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Thailand leads ASEAN in 5G

Sure. 5G standards need to be signed off by ITU.

Whatever
Not changing the fact ITU or IEEE are standard setting bodies.
Other are not. Even they make release 1,000.
If ITU or IEEE don’t adopt the releases they can throw all releases into next trash bin.
 
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Huawei does not set any international standards least 5g
No

Nonsense

5g is set by an international standard setting body and Huawei is excluded.
No and No

Everything in electronics is defined by IEEE. That’s it.
No

Huawei can’t have monopoly in 5g and ask for fee. Following this logic, you must pay fee to France every time you use meter.
Where does this retarded strawman following only your own retarded nonsense even come from?

Stop talking utter nonesense about things you obviously dont understand and go back to your minimum wage job moving cup noodles into some shelves. You obviously dont even know what a standard means or what the IEEE is or does and how irrelevant it can be rendered to international standard setting and adoption when it doesnt follow open market principles and can barely understand the layman pandering politicized articles your try to parrot with your horribly broken English.

The international academia, international industry and international markets will move forward and set and adopt new standards with or without your American overlords. Thats exactly why the political stunt trying to ban Huawei from some random American publisher they can dictacte over for 5 minutes worth of pandering to low IQ retards with flashy headlines was immediately pulled back. Because it just doesnt work the way you try to assert.
 
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Thai chip designer plans IPO to fund R&D for 5G applications
July 10, 2020 18:09 JST

BANGKOK -- Thailand's leading microchip designer Silicon Craft Technology has announced its plan to debut on the country's stock exchange following the subscription period later this month.

The Bangkok-based company is poised to expand its development capability, as it expects the spread of fifth-generation (5G) telecom technology will push up demand for microchips for internet of things applications. The chip company is putting particular focus on chips for animal tagging.

Chief Executive Officer Manop Dhamsirianunt said the funds to be raised from the initial public offering will be used in research and development on its core products -- car immobilizers, radio-frequency identification chips and animal tags.

"[We] plan to expand our microchip business substantially over the next few years as we aim to be the world's No. 1 animal tag microchip producer within the next four years," said Manop. He did not provide details on how much money the company expects to raise from the IPO.

The company plans to offer 100 million shares equivalent to 25% of issued and paid-up shares. The company will be listed on the Market for Alternative Investment, a stock market for small and midsize companies established by the Stock Exchange of Thailand in 1998.

That suggests the amount of funds expected to be raised is between 50 million baht ($1.6 million) and 300 million baht, since an IPO worth more than 300 million baht would be listed on the main board of the stock exchange.

Founded in 2002 by a group of integrated circuit specialists with registered capital of 5 million baht, Silicon Craft reported 24.5 million baht in net profit on revenue of 308.8 million baht for the year ended in December.

The company also expects rising demand for microchips for motion sensing systems, which are expected to be used widely in factory automation in the next few years.

"We are in the 5G era, when everything will be controlled by microchips, ranging from tracing animals by tags to self-driving cars controlled by microchips and motion sensors. It suggests that demand for microchips will rise sharply," said an analyst a Kasikorn Research Center.
 
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Huawei launches 5G unmanned vehicle in Thailand smart hospital

Published: 23:24, Jul 04,2020




Huawei, in association with Thailand National Broadcasting and Telecommunication Commission (NBTC) and Siriraj Hospital, recently initiated the Unmanned Vehicle Pilot Project Driving Thai Healthcare to 5G Era to pioneer the use of unmanned vehicle for the first time at a smart hospital in Thailand, said a press release.

The self-driving delivery vehicle takes advantage of 5G technology from Huawei to bring about contactless delivery solution of medical supplies, which will elevate the medical system to 5G era by applying world-class technology and innovation to drive medical services and the healthcare industry.

Such technology can replace manpower in logistics services as it can operate in complex environments.

The autonomous car offers safe, convenient and cost-effective solutions while reducing workload for healthcare worker and improving patient safety. The 5G technology integration will then be progressively applied in the national health system for smart hospital transformation in the near future.

‘The NBTC has been utilising 5G technology with remote medical services by connecting with community health promotion hospital and large local hospitals in piloting remote treatment of four diseases – such as eye diseases, skin diseases, blood pressure abnormalities and diabetes. The ongoing projects by the NBTC aim to drive greater benefits of 5G innovation into different aspects of life across the country,’ said Takorn Tantasith, secretary general of the Office of the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission.

