CodingGirls Day | Closing the Confidence Gap - Practical Advice and Where to Begin

Closing the Confidence Gap - Practical Advice and Where to Begin Catch Michelle Simmons, General Manager, Southeast Asia New Market, Microsoft Asia Pacific as she participates as a panel speaker at the CodingGirls Day on June 24****th. The panelists will discuss the opportunities in tech field for women and share their personal journey of advancement. The following speakers have been confirmed: 1. Michelle Simmons (General Manager, SEA New Markets at Microsoft APAC) 2. Susan Jain (CMO at IBM) 3. Sunita Kaur (Managing Director at Spotify) 4. Virginia Cha (Adjunct Professor at Entrepreneurship INSEAD & NUS) 5. Nopparat Yokubon (AUNZ/SEA Lead, App Developer Sales at Google) Moderator for this panel is Arnaud Bonzom, Director of Corporate Innovation at 500 Startups CodingGirls Day is an inaugural regional event to bring female tech leaders, founders and enthusiasts in Southeast Asia together for a day of sharing, learning and networking. RSVP now at CodingGirls Day!

Microsoft Tech Summit

Gain valuable cloud skills at the Microsoft Tech Summit and take your career to the next level Every day the Microsoft Cloud helps developers and IT professionals like you stay competitive in today’s digital transformation landscape. To help build your cloud and infrastructure skills, we’re hitting the road with our top engineers visiting cities around the world to deliver two days of free technical training. This year, there will be a Microsoft Tech Summit near you in Singapore on March 13-14, 2017 at the Marina Bay Sands. To keep up with the evolution of technologies, tools, and techniques that make up the Microsoft Cloud, the event offers a great opportunity to: ...

We Tech Care 2016

[caption id=“attachment_22761” align=“alignnone” width=“1620”] From left: (MSP) Azeem Vasanwala, (MD, Microsoft Singapore) Jessica Tan, (DPM) Tharman Shanmugaratnam[/caption] The December edition of Microsoft’s We Tech Care 2016 which was held on 10th December has just concluded! With over 700 registered participants taking part in the many fringe activities, charity booths as well as the Tech4Good workshops, everybody walked away with lots to share with their family and friends! [caption id=“attachment_22765” align=“alignnone” width=“1620”] Kodu Workshop[/caption] One of the highlights was the Hour of Code coding workshops conducted by the Microsoft Student Partners and Microsoft Volunteers. Topics covered includes working with Kodu, BBC’s micro:bit, Minecraft as well as WordPress hosting. Participants of the micro:bit workshop also had a chance to interact face to face with our Deputy Prime Minister, Tharman Shanmugaratnam when he was brought around the venue after his keynote. [caption id=“attachment_22767” align=“alignnone” width=“1620”] From left: (Singapore MSP Lead) Shawn Tjai, (MSP) Deddy Tandean[/caption] All participants of We Tech Care also had the chance to participate in the huge range of fringe activities, booths as well as listen to the keynote in the main auditorium. [caption id=“attachment_22770” align=“alignnone” width=“1620”] Deputy Prime Minister - Tharman Shanmugaratnam[/caption] Lastly, thank you to all MSPs, Microsoft Volunteers and the public for helping out and taking part in this edition of We Tech Care! It would not have been a success without all of your participation! For more information and news about our upcoming events, do stay tuned to the Microsoft Singapore Facebook Page!

Pitch your Tech- Disrupt the Laundry Experience

Pitch your tech to the world’s #1 consumer goods company to disrupt a $4 Billion USD business! Fabric Care P&G pitch contest This is an open innovation competition to develop and pitch your tech to P&G wherein participants have a wonderful opportunity to secure SGD20,000 funds from P&G, partnership opportunity and other prizes. Entire global tech community including external community like developers, innovators and creators are invited to develop technology based solutions transforming laundry experience solving key consumer issues enabling consumers and their fabrics with focus on China and Japan markets. Visit http://pngchallenge.thehub.sg/ for more details and to register/participate

Free resources from Microsoft to help you build a cloud career

Resources for IT Pros to build their careers in cloud technology. Cloud technology is transforming the role of IT. Building new skills and learning about cloud technology is important for career growth. Microsoft is introducing two new free programs for IT Professionals who want to build and grow their career in the cloud-first world. Join now! Microsoft IT Pro Cloud Essentials A free annual subscription that includes free cloud services, education and support. ...

