, ‘The Girl With Sealed Vagina.’  The Take Off, a passionate project of Cyclops, is India’s first book that brings true stories of Indian cyclists, including her contribution, ‘A Housewife’s Bike Love Story.’

From childhood, Vartika liked to maintain a writing journal. Even today she has a trunk full of old diaries, letters which she considers as her priced possessions.

Vartika’s Inspiration: “Very early I had discovered that the message which I can put across through my writing is more impactful than the spoken words. I find writing a more resonating tool than anything else. Like, when I was in grade nine, I was punished by the headmistress for something which was not my mistake. I was so angry and hurt, didn’t know how to react. Then I wrote a poem expressing my detest at the injustice and the next day in the school assembly recited it. Of course, after that, the headmistress was more annoyed and my games period were banned, but I was now at peace for speaking up.”

Vartika’s writing continued through the college days in the campus journals and sometimes through the young writers’ meets. By then it had evolved into words that were sensitive but also sharp. She was writing more about social impacts, such as the incidences of rape, dowry deaths, gender prejudice, lawlessness and others. Some of them were published in the national dailies and online forums engaged in serious discussion about these issues. The turning point came when she started receiving encouraging letters from the readers. This motivated her that there are many who think like her and most importantly, her pen is making an impact. Like a reader wrote, ‘I am the father of a boy and I read your article ‘The Mother of a Daughter.’ Thank you for an uncensored narrative of a mother’s fears. We need to read more of this more often.’

Shrutidhora P Mohor, had her debut with her autobiographical novel The Unknown Script which is a story of a young professional woman’s journey in life. Two of her next writings, both long stories, went on to take her ahead into the world of literature by clearly establishing her preferred genre as literary fiction with a strong element of politics and shades of romance in it. Of these two, Twenty Three Summers remains her most-read, most-loved work, blending the political dispute in Kashmir with a same-sex love story. The other one, Showing Results: Zero of Zero is a futuristic dystopian tale of a reclusive man and his possible encounters with alien life and the utterly real consequences of that in a digitised, virtual existence of mankind. Set in India of 2049 it is a story that silences the din and bustle of our wearily repetitive, social mediatised lives with a truth that is simple yet disturbing.

The next publication has been Where the Sky Feels Cold, a novella resituating the much-adored couple Sudarshan and Rukhi in an intensely conflictual politically destabilised contemporary India of 2019. Making a renewed use of the ‘political’ in her writings Mohor went on to pen a long story called Nefeli and Us: A Story of Love from the Past which got converted then into a graphic novel. A unique piece of work, it is a continuation of her tradition of writing which takes a serious look into even more serious questions of identity and rights through the lens of fiction, this time going back thousands of years into the Greek city-states of the classical Hellenic times.

Her latest single title The Last Gift is once again a novella in which Mohor explores postmodernist story-telling (taking advantage of her academic background, her professional competence, and her disciplinary base as a student of Political Science) by writing a story of perplexing interactions between an author-mentor and an author-disciple of his which tear apart metanarratives and the framework of sequence/ chronology of story-telling.    

Sofia Naznim is a corporate strategist, author, blogger, and influencer from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. While speaking to her she says, “I have always wanted to be an author from the first day I discovered that my ultimate passion is writing when I was thirteen years old! It took me seventeen years to fulfil my ultimate dream which is becoming an author. It didn’t happen overnight or in a short period of time. The journey was interesting yet challenging and full of obstacles. I truly believe that if we want to achieve something so hard, we need to fully prepare and work for it and be persistent no matter how tough the journey will be. Even though there were many trials encountered in my journey, I still persevere and work hard to pursue my dream. I’m happy that I stayed true in what I truly believe in, didn’t give up and endeavoured towards achieving my goals.

I seriously began sharing my articles with people when I was twenty five years old. From there onwards, I have written more than three hundred articles along with the creation of my own website with stories, and reviews. In October 2020, I finally released my first motivational book, “A Book of Life (ABOL)“. ABOL will take you in the deep journey of enlightening you to find your motivation and inspiring you to be a better you. ABOL is available in Paperback and eBook now on Amazon, Kindle, Google Play, Ukiyoto, showcased at Frankfurt Buchmesse both in online as well as paperback formats! May all us can make a difference in our lives, the life of others and other beings too by reading ABOL.”