After the first test trial in Siriraj Hospital, the oldest and largest hospital in Thailand at the frontline of the fight against COVID-19, the NBTC will evaluate the benefits and efficiency of the 5G-enable unmanned vehicle before maximising results from this pilot project to leverage the unmanned vehicle in different uses, as well as in other hospitals.

Huawei Thailand CEO Abel Deng said, ‘The pilot project of the driverless vehicle for Siriraj Hospital will operate under Huawei’s 5G technology to help transport medical supplies within the hospital. The 5G applications in the public health domain could also inspire businesses in other sectors to leverage 5G’s popularity and explore new applications of the technology.’ — New Age

https://www.newagebd.net/article/11...g-unmanned-vehicle-in-thailand-smart-hospital

Good cooperation between Thailand and Huawei
 
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Huawei invests B475m in 5G research hub at Depa
PUBLISHED : 22 SEP 2020 AT 04:33
NEWSPAPER SECTION: BUSINESS
The 5G ecosystem innovation facility at Depa headquarters.
The 5G ecosystem innovation facility at Depa headquarters.

Huawei Thailand is investing 475 million baht to establish a 5G ecosystem innovation centre at the Digital Economy Promotion Agency's (Depa) headquarters to research 5G use cases and incubate 100 local small and medium-sized enterprises and startups for three years.

The centre is a partnership with the Digital Economy and Society (DES) Ministry and Depa to find new ways to use 5G across industries.

"This is an important milestone demonstrating the readiness of Thailand to be a digital hub in Asean by utilising 5G technologies to improve economic and social development," DES minister Buddhipongse Punnakanta said yesterday at the opening ceremony.

"The pandemic is a turning point for the digital economy globally and Thailand plays a role in the social and economic development of countries' recovery."

Mr Buddhipongse said 5G commercial service will be available nationwide in the next few months.
Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha also assigned the DES to make 5G services available to everyone to reduce inequality and create equal opportunity. 5G-enabled smartphones currently cost upwards of 31,000 baht.
"This is why we asked CAT and TOT to participate in 5G bidding," Mr Buddhipongse said.

In October the national 5G committee led by the prime minister is scheduled to hold a meeting to encourage state agencies to embrace 5G use cases.

"We are considering a roll-out of smart agriculture in the Northeast and South after deploying 5G in Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai, as well as considering privileges for various sectors to adopt 5G to reduce expenses," he said. "Thailand is open to other technology leaders in every area, not just from China."
Abel Deng, chief executive of Huawei Thailand, said Huawei is continuing to drive Thailand 4.0 by investing in the innovation centre, which includes equipment and expert training.

"The 5G ecosystem innovation centre in Thailand is the first such launch in Asean," he said.

The centre will serve as a sandbox for development of digital innovations and proof of concepts for 5G applications and services across various industries in Thailand. It is also expected to incubate 100 startups in three years.

The centre features smart healthcare, agriculture, education, smart poles, smart ports, smart homes, smart security and an RF shield room (for developers to work in a 5G signal environment).

"Innovation in 5G can help fight against pandemics, boosting the economy and long-term growth for Thailand," Mr Deng said.

Nuttapon Nimmanphatcharin, president and chief executive of Depa, said the agency is open to collaborating with mobile operators and technology vendors to support innovation in Thailand's startup ecosystem.

Huawei's 5G ecosystem innovation centre will support testbed, technology transfer and training to leverage use of the 5G ecosystem. Depa aims to do business matching with startups, train 500 workers per year and develop at least 20 innovations, said Mr Nuttapon.

"5G is a digital infrastructure, but it will be more useful to leverage artificial intelligence, big data and the Internet of Things," he said.
 
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Thailand is a great place to invest for Huawei, and China's IT companies.

Reason:
- Thailand is COVID-19 free. The quarantine works.
- Thailand has large population, and land mass suitable for telecom infrasturcture. ( compare to Singapore for example)
- Thailand has smart brains. You can check math olympic result. Thailand is 5th place. Last 3 years was 5,5,7
- Thailand does not have anti-China sentiment.
- Thailand is very likely to be able to stay neutral in this China-US power competition.

My request: Fund Thailand to help research on China's semiconductor supply chain problem.
 
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Everything in electronics is defined by IEEE. That’s it. In case you don’t know. Otherwise we are all blackmailed by a company.

Huawei can’t have monopoly in 5g and ask for fee. Following this logic, you must pay fee to France every time you use meter.


Haha, just stop here because you obviously don't know what you speak of.
 
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Global 5G Success Stories: Thailand to Be a Model in 5G-Enabled Smart Healthcare
Last year, COVID-19 swept across the world with an unprecedented impact on people’s lives. In Thailand, newly launched 5G technology was used to combat this pandemic and will be even more instrumental this year to drive economic recovery.

5g-car1-1-100884249-large.jpg


Thailand has been ranked first among the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and sixth globally for medical tourism, making this industry a significant contributor to Thailand’s economy and serving more than 1.1 million tourists annually. The local regulator has further predicted that 5G and the smart healthcare sector will generate a new market space for the economy.

With the government positioning the country as a digital hub for ASEAN, Thailand was first in ASEAN to deploy 5G commercially at large scale and has prioritized 5G, recognizing it as an important engine to support the “Thailand 4.0” digital transformation initiative. In addition to operators launching consumer 5G services, the country has been very active exploring opportunities for 5G industrial applications.

Already, Thailand has launched a “Digital Healthcare” roadmap aimed at alleviating the imbalance of medical resources by introducing remote monitoring and diagnosis based on big data analysis. As a result, hospitals have effectively used 5G technologies for pandemic control, improving treatment efficiency, minimizing direct human contact, and ensuring healthcare personnel safety.

At CommunicAsia 2020, Bangkok’s Siriraj Hospital was acknowledged for the “Most Innovative 5G Applications in Asia Pacific,” recognizing its successful practices in fighting the pandemic using 5G. This year, Siriraj Hospital, in cooperation with Mahidol University, highlighted the importance of 5G, cloud, and big data in pandemic control at Mobile World Congress Shanghai in February.

5G Supports Faster Diagnoses

On March 26th, 2020, Thailand declared a “national emergency” due to the surge in COVID-19 infections, leading the government and hospitals to raise their broadband requirements immediately with the support of telecom operators and Huawei. Within three days, a 5G network and an automatic diagnosis solution were deployed and commissioned at Siriraj Hospital and Ramathibodi Hospital.

5G, cloud computing, and automation technologies help doctors analyze computerized tomography (CT) quantification results of infected cases with high precision. 5G’s high-speed connectivity, high reliability, and low latency increase the transfer efficiency of CT scans by as much as four times compared to previous Wi-Fi solutions. Simultaneously, medical system response time, patient monitoring, data collection, remote collaboration, and resource allocation decreased diagnosis time from 12 minutes to two minutes, improving the detection of new cases and safeguarding hospital medical staff.

5G Unmanned Vehicles Reduce Frontline Healthcare Contact and Infection Risks

The self-driving white bus at Siriraj Hospital is unmistakable with its 5G logo, commuting around the hospital’s courtyard and between wards, pharmacy units, and buildings to transport medicine and medical supplies. This Unmanned Vehicle (UV) from China, equipped with multiple high-definition cameras, uses a 5G high-speed connection to transmit HD video to a command center and low latency to enable fine control of the vehicle in a safe and secure manner.

Prof. Dr. Prasit Watanapa, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine Mahidol University, Siriraj Hospital, said “This multi-functional 5G UV effectively reduces the risk of infection for medical personnel and prevents staff from being exposed to high-risk environments.” He added that it “also relieves the strained frontline workforce during the outbreak.”

5G Ambulance Improves Emergency Medical Services

The mortality rate for emergency patients in Thailand is around 8%. With some of the highest traffic congestion in the world, local hospitals need to establish a real-time digital life rescue channel to reduce emergency mortality. As a result, Bangkok's Nopparat Rajathanee Hospital, which treats close to 3,000 patients a day, launched its 5G smart ambulance, equipped with 5G gateway, High Definition (HD) cameras, and Augmented Reality (AR) glasses for real-time video communication with medical devices in the hospital’s Emergency Room (ER). Ambulance staff can use video communication with ER doctors when patients are in critical condition and conduct remote consultation and profiling before arriving at the hospital. Mobile CT scans and ultrasound devices also make use of the 5G high-speed connectivity to transmit large files to the hospital in real-time to reduce preparation time.

Thailand 5G Healthcare Application Vision Planning

Innovative technologies are rewriting the rules of healthcare by providing high-speed connectivity, low latency, and high reliability.

The Thailand 5G Committee has allocated funds for smart healthcare projects and formulated a long-term plan for 5G healthcare applications that estimates 5G healthcare will cover at least 500 hospitals in villages by the year 2022 and serving 300,000 people. These facilities will be expanded to 7,800 community hospitals by 2027.

With the success of 5G use cases at Siriraj hospital, more hospitals are introducing 5G technologies and smart Healthcare applications. Phyathai Sriracha Hospital, a subsidiary of Bangkok Dusit Medical Services (BDMS), launched 5G telemedicine services with Huawei at Bangsaen 21 Marathon, providing medical facilities for emergency services.

Local companies working with foreign companies such as Neolix, for unmanned vehicles, and Huiying, for automated assistant diagnosis and HiLeia AR glasses, have actively participated in building a smart healthcare ecosystem. In 2020, Thailand’s Ministry of Digital Economy and Society (MDES), Digital Economy Promotion Agency (DEPA), and Huawei opened Thailand’s 5G Ecosystem Innovation Center (5G EIC), with the aim of accelerating 5G innovation through ecosystem collaboration. The center will serve as a sandbox for the development of digital innovations for 5G applications and services across various industries in Thailand.

With the rapid demand in healthcare and other vertical industries, ICT technologies will better serve the people of Thailand, accelerate industry digital transformation including economic recovery from the pandemic, and provide a foundation to realize Thailand 4.0.
 
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Thailand's AIS, SUT, China's ZTE team up for 5G-powered smart factory
PUBLISHED : 25 MAY 2021 AT 04:00

Thailand's largest mobile operator Advanced Info Service (AIS) is working with Chinese telecom equipment maker ZTE Corporation and Suranaree University of Technology (SUT) to leverage 5G technology and innovation to transform normal factories into smart facilities.

Tanapong Ittisakulchai, chief enterprise business officer of AIS, said the company is committed to deploying 5G in the industrial sector while ensuring its leading position amid challenging situations.

Through collaboration under a memorandum of understanding (MoU), the deployment includes 5G cloud automated guided vehicles (AGV), inspection patrol robots, 5G augmented reality (AR) remote guidance, virtual reality (VR) monitoring in real-time as well as a robotic arm.

The project aims to build a smart factory through 5G industrial solutions.

"We have deployed standalone [SA] AIS 5G digital infrastructure on a 2600 gigahertz middle-band spectrum with excellent properties to make a use case and reduced latency to provide full support for Internet of Thing [IoT]," said Mr Tanapong.

"We built a prototype factory to level up management capabilities and transform manufacturing processes in the context of a rapidly changing industrial sector."

Peerapong Uthansakul, director of SUT's Institute of Research and Development, said the collaboration is crucial to transform practices of the industrial sector and consistent with the University's mission to research, adapt and transfer technology to the industrial sector.

Referring to 5G cloud AGV, Mr Peerapong said it can create its own map, move autonomously and work quickly, accurately, and on time, making it a vital tool to boost efficiency inside the factory, warehouses and the production floor.

The 5G Robotic Arm has improved capabilities appropriate for use in the factory and production. The Robotic Arm can inspect a product and pick multiple products or equipment of various sizes rather than just one kind of object as before, he said.

5G AR remote guidance is a tool to improve efficiency by handling the work of many departments, Mr Peerapong said, adding 5G inspection patrol robots have the duties of a security guard to watch various areas. It has facial recognition capabilities as well as the ability to raise alarms regarding suspicious activity.

5G VR monitoring in real-time is a quality assurance inspection tool to ensure the product is made to a uniform standard from raw material to finished good.

Ling Zhi, vice president of global marketing at ZTE, indicated the company is willing to expand 5G intelligent manufacturing in Thailand.

ZTE has innovated 5G applications covering over 15 key industries with partners.
 
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Very stupid by Thailand if true. Huawei 5g can’t communicate with Vietnam and other Asean 5g.
Huawei is most economical vendor. If you rich you want to pay more and wait for a long time then you can refused Huawei. If Huawei is Vietnam made we will go for it economy factors is more important than bullshit political rhetoric. Malaysia is neutral and will go for the most economical solution.
 
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Panasonic just closed factories in Thai and flee to VN due to Thai covid and high labor cost.thousands job loss in Thai. Covid kill Thai's job and badly as killing Cnese and their jobs :cry:


https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/pana...e-production-from-thailand-to-vietnam.667356/
Panasonic were big in Malaysia in the 80 and 90s then they moved to Indonesia and Thailand as the labor cost is cheaper. Now to Vietnam as it is even more cheaper for now. Once Vietnam economy picks up they will move away from Vietnam. That is economy cycle. In fact Malaysia is one of the first investor to venture into Vietnam even our chopsticks manufacturer all are in Vietnam. But once Vietnam get more costly maybe in another 10 years then they will moved to other cheaper country. This is how company manage cost.
 
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Panasonic were big in Malaysia in the 80 and 90s then they moved to Indonesia and Thailand as the labor cost is cheaper. Now to Vietnam as it is even more cheaper for now. Once Vietnam economy picks up they will move away from Vietnam. That is economy cycle. In fact Malaysia is one of the first investor to venture into Vietnam even our chopsticks manufacturer all are in Vietnam. But once Vietnam get more costly maybe in another 10 years then they will moved to other cheaper country. This is how company manage cost.
Thats why VN has to make our own 5G, own electric cars and plan to sell those products worldwide. JP 4G/5G is still too expensive and cant compete with Viettel 4G/5G now.

For electric cars, it will be the equal competition for everyone now since its new and require lost of advantage technology, specially 5g autonomous driving functions.

So far, only CN and VN can manufacture cheap and good quality 5G stuff.

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Vietnam hopes to sell locally-made 5G equipment to the U.S. as it prepares commercial launch of the telecom technology this year.
Information and Communications Minister Nguyen Manh Hung proposed to a delegation of the U.S. House of Representatives Monday that they initiate discussions of 5G technical standards to see if made-in-Vietnam equipment could enter the U.S. market.
Vietnam plans to commence commercial operations of 5G this year, becoming among the first countries in ASEAN to do so, he said.
The minister had set the stage for launching the new telecommunications technology by making the first 5G phone call on January 17, using equipment manufactured by Vietnamese telecom giant Viettel.
The military-run Viettel is set to become the sixth firm in the world to launch its own 5G equipment after Ericsson, Nokia, Huawei, Samsung and ZTE.
Viettel plans to commercially launch 5G services this June. It has been testing and installing equipment since last year.
Hung, a former Viettel CEO, has been pushing 5G research in Vietnam since taking over as communications minister towards the end of 2018. He asked local firms to produce their own equipment so that Vietnam is among the first countries in the world to launch the 5G technology.
The number of 5G subscriptions in Vietnam could hit 6.3 million by 2025 or 6 percent of total mobile subscriptions, technology conglomerate Cisco has forecast

 
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Panasonic were big in Malaysia in the 80 and 90s then they moved to Indonesia and Thailand as the labor cost is cheaper. Now to Vietnam as it is even more cheaper for now. Once Vietnam economy picks up they will move away from Vietnam. That is economy cycle. In fact Malaysia is one of the first investor to venture into Vietnam even our chopsticks manufacturer all are in Vietnam. But once Vietnam get more costly maybe in another 10 years then they will moved to other cheaper country. This is how company manage cost.

Malaysia curent labor cost is actually cheaper than labor cost in industrial region in Indonesia. Malaysia labor cost is only 300 USD per month

Nope, Panasonics has been exist in Indonesia since 1960. It started from join venture of PT Transistor Radio Manufacturing from Indonesia (Founded by Muhammad Gobel) and Matsusita Electric Japan.

1621956318918.png


The name of company is National Gobel since 1970

1621956542898.png


The name change to Panasonic Gobel since 1991

1621956610335.png



You can learn from this official website

 
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Malaysia curent labor cost is actually cheaper than labor cost in industrial region in Indonesia. Malaysia labor cost is only 300 USD per month

Nope, Panasonics has been exist in Indonesia since 1960. It started from join venture of PT Transistor Radio Manufacturing from Indonesia (Founded by Muhammad Gobel) and Matsusita Electric Japan.

View attachment 747369

The name of company is National Gobel since 1970

View attachment 747373

The name change to Panasonic Gobel since 1991

View attachment 747375


You can learn from this official website


Malaysia GDP per capita in 2019 is 11414 USD whereas in Indonesia is 4120 USD. Hence Indonesia manpower is still cheaper than Malaysia. But Indonesia economy is set to move forward in coming future.
 
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