Programmer’s Day Blog Post

5 reasons why everyone should learn to code 12 September is not just the 256th day of the year – it is also International Programmer’s Day, a time for us to celebrate the architects behind our increasingly digital world. In case you’re wondering- the number 256 symbolizes the number of distinct values that can be represented with an eight-bit byte. Today, we take for granted how simple it is to stay in touch with our loved ones, shop online, or even read this article on our mobile devices. We rarely pause to consider that all these conveniences and benefits of technology are actually only possible through the work of coders and programmers. Coding is something that everyone should try – here’s why: 1. Digital capabilities and economic growth go together: According to a recent study by Accenture, more than a fifth (22%) of global GDP today can be attributed to some form of digital skills, capital, goods or services. Digital tech could power $2 trillion of the global economic output by 2020 clearly demonstrating its role in igniting overall economic growth. For this reason, there are plans to formally introduce computing and computer science education into national curricula in several Asian countries like Japan, Korea, Singapore, Malaysia and Vietnam. ...

How to format your Microsoft Surface using an Windows ISO file

Many people are familiar with our official Windows USB/DVD Download Tool (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/windows-usb-dvd-download-tool). A super convenient tool to flash ISO file into USB thumb drive. However, many of you will realize that, your Microsoft Surface doesn’t boot from the USB when you flash the ISO using the tool. That is because Microsoft Surface will only boot into a thumb drive with FAT32 file system! So here. I will give you a step by step guide to create a Windows 10 bootable thumb drive for your Microsoft Surface. What you need • An 8GB or 16GB or 32GB thumb drive • A PC with internet access and a USB port What to do 1. Go to https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows10 and click on “Download tool now” 2. Go to your download folder and double click on “MediaCreationTool.exe” 3. Click on “Accept” to agree the terms and condition (<- Please read) 4. Select “Create installation media for another PC” then “Next” 5. You can either “use recommended options for this PC” or uncheck the check box and select from the drop down list for the ISO file you need. 6. Select “ISO file” and click “Next” 7. Choose a location to save the file and click “Save” 8. The download will begin. Just wait for the download to complete. 9. Click on “Finish” after the download has completed. 10. Plug in your thumb drive and go to “This PC” 11. Right click on the drive icon of your thumb drive and select “Format…” 12. Click on “File system” and select “FAT32” 13. Click on “Start” to begin the format drive process. NOTE THAT THIS STEP WILL WIPE THE ENTIRE THUMB DRIVE. 14. Browse to the ISO file you have saved. Right click to get the drop down list. Select “Open with” then “Windows Explorer”. 15. A Windows Explorer will open. Select all the files and copy it. 16. Go to the root folder of the thumb drive and paste the files into it. 17. That’s it! Your Surface bootable thumb drive is ready! You may want to refer to https://www.microsoft.com/surface/en-ae/support/storage-files-and-folders/boot-surface-from-usb-recovery-device?os=windows-10 to see how to boot Surface from a USB device. Cheers Lungic \(^o^)/

Startup Feature: Surfing Suitcase Co-Founder, Xander Khoo

[caption id=“attachment_22096” align=“alignnone” width=“2988”] Surfing Suitcase Team - Lik Khian, Dansu, and Xander (from left to right)[/caption] Hello! What’s your current role in your start-up, and how did your past experiences take you here? I am the co-founder of my start-up. I had all along been very keen in the field of business and started doing my little business venture in 2012 as well. However, the exposure to start-up, together with my one-year overseas start-up internship experience in Shanghai with NUS Overseas College, changed how I look at things, and I have never looked back since. I am very fortunate to have been able to be guided by the best throughout this journey, from my Shanghai start-up boss Brian Tan, who is a serial entrepreneur, highly creative and motivated individual, to people like Charles from Charles & Keith and Jane Sun from Ctrip who had selflessly shared with a group of people and myself on the various experiences and tips they had for us. Slowly but surely, from the 3 years plus I have immersed myself in the start-up ecosystem now, to the books I had poured through and the great people I had the opportunity to come across, standing on the shoulders of giants affirmed by belief that there is more to be done and we can indeed make a change in the society through our start-ups and through innovating day in day out. Which 3 words would describe you best? Curious, passionate, and hungry. How did you come up with the idea? And what problem is your start-up trying to solve? It started when my co-founders, Lik Khian, Dansu and myself were constantly looking for work spaces to work out of. Not just any work spaces, but spaces that are able to cater to our needs at that point in time and allow us to do proper work. Once we realized there actually lack a solution that caters to what we want, and started tinkering with what we might possibly with, we begun talking to more people and did some validation, only soon to realized that we are not the only ones facing this problem. As we look deeper we started to develop this firm belief that remote working and co-working is going to be a huge trend in the very near future, and we want to be able to help people transit seamlessly into it, as well as experiencing the full benefits what remote working can do for them. Hence, we decide to start small by first empowering road warriors to access work spaces suited to their needs, anytime they want, anywhere and everywhere they need. The very first problem we all faced. How long did your start-up take to finish development? (Before the product could meet the market) It took us somewhere between 6 to 7 months to have the MVP out. At the start we were bouncing around the idea and thinking all about the grand plan we have and what we can do for the society, only soon to realise we need to first start solving one of their immediate problem, then we are able to allow our consumers to have a taste and first insight into remote working, if they had not tried it out yet. What are your preferred platforms/tools? We operate on a mobile web currently, but looking to move into a mobile app to further improve the ease of access. Have you gotten any interesting feedback from users of the app/solution? It was heartening to receive many encouraging feedbacks from our users ever since we did the beta testing. Users currently had feedback to us that this is indeed very applicable and useful to them, however of course with some areas that we can possibly improve in, and that is what we are working hard to do! Also, when we participated in Tech In Asia Conference 2016, quite a few companies and investors alike came to inquire if we had launched and where were we then. Unfortunately, we were not ready then. There was an instance when we were even asked if we are in Nepal! How do you keep yourself motivated, especially during the low times? Constant reminders of why we started out in the first place and the amount of sacrifices that we had put in. Beyond passion, it has also become a responsibility for us, an answer to ourselves, an answer to the customers that were there for us from the start, and an answer to our dreams. Definitely also, the thought that we started out to really want to shake the world. To be able to bring a little good with what we do to the society. Last but not least, the environment also plays an important part in keeping me going. Personally, getting consistently involved with meeting people of various walks, as well as different related events. The little chats, sharing and sessions that happen will remind myself on what made me embark on this journey at the start, as I recount my journey and explain my start-up to them. If you could go back in time when you first started, what would you have done differently? I would have done things faster and more fearlessly. A lot of times it is the self-doubt that are the shackles tying ourselves to our current position. What’s next for you? Line up an official launch once the full fledge app is ready, and start breaking into the SEA market to bring more good to more people in the region! What’s one advice you would give to budding entrepreneurs? As an early stage start-up, perhaps I am not as fully qualified to give advices. Yet, if I am to share with the others on what I got out of my experiences, I would say that there will be points in time you will hear a lot of people saying a lot of different things. Some will love you, some will hate you, some will tell you you are onto something big, and some will tell you that it is never going to work. However, what matters is that you persevere on no matter what until you have seen the results for yourself, and always, Stay true to your vision. From the words of Winston Churchill, If you are going through hell, keep going.

Singapore to Explore Next-Generation Digital Government Services

Singapore to Explore Next-Generation Digital Government Services with Conversations as a Platform Proof-of-Concept SINGAPORE, 12 July 2016 – Singapore is partnering with Microsoft on its “Conversations as a Platform” to explore opportunities in co-creating next-generation digital government services for a Smart Nation. At this year’s World Cities Summit “Innovative Solutions for a Smart City” conference track, Dr Vivian Balakrishnan, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Minister-In-Charge of the Smart Nation Initiative, announced that the Government will explore next-generation government services based on a shift towards conversational computing - specifically, the use of intelligent software programs known as chatbots for selected public services where appropriate. These chatbots will function as digital representatives, simulating human behaviour in order to make interactions simpler, more efficient, and more consistent. In the mobile-first and cloud-first world that we all live in, citizens and constituents want public and business services that can interact with their digital lives – intelligent services that respond, act and communicate in fundamentally new ways that can augment human abilities and experiences and do so in a trustworthy manner. The Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore (IDA) will explore with Microsoft on a new computing proof-of-concept (POC) that builds conversational intelligence into public services, with the aim of making them more anticipatory, accessible, engaging and inclusive for citizens and constituents. “I believe there are more intuitive ways for government services to be delivered to our citizens. Everybody expects responsive and personalised interactions in real time. The recent quantum improvement of natural language processing means that ‘conversations’ will be the new medium. This joint research project with Microsoft to demonstrate the utility of conversational computing for public services will be all the more pertinent,” said Dr Vivian Balakrishnan. Conversations as a Platform represents a fundamental shift where the power of human language, artificial intelligence and machine learning are applied pervasively through computing interface and interaction. Essentially, computing systems, their apps and services, are infused with intelligence and context that shows up in the form of a bot to enable productive human to machine interaction within a single conversation – whether spoken or text – rather than needing individuals to navigate through a sea of icons to find and use multiple applications or look through pages and pages of Websites to accomplish tasks. “As everything around us becomes more digitised, Conversations as a Platform is a new shift that applies the understanding of human language to computers and computing, which can transform every industry,” said Satya Nadella, CEO, Microsoft. “We’re excited to partner with organisations like the Government of Singapore to help transform its engagements with citizens and businesses to seize the opportunities ahead.” “As part of a Digital Government, IDA continues to explore partnership opportunities with the industry to co-create digital solutions for citizens and businesses. We have done so with virtual assistant ‘Ask Jamie,’ which has been successfully rolled out to some government agencies including IDA. We are happy to work with more partners, including Microsoft, to test out POCs which may enhance the way citizens and businesses interact online with the Government,” said Jacqueline Poh, Managing Director of IDA. The POC, which will be implemented in three phases, will involve intelligent chatbots, where users are able to converse with and call upon any applications within a single website to complete tasks. It will also explore potential future scenarios, including services that cater to a multi-lingual and multi-generational population. ...

Startup Feature: Cafebond.com Co-Founder, Keyis Ng

For this Start-Up Feature, we will be interviewing Keyis, Co-Founder of Cafebond.com. Hi Keyis, what’s your current role in Cafebond, and how did your past experiences take you here? I’m the CEO and Co-Founder of Cafebond.com, a specialty coffee bean e-commerce marketplace for coffee lovers to shop beans from top cafes around the world. I have been a coffee addict since I was 20 when I started working in the Marketing industry, and a trip to Melbourne, Australia, with my CTO and Co-Founder Eugene Chen 2 years ago let us tasted one of the best coffee we ever tasted, and everything else is history. Which 3 words would describe you best? Ambitious, hard-working and creative. How did you come up with the idea? And what problem is Cafebond trying to solve? It was a leisure trip to Melbourne 2 years ago with my co-founder when we tasted one of the best cup of coffee in our life and we want the world to share the same experience we had. As a coffee lover myself, buying fresh coffee beans offline is a troublesome process due to my busy schedule and I do not want to settle for anything less. Also, usually there isn’t a good variety of coffee beans for me to choose locally. That’s the 2 main problems Cafebond.com is adding value to for our customers. Cafebond.com currently has 15 top Australian cafes on our platform, including names like Seven Seeds, Market Lane, St Ali from Melbourne and Ona Coffee from Canberra, which is owned by Sasa Sestic, the World Barista Champion of 2015. Our coffee are roast to order and ships weekly from Australia at a flat delivery of S$10 regardless the order size. The affordable shipping is only made possible with our Shipping Consