Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Thailand - Banks stock up on cash


Bangkok Bank today (December 24) said it has prepared more than Bt30 billion in cash reserves at 10,000 ATMs nationwide to serve customers during the New Year holiday.

Digital and online services such as Bualuang Phone 1333 and 0-2645-5555, Bualuang iBanking, Bualuang mBanking and QR Code payment would also be fully operational and the bank’s 300 micro branches in shopping malls will be open for business every day during the holiday. 

The bank will be open on Monday December 30 and resume normal operations on Thursday January 2.

CIMB Thai Bank has prepared cash reserves of Bt250 million at its ATMs and branches.

Kasikonrbank plans to allocate cash reserves worth Bt45.8 billion for KBank branches and K-ATMs during the holidays. 

Of that total, Bt11.8 billion is for branches nationwide, including Bt4.5 billion for branches in Bangkok and the remaining Bt7.3 billion for those in other provinces. 

Currently, KBank has a total of 900 branches nationwide. 

A total of Bt34.0 billion is reserved for over 8,200 K-ATMs across the country, Bt15.0 billion of which for K-ATMs in Bangkok and the remaining Bt19.0 billion for K-ATMs in other provinces.

Siam Commercial Bank (SCB) has earmarked a cash reserve of Bt63 billion of which Bt42 billion is for ATMs and Bt21 billion for branches. 

As of November this year SCB had 698 branches and 9,373 ATMs nationwide.

Source - TheNation

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Phones with outdated operating systems to lose mobile-banking access


The Bank of Thailand (BOT) has stepped up measures to ensure mobile-banking security, assistant governor Siritida Panomwon Na Ayudhya said on Friday (December 20).

The central bank has issued guiding principles for mobile-banking security, which will not allow obsolete operating systems of smartphones to access banking services.She said currently mobile banking has grown rapidly. 
 
There are about 55 million accounts registered to use mobile banking in the first nine months of this year, up from 41 million accounts last year, while financial transactions reached 3.2 billion items via mobile banking, up from 2.7 billion last year.
 
Mobile phones have become a more-important tool for financial transactions, she said.
 
However, risks stemming from malwares or fake applications also posed a threat to the system, she warned. Therefore, the central bank will require financial institutions to be more careful about the security of the system.
 
Banks will have to inform customers that they cannot use mobile phones with obsolete operating systems, such as Android software prior to version 4, and iOS of iPhone prior to version 8. 
 
These outdated operating systems are vulnerable to cyber-attacks.
 
“Mobile phones run by an obsolete operating system would have limited access to mobile-banking services or could be totally banned in the future; mobile devices that have been jailbroken or rooted would also be prohibited,” she said. 
 
The iOS latest operating version is 13.3. Mobile phones run by the obsolete Android system is less than one per cent. An estimated 10,000 mobile phones have been jail-broken and currently are used to access banking services.
 
Banks would also be required to have more complicated settings for PIN codes and passwords in order to reduce the risk of being hacked.
 
The central bank would allow banks four months to make the necessary changes before the guiding principles are enforced in May next year, she added.

Source - TheNation

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

#Bangkok - “Walking Street @Silom” New destination in Town


Brand New city market “Walking Street @Silom” opens up (15 December 2019) welcoming visitors to the brand new destination in town every 3rd Sunday of the month from 12.00 to 22.00.

Right from lunchtime, big crowds of locals and tourists have joined in the grand opening by shopping for goods and tasting cool dishes along the famous Silom road.

The stalls line both sides of Silom road under the BTS Skytrain elevated rails to give some shade from the bright sun.

Over 300 businesses have joined the walking street with 70% being food stalls including classic Thai food and trendy options including drinks and desserts to end a perfect meal.

Visitors can also shop home products including handmade goods, OTOP (One Tambon, One Product) goods, clothes, and other goods. There are also street performers who will be a part of the experience of Walking Street @Silom.

There is a stage in the middle of the street with various shows such as a Thai Dance show. The Prime Minister of Thailand Prayut Chan-o-cha went on the stage to officially open Walking Street @Silom up for business.
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The main concept behind the event is to “Walk, Eat, Taste, and Explore”. The new walking street will promote tourism in the area along with boosting the economy in the area. The Bangkok Governor Aswin Kwanmuang joined in the grand opening celebration.

The Prime Minister stated in his ceremonial speech that tourists visit Thailand because of the beautiful nature, delicious food that is good and cheap, and Thai Smile.

The Thai people need to keep these good qualities by continuing to smile and to have peace along with efficiency and safety.

The government wants to increase tourism, but safety and stability must come first. The government can’t approve every project because there is a budget.

The Prime Minister touched on a few other topics before ending with a statement that the people must become one, the Thai’s must stand solo and to not let any person destroy
 
Source - Pattayaone News

Saturday, December 14, 2019

First-day pre-orders for Samsung Galaxy Fold in Indonesia sell out in 31 minutes


In a mere 31 minutes, Samsung Galaxy Fold sold out on the first day of its online pre-orders, which officially kicked off on Friday at 9 a.m.

"We're very happy and appreciate the high enthusiasm shown by the public for the launch of Samsung Galaxy Fold in Indonesia," said Samsung Electronics Indonesia vice president of IT and mobile business, Bernard Ang, in a statement on Friday.

Priced at a staggering Rp 30,888,000 (US$2,213), the pre-order products, available in "space silver" and "cosmos black", come with several benefits, including Galaxy Buds, one year Infinity Flex Display protection, a cover and a zero-percent installment payment scheme for 24 months.

Registration for the two-day pre-order service opened Nov. 26 through its official website.

In addition to its unique 7.3-inch QXGA+ Dynamic AMOLED main display that can be folded like a book, Galaxy Fold also boasts a 4.6-inch HD + Super AMOLED front display, six hexa cameras, a 7nm 64-bit octa-core processor, 12GB RAM and a 4,380 mAh battery. 

Source - The JakartaPost

Thursday, December 12, 2019

#Google now lets users attach emails to an email in Gmail


Instead of cluttering your Gmail inbox and those of your correspondents with forwarded emails, you can now simply send one as an attachment.

On Monday, Google announced that emails can now be sent with other emails as attachments rather than as forwarded messages. There's no need to first download the item of mail to convert it to an attachable file.

This feature is designed to eliminate muddling inboxes with separate forwarded messages which are disconnected from a relevant thread. It will prove to be an especially useful organizational tool in the cases where  a user wants to forward a series of emails to someone.

There is no need to activate or install this tool -- it is 'on' by default. Users can find the option to "forward [an email] as attachment" within the three-dot settings menu as soon as it is available. Messages will then be sent to recipients as an ".eml" file.

Rollout of this feature began Monday and will continue for the next few weeks.

 Get attached to this #gmail update: You can now attach emails to other emails without downloading them. Learn more → https://goo.gle/2qGBdbO


Source - TheJakartePost

Sunday, December 8, 2019

Strange disease threatens Caribbean coral reef


The breathtaking reds, yellows and purples of the Mesoamerican Reef have been turning sickly white, leading researchers on a desperate hunt to understand and fight the mysterious disease killing the Caribbean's corals.

In a little over a year, the Mexican Caribbean has lost more than 30 percent of its corals to a little-understood illness called SCTLD, or stony coral tissue loss disease, which causes them to calcify and die.

Experts warn the disease could kill a large part of the Mesoamerican Reef, a magnificent arc of more than 1,000 kilometers of coral shared by Mexico, Belize, Guatemala and Honduras.

SCTLD has put the region in a bind: it could potentially devastate the vital tourism industry around the reef, the second-largest in the world after Australia's Great Barrier Reef.

And yet, it is highly possible that too much tourism is in fact fueling the problem, scientists say.

SCTLD, which has also been infecting coral off the coast of Florida since 2014, was first detected in the Mexican Caribbean in July last year, near the reef's northern tip.

It has since spread 400 kilometers to the south, reaching Belize and causing more coral loss than occurred in the past 40 years in the region, according to the environmental group Healthy Reefs for Healthy People.

The disease takes just weeks to kill off coral tissue that took decades to grow, said Melina Soto, the organization's coordinator in Mexico.

"If we keep going at this rate, this ecosystem is going to collapse in the next five to 10 years," she told AFP.

Brink of extinction

Scientists say SCTLD is even more dangerous than coral bleaching, another damaging condition that has affected reefs around the world, including the Great Barrier Reef.

Bleaching happens when environmental changes, such as warming ocean temperatures, cause corals -- which are colonies of tiny animals -- to expel the microscopic algae known as zooxanthellae that live inside them and give them their vibrant colors.

A reef can recover from coral bleaching if its environment recovers in time.

But SCTLD is fatal.

"It's a complete detachment of the coral tissue, which dies and leaves behind a white skeleton," said Claudia Padilla, a scientist at CRIP Puerto Morelos, a marine biology research center on Mexico's Yucatan peninsula.

To the untrained eye, the impact of the disease is not highly visible yet.

"They looked marvelous to me. I would never have thought they were dying, like the experts say," said Emanuel Fernandez, 34, an Argentine chemical engineer, after a snorkeling tour off the coast of Cancun, the region's most famous resort.

But the impact is all too visible to experts.

"You used to go diving and see these thriving colonies (of corals). Now they're all dead," said Padilla.

Twenty-five of the region's 40 coral species have been affected, she said. Of those, three are on the brink of going extinct in the region.

Researchers are currently building up a DNA bank of the endangered corals, hoping they can one day bring them back from extinction in the wild if needed.

Too much tourism?

Scientists are racing to understand what causes SCTLD.

One prime suspect is poor water quality, caused by sewage and a recent surge of decomposing sargassum seaweed -- another environmental emergency in the region.

Another likely factor is the chemicals in tourists' sunscreen, which the authorities have now banned.

"Many studies indicate that a particle found in sunscreen, oxybenzone, impedes the corals' reproduction," said Christopher Gonzalez, regional director for the national parks commission.

This month, authorities temporarily closed three sections of the reef, Palancar, Colombia and El Cielo, which receive thousands of visitors each year.

Now, government officials, the tourism industry and residents are forced to find a delicate balance: a level of tourism that will neither kill off the reef nor the economy.

Around 725,000 tourists have visited the Mexican Caribbean's reefs so far this year, a similar figure to previous years, according to officials.

"If we lose the reef, we lose our main economic activity: tourism," warned Maria del Carmen Garcia, head of the Coral Reef National Park in Puerto Morelos.

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Thursday, December 5, 2019

#Sydney to ease drinking rules to boost nightlife


Sydney's lackluster nightlife received a long-awaited boost when officials announced an end to rules severely limiting where and when people can drink alcohol.

New South Wales premier Gladys Berejiklian announced pubs' trading hours would be extended and laws curbing after-midnight drinking would be eased in most of central Sydney.

"We need to ensure we have a strong and vibrant night-time economy that reflects our position as Australia's only truly global city," said Berejiklian.

For a city famed for its New Year's Eve parties and weaned on alcohol -- rum was the currency of choice among early settlers -- Sydney is surprisingly dead at night.

Under famed "lock-out laws", bar doors close at 1:30 am, there are restrictions on serving cocktails, shots or "drinks in glass" after midnight, and bouncers and police hover over proceedings.

The measures were introduced in early 2014 to limit alcohol-related violence.

The laws have thrown up some tragicomic results -- with Madonna and Justin Bieber famously unable to attend their own after-parties because they arrived too late from gigs.

A TimeOut.com survey placed Sydney the 39th best city in the world in 2019, largely because residents ranked "our city worst in the world for nightlife".

The new laws take effect on 14 January

Source - TheJakartaPost