Harish Muralidhar, a twenty-five year from India published his book, “What is Justice?” in December 2020 and has since then been on several interviews and panels speaking about his book. Harish believes Quotes can bring a drastic as well as a positive change in one’s life and they have helped him overcome difficult circumstances in his life, which was what made him come up with his first book “52 Quotes to Change Your Life.”

“I have always had the passion to write from my school days but never dared to choose it as a career. But after I started my business, I decided to spare some time for my passion and lockdown has also helped to finish my book quickly. As previously stated writing is not a full-time profession for me at this point in time, I have always motivated others to follow their passion without compromising their profession, which would give them immense satisfaction.

Watching the news and movies which revolves about the crime and tragedy in the world has affected me deeply and I wanted to bring awareness to the world about it, so I decided to write a crime fiction book which is my second book named, ‘What is Justice?’, which is a crime thriller.”

Ethel Da Costa, an award winning Lifestyle Journalist, former Editor and Radio Head, an International Lifestyle Influencer, a global nomad, a seeker of truth and love released her book, The Stiletto Foodie — A Blog Binge in Malaysia (on 1st January 2021) which is her own discovery of self and soul in Malaysia through food. She had showcased twelve culinary ambassadors who she believes represent their own journey and their expression of self through the food they create and showcase to the world.

“I feel there is a series coming out from this title since there is so much more to write on food and the food of Malaysia. In fact, food of the different countries I hope I travel through. It’s so exciting.” says Ethel.

Ethel has been on this journey for the last thirty years with a multi-faceted media career that has taken her all over the world. One such journey brought her to Malaysia in November 2019 invited by Malaysia Tourism. They invited her back again in February 2020 when she decided that she was going to heed the call of Malaysia; hence returned in March 2020 and is now currently based in Kuala Lumpur. Meeting talented chefs and their experiences and journeys made a deep impact on her.

“It brought me home to myself. The more I got to know the soul of Malaysia, the more I was experiencing healing and a freedom, a letting go, which also evolved into food blogs. A very intimate journey exists between the food and emotions. The gift of words is my vocation. There is a purpose to this gift. I’m just honouring it here on my time on Earth.”

About Ukiyoto Publishing:

Conceptualised amidst the Wahiba Sand Dunes in Oman in Jan’19 with the idea of nurturing creative talent worldwide, Ukiyoto today has reached more than 2,000 authors and writers publishing books in both digital and print formats. Paperbacks and hardbacks have been physically shipped to more than 50 countries worldwide including places such as Tunisia, Israel, Russia, Dominic Republic and many more. With its upcoming launch of Ukiyosk, an Augmented Reality enabled platform, Ukiyoto promises to integrate technology with creativity and populate flipbooks (paperbacks in digital formats) with mass visibility across the globe.

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Filed Under: Media OutReach Media OutReach, START SINGAPORE, Chinese New Year in Singapore, Mega Adventure Singapore, School Year Starts, Chinese New Year SINGAPORE, New Year SINGAPORE

Animated Hanoi preparing for Tet

August 2, 2021 by vietnamnet.vn

Pre-Tet days are the most colourful time of Hanoi when the capital changes its coat into a new vital color of spring and joy.

Covid-19 is dimming the Tet (Lunar New Year Festival) atmosphere of Hanoi a little bit, but the city still appears lively these days when Tet drawing near as people are preparing for the year’s largest traditional festival. The time honored costume of Vietnamese people is depicted through the lens of photographer Hieu Tran.

Peach blossoms are on sale for Tet. Photo: Hieu Tran

Hanoi, the thousand-year-old capital, has always been an attraction on the tourist map of Vietnam. Visitors fall in love with Hanoi for its historical sites, old architectural works and long-standing traditional cultures. 

Hanoi streets are adorned with Red flags. Photo: Hieu Tran. 

Moreover, Hanoi also wins many hearts for its simple and peaceful life that you can see right in the streets, alleyways, corners, and villages. The ordinary daily life is the charm of the capital city.

Famous sites of Hanoi such as the Old Quarters, Hoan Kiem Lake, Long Bien Bridge, Temple of Literature, St. Joseph Cathedral, Ba Dinh Square, Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum, Hoa Lo Prison, among others are familiar images of the capital and attract a lot of tourists. 

A Tet ritual: buy a little pack of salt for a lucky Lunar New Year. 

However, some others choose to get lost in the small streets to observe and discover another beauty of the city and the people.

One of them, photographer Hieu Tran, who during days wanders around the corners of Hanoi and caught some of these beautiful snapshots of Hanoians preparing to celebrate the coming New Year.

Hanoi is beautiful for its simple things: Cooking Banh Chung (Vietnamese traditional cake for Tet) on the streets. 

It comes from the national flags hanging in front of houses as a way to together welcome the important event of everyone. It also comes from peach flowers, a symbolic tree for display during Tet, which blooms in gardens and flower markets, creating a lively atmosphere of the bustling trading.

Thuoc duoc or Dahlia flowers for Tet decoration.

Peach also embellishes shops, restaurants, hotels, commercial centres, and indispensably, at home. Calligraphy and lanterns for decoration on this occasion also wear some streets like Hang Ma, Van Mieu, Quoc Tu Giam in red.

As red is the symbol of joy and luck in the belief of Oriental culture, it shows the wish of people for a good new year.

Besides red, green is the color of Hanoi this time, coming Chung cake, a traditional cake made of sticky rice, green bean and pork, that people are cooking. Chung cake is one of the typical foods of Tet that is to enjoy or give to families and friends as a small gift. 

The Banh Chung is on sale in every local markets or in the streets in Hanoi’s Old Quarter area.

In the old time, members of family, friends or even neighbors usually gathered besides a large pot to together cook Chung cake in days.Today, not many people do it but some still.

A vendor is selling cilantro in the streets. Hanoian believes that having bath with cilantro at the last day of the twelve month of the Lunar calendar might help wash out all the dirt and bad luck.

It also comes from street vendors of cilantro that is used to shower on the last day of the old year with the belief of washing out all the dirt and bad luck during the year to be clean to welcome the new one.

Another important color of Hieu Tran’s photo is the diverse tones of life such as animated markets filled with vendors and buyers for traditional food, fruits, flowers for Tet; busy stores serving the last clients of the year, crowded streets more crowded s, queue of people lining up in front of street barbershop for cutting the hair hoping for good look for New Year, calligraphy masters busy writing letters and so on.

A calligraphy master with his little clients. 
A busy barbershop at the days before Tet.

In fact, all of these are common activities on the occasion every year. However, they appear very vivid and full of tradition and culture, showing the festive atmosphere of Tet where everyone is excited to prepare and look forward to the New Year.

Hanoi’s streets turn to be empty on the first day of the first lunar month of the year.
Then, the Tet holiday is coming to town. 

Thuy Duong (Hanoitimes)

Hanoi’s buses almost empty amid pandemic

A number of bus routes in Hanoi have few passengers these days due to the impact of Covid-19 pandemic.

Hanoi to set off fireworks at only one location in Lunar New Year’s Eve

The capital city of Hanoi will cancel fireworks display in all of its 30 districts as planned in the Lunar New Year’s Eve, which falls on February 11, in a bid to curb the spread of COVID-19 in the community.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tet holidays, Vietnamese traditional lunar New Year, Tet Viet, Photos of Tet, Vietnam news, vietnamnet news, Vietnam latest news, Vietnam breaking news, vietnamnet, hazards when preparing food for animals

Vietnamese Tet: Don’t take out the garbage!

February 11, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

Each year, the Lunar New Year creeps up on us, slowly bubbling up to a dramatic apex, then, just like that, the new moon begins, signaling the start of a fresh chapter. Last year was definitely the Year of the Rat, sneaky, slimy, and carrier of scary diseases.

Phew! How glad we all are to see that water buffalo coming at us for this year.

And it’s a golden buffalo to boot!

Through some nuance between the zodiac signs and their complementing elements, this year represents metal, specifically gold, so, sit back and relax, we’ll all finally become wealthy this time around.

As Tet looms nearer, it’s a game akin to musical chairs, the music suddenly cut off when one business after another bangs down its shutters to begin preparation for the big event.

We sense it and feel it; as traffic picks up, the general level of intensity grows, the card games in cafés are more numerous and raucous, and people shop until they drop.

It makes perfect sense that it’s such an epic event – it’s Thanksgiving (celebrated in various forms in some countries), Christmas, and New Year (per the Gregorian calendar) all rolled together, and don’t forget to toss in Valentine’s Day this year since it’s right after Tet.

I usually duck out of the country as Tet looms, mainly because I don’t have family obligations, and, I confess, because by the time it rolls around I know I’ll scream if I see one more orchid or cherry tree. It’s also nice to get out of the way so Vietnamese people can enjoy the celebration to the max and take time off after a year of hard work.

It took me several years to get ahead of the game for my annual exodus abroad. I cut it close a few times, then allocated more time, arriving at the airport over three hours before take-off, yet barely making my flight. Lesson learned, since then I leave a full two weeks before and return at the earliest two weeks after, but this year, of course, there’s no such overseas trip.

One of the signs indicating it’s time for me to hit the road is when half of the motorbikes have some sort of foliage hanging off them – flowers, trees, shrubs, bushes, you name it. Toss on a sack of rice, some of the trendiest fruits, and you’re good to go.

Kumquat tree farm

Kumquat tree farm

Offerings include plants, fruit, flowers, and trees, and there are lots of them, all with particular nuances and purposes, most of which escape me.

Gift baskets – now that’s tricky business to say the least – akin to going on a package vacation where meals are included. You never really know what you get until it’s too late, but for sure the baskets look flash, and that’s half the battle right there.

Tet gift basket

Tet gift basket

Debts are cleared, bills are paid, families remember deceased relatives by cleaning up and decorating their resting places, and parts of the house you never visit are scrubbed spotless where they will sit idle collecting dust until the same time next year.

Cupboards are stocked up to the rafters. I’ve seen more boxes of Choco Pies and huge bags of rice over the last week than during the prior three months combined. Judging by the strained expressions on people’s faces as they haul those heavy sacks, the traditional acupuncture specialists must be making a killing.

Tenuous relationships are cobbled back together (or not, depending on the gravity of the tiff), ensuring a peaceful holiday season for all. Oh, how we all know the tension around the holiday table – so thick you could cut it with a knife – that’s a universal one. There’s  a dreaded family member in every clan  that drives the whole gang crazy, that’s just part of the deal.

The entire celebration is masterfully orchestrated with no loose ends left because there is no room for procrastination, the hourglass runs dry. All must be done, on time, and impeccably.

Seasonal tasks are carefully allocated one of two time slots for completion:  BT and AT (Before and After Tet), with tasks designated as BT mandatory for completion by the big day, or there’s hell to pay.

AT is another attribute altogether, a vague reference to a point in time after Tet at which time tasks may be due, but then again they may never be completed, or even started, perpetually retaining the status of ‘to do soon.’

Each day leading up to Tet some facet of our daily life – a shop, restaurant, or a service – disappears into thin air without warning. The other day I wandered off to coffee headquarters only to find it shuttered and abandoned, the staff having bolted for their hometowns for the holidays.

I recoiled in horror, then gingerly pulled myself together, and headed down the street to Backup HQ, which I had scouted out for just such a rainy day.

Everyone forges ahead, giving gifts to neighbors, preparing festive goodies, and generally being downright chummy all around. Most of the goodies are familiar, such as ‘banh tet,’ the savory sticky rice-based treat wrapped in banana leaves, but each year a new one pops up.

Check out this ‘chuoi chanh len men’ (fermented lemon and banana), not a Tet specialty as such, but such a concoction fits well with this season dedicated to preparing foods that fester, foam, and gurgle for weeks until they reach their peak.

Scary fermented lemon and banana

Scary fermented lemon and banana

My friend prepared that concoction, waiting the mandatory 21 days before letting me near it, and when the lid was unscrewed a pungent aroma similar to rocket fuel blasted out of the jar and filled the room in no time, forcing me to flee the scene. I’m an adventurous eater, but sometimes there is a cost involved when it’s food, so I had to pass on that one.

When the big day finally rolls around, the family gathers, following many rituals, prayers, a visit or two to the temple, and eats enough food to sink a ship. The day features continuous eating, drinking, playing cards, peppered with the rekindling of an old family argument or two since the gang is finally under one roof.

There are some important rituals to be followed, such as avoiding being the first person to enter someone’s house on the first day of the new lunar year. Be careful, this one’s a bomb waiting to go off, because if you’re first to arrive and the house owner has a bad year, you’ll never hear the end of it.

It is a judgment call to some degree because should you bring the owner good luck, then you’ll get all the credit, at least in theory, plus, maybe a reward or gift, so size it up, roll the dice and hope for the best.

I’ll soon find out, because I received an invitation to visit friends during the ‘afternoon’ of New Year’s Day. You can imagine I’ll be showing up late just to be safe, maybe at 5:00 pm, to be completely certain I’m not the first guest.

Otherwise, this whole Tet celebration is clearly a ‘lead, follow, or get out of the way’ situation. That’s an easy choice as a foreign guest, so I bolt the door and relax, while bearing in mind to not take the garbage out or sweep the floor, at least on the first day of the New Year, according to tradition of course.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Vietnam Life - Vietnamese Tet: Don’t take out the garbage!, TTNTAG, tet toc dep don gian

Redirecting our impact on the planet

February 11, 2021 by www.vir.com.vn

tet 13 redirecting our impact on the planet
By Caitlin Wiesen – Resident representative in Vietnam United Nations Development Programme

The ambition of the first report, published in 1990, was to shift the focus of development thinking to human capabilities rather than focus exclusively on economic growth. Increasing incomes is important, especially for the poor and vulnerable, but we also need access to quality healthcare and education to realise our full potential.

Vietnam’s extraordinary achievement of joining the High Human Development group this year as a lower middle-income country demonstrates the importance of focusing on human capabilities while also striving for rapid economic growth. Vietnam’s Human Development Index (HDI) since 1990 shows one of the fastest rates of improvement globally since the indicators were introduced.

The country has excelled at widening access to healthcare and education, especially in rural and remote areas, which has enabled the country to avoid a situation – common within the Asia-Pacific region – in which inequality rises with urbanisation and industrialisation.

However, these impressive achievements have come at the cost of high pressure on planetary systems. This is a global problem, not unique to Vietnam – and it is the focus of the 2020 report which launched in January.

The report, entitled “The Next Frontier: Human Development and the Anthropocene,” rejects the idea that we must choose between people and the planet, arguing for a transformation in the way that we live, work, consume, interact – and most important of all – how we produce and use energy.

The Anthropocene, or the Age of Humans, is the new geological age in which we live today, an era in which humans have fundamentally changed the planetary systems needed for life on earth.

COVID-19 is the latest warning that humanity has reached a precipice. The pandemic has had a devastating impact on human development, lowering the global HDI for the first time in 30 years.

But the pandemic and disruption it caused to our routines and practices, is also an opportunity to reset our relationship to the environment from exploitation to regeneration.

To illustrate the harmony between human development and the planet, the report introduces a new experimental lens to its HDI, which for the last three decades has measured countries’ health, education, and standard of living.

By adding two new metrics – CO2 emissions and material footprint – the new index shows how the global development landscape changes when you consider the wellbeing of people alongside planetary pressures.

The results are stark: no country is currently achieving very high human development without straining planetary systems. In Vietnam, taking carbon emissions and material footprint into account lowers the national HDI by 5.7 per cent, from 0.704 to 0.664.

The impact is greater in richer countries. For example, Malaysia loses 13.7 per cent, China 11.6 per cent, and Thailand 7.9 per cent from its HDI because of high levels of carbon emissions.

Developing human capabilities without damaging the planet means working with and not against nature. There is huge potential in actions that protect, sustainably manage, and restore ecosystems. Ventures like coastal management, reforestation, and urban green spaces can benefit both the natural world and local communities.

For example, we are working with the government, coastal communities, and the Green Climate Fund to plant and regenerate over 3,000 hectares of mangrove forests, which act as a buffer against storms and provide ecosystem resources that support local livelihoods.

There is also a need to change social norms and values to better balance people and the planet. This year has demonstrated how quickly entrenched behaviours can change when driven by necessity, whether on mask wearing or social distancing. Here, Vietnam’s leadership and solidarity of the Vietnamese people have been critical to the success in containing the pandemic.

In just a generation, a similar movement has happened globally on issues ranging from stigma around HIV/AIDS to reducing single use plastics.

Finally, incentives are essential tools to bridge the gap between behaviour and values. The right policies and regulations have a vital role to play. Rethinking government subsidies for the construction of coal-fired power plants and creating further incentives to attract investment options for renewable energy could make a significant difference to greening Vietnam’s growth.

One of our recent studies indicates that enabling legislation would unblock a further $15 billion of private sector investment in clean renewable energy.

Inequalities of power and opportunity within and between countries are important barriers to change. As we have experienced during the pandemic, unequal societies were less about to respond to the threat in a prompt and coherent manner, and the economic costs of the disease were borne disproportionately by the poor and vulnerable. The excellent performance of Vietnam in managing the crisis is partly due to relatively low levels of inequality compared to other countries in the Asia-Pacific region.

We are the first generation of the Anthropocene, an era in which, for the first time, human behaviour will determine the future of the planet. The choices that we make now will determine how our time will be remembered: as the era in which people continued to exploit nature long after it was clear that our actions were unsustainable; or as the turning point, when people decided to mobilise our power and knowledge for the good of people, and the planet.

The choice is ours to make.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Human Development Report, UN Development Programme, UNDP, Green Growth, UN..., about hi impact planet, high impact planet, asteroid impact the planet earth

5G remains strategic imperative for enterprises, governments in 2021

February 12, 2021 by www.vir.com.vn

5g remains strategic imperative for enterprises governments in 2021
Keysight 2021 Predictions highlights the main industry trends

In 2020, the world experienced an unprecedented public health crisis – the coronavirus pandemic. This has impacted all sectors of society and forced enterprises, small businesses, governments, and private institutions to pivot, in some cases extensively, to accelerate digital transformations and rethink the way innovation is achieved.

There are shape-shifting business operations and technology trends that are unfolding through the lens of the pandemic, the effects of which will continue to have lasting effects on organisations and society.

5G deployment trend:

  • 5G to be the focus of intense international interest as 5G networks will drive improvements in power, energy, and financial infrastructures. However, cell-site zoning issues and related policy will become a bigger issue for national and local governments.
  • 5G will move beyond the smartphone into industrial use cases and the enablement of virtualised healthcare delivery and procedures.
  • Manufacturing and network rollouts will catch up with 2020 device launches, and there will be a greater diversification of 5G devices with multiple price points.
  • Dynamic spectrum sharing (DSS) and new national spectrum policies will drive widespread 5G deployment as accessibility to user equipment grows to address current coverage issues and cost of deploying mid-band spectrum.

The growing acceptance of working remotely:

The distributed and remote workforce has gained new respect and acceptance, especially for technology innovation, leading to a mix of remote and on-site work environments, which have become, and will remain, the norm even as the pandemic eases.

  • Collaboration technologies and practices have and will continue to take on new significance. Technology businesses will escalate the formation and organisation of mission-critical innovation teams that will be managed remotely.
  • Engineers, and other innovators, will need to return to on-site, in-person collaboration but will be more intentional and strategic about when to do so.
  • Enterprise sales organisations will undergo a significant transformation as hybrid salesforces (mix of in-person and virtual) apply new methods for relationship-building and learning objectives, as well as alternative ways to provide product and solution demonstrations remotely.

Software will also be critical to digital transformations:

The pace of innovation will accelerate in 2021. The adoption of digital tools, processes, and software-led solutions will change the speed at which enterprises innovate, grow, support customers, and conduct business.

  • Enterprises will speed transformations using software that improves productivity, efficiency, accuracy, security, and time-to-market by collecting and acquiring information digitally, coupled with the use of advanced analytics and data visualisation to gain insights needed to accelerate innovation.
  • Greater emphasis on new software solutions for design, test, and validation, as well as for the analysis and interpretation of those results, specifically for:
    • Research and development measurements and analytics as more experiments and iterations need to be tested. Engineers will need in-depth analysis of data which will require richer automation capabilities beyond the basics.
    • Complex design and simulation as electronic packaging environments become more complex, requiring measurements of power flow, heat, and assembly while validating prototypes to ensure that designs are working as intended.
  • Security will take on a new meaning in 2021. Developers will address potential security issues, including security testing, much earlier in the design cycle. Greater emphasis will be placed on how products will be deployed, the use of touchless and contactless technology, removing human intervention, and fully automating networks that self-heal.
  • User experience will continue to grow in importance for both customers and providers of software solutions of all types due to the increased role such solutions play in professional and personal contexts, and the ever-increasing expectations resulting from frustrations with mediocre experiences.

Greater investment in the infrastructure that enables the Internet of Things and Industrial Internet of Things (IoT and IIoT), including distributed cloud and hyper-connectivity:

Private 5G networks for industrial enterprises will be emphasised, which will facilitate, among other things, remote operation and management.

  • A growing remote workforce will fuel IIoT which will require enterprises to deploy intelligent equipment to effectively manage manufacturing and factory operations from a distance. As a result, expect:
    • Increased investment in automation and use of robotics and machine learning to manage facilities, as well as a growing acceptance in leveraging the cloud to automate production lines.
    • New solutions for manufacturing automation, testing, and analytics for all components as automotive and other facilities ramp up.
    • Greater investment in IIoT functions for real-time, predictable control, which will require an increase in the number of machines and sensors, and a network infrastructure that can manage this growing number of devices.

Although early, expect accelerated levels of investment in quantum computing:

For 2021, quantum enters a robust research phase in which the primary players will continue to experiment and invest in quantum research for the future.

  • Today there are many competing qubit technologies – leading ones include superconducting, trapped ion, silicon spin, as well as photonic implementations. These technologies will continue to evolve in 2021 at a rapid pace.
  • The materials research aspect of quantum will heat up in 2021. This will be supported by a robust investment pipeline, some of which will be funded by major governments as they learn more about the geopolitical and economic advantages of quantum computing.
  • An increasing number of customers will be accessing time on quantum computers in the cloud in 2021 to run new algorithms to find quantum advantage. More players will enter providing quantum computers, cloud services, or both in 2021, as well as expanding the power of the computers available to users.

Autonomous vehicle (AV) development will continue to evolve:

The automotive sector suffered headwinds due to the pandemic, however production and manufacturing will roar back.

  • As the number of sensors powering in-vehicle networks continues to escalate, in-vehicle networks will need to keep pace.
  • Electronic vehicle (EV) sales will increase, yet they are only a small percentage (3 per cent) of total automotive manufacturing. While traditional vehicle manufacturing stalls, interest in EV will pick up as countries face more stringent emissions standards.
  • AV investment will be modest in the first half of 2021 but will pick up in the second half. It will be more aggressive in Greater China as this region is committed to phasing out conventional gas-burning vehicles by 2035.
  • The US will be more focused on AV and EV development in 2021 with the change of presidential administration which supports these technologies.
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Filed Under: Uncategorized 5G, Keysight, tech, innovation, IoT, IIoT, Biz Link, enterprise governance risk and compliance, enterprise governance framework, enterprise governance of it, enterprise governance model

Asia beckons

February 5, 2021 by www.vir.com.vn

infection rates are hitting record highs with travel restrictions being further tightened
Benjamin Hung, CEO, Asia, Standard Chartered

Amid the lacklustre news flow, it is easy to overlook the profound shifts which are rapidly taking shape. Here in Asia, there are increasing reasons for optimism. Already home to over half of the world’s population and a rising middle class, COVID-19 and geopolitics have accelerated seismic shifts in the region’s business landscape, much of which are structural and enduring. Globalisation is giving way to regionalisation. Fundamental changes are happening in supply chain approaches, trade pacts, digital and consumption patterns, and financial innovation.

Although COVID-19 set back progress, we have seen the region’s policymakers act decisively to mitigate its impact, protecting economies from their worst ravages. As it stands, Asia is rebounding faster than the rest of the world. Research estimates Asia’s growth of 7.5 per cent in 2021, with China and India leading at 8 per cent and 10 per cent, respectively, spearheading the global economic revival.

Slingshotting the comeback will be the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP). The RCEP is expected to boost intra-Asian trade, which already accounts for half of Asia’s trade volume. With a harmonisation in trade standards, RCEP’s added connectivity will bolster a rapidly rising north-south corridor.

Supply chain shifts precipitated by US-China tensions on top of the already revved-up engine of Asia’s emerging consumer base will bring about a structural rebalancing of global trade corridors. The East will increasingly be producing for the East. And other advances – including enhanced connectivity within the Greater Bay Area and across ASEAN – will add whirls of vitality.

Asia’s re-engineering

After all, Asia is in a different place to where it was even a year ago. COVID-19 has wrought structural changes, but it is these exact shifts that are presenting underrated opportunities for businesses. Through a wider lens, I see in Asia new supply chain dynamics and digital innovation creating jobs, transforming skills requirements, and remaking economies.

Experiencing last year’s growing fragility of the international supply chain, those businesses quick to adapt have re-engineered their approach to sustain growth. With certainty of supply now valued as highly as costs and speed-to-market, supply-chain participants have rebalanced their priorities, focusing on a “just-in-case” model with greater emphases on self-sufficiency and business continuity.

The pandemic has also brought digitalisation to the fore, compelling traditional and new players alike to adopt technology to ensure resilience and sustainability. Everything from education, shopping, food and healthcare are shifting online.

Asia has already surpassed North America and Western Europe in terms of the share of e-commerce retail sales, with the fastest growth coming from India, China and Indonesia. Governments are also accelerating digital interconnections. China’s digital currency, Singapore’s Networked Trade Platform and Hong Kong’s eTradeConnect all serve to bring greater connectivity to facilitate trade and payment flows.

Act now, act decisively

A year from now, the world could look vastly different from what it is today, just like how it did from the last 12 months. At the heart of a resurgent Asia will be fast-changing digitalisation dynamics against a rapidly evolving context.

For the bold and decisive, it is this backdrop in Asia that provides a unique, broad, and exciting canvas – albeit a fragmented one. No single business player has dominated any sector in Asia as Google, Amazon or Apple have in the United States and around the world. Take messaging apps: LINE dominates in Taiwan and Japan, whereas Telegram, WeChat, Signal, and WhatsApp are popular in other parts of Asia. Likewise for e-commerce platforms, ride-hailing apps, and payment wallets.

Recognising that this gap exists is key – it’s indicative of the potential opportunities that are available. Businesses that act upon what Asia has to offer today will be well-placed to emerge as tomorrow’s leaders. And that reinforces another element: time is of the essence, and the first-mover advantage is real.

Prospective players, then, need to approach this market with an aggressive, dominant-player and fail-fast-learn-fast mentality. Companies that look to revamp their strategies now while factoring in the profound structural shifts underway will make a meaningful impact.

Success in Asia is unlikely to be straightforward. Much will also depend on extraneous factors, including regional stability, US-China relations, the speed by which the pandemic can be controlled, and how governments implement their public policies. Asia also faces substantial risks in climate change, where public and private sectors’ ability to heed sustainability considerations to generate long-term economic growth will be critical.

Caveats aside, Asia is the beating heart of the world and I have no doubt that it will pump vibrancy back into the global economy. My message, then, is simple: Watch this space, but don’t wait too long to act.

For Asia beckons!

By Benjamin Hung, CEO, Asia, Standard Chartered

Filed Under: Uncategorized Standard Chartered, Asia, RCEP, ASEAN, COVID-19, Highlight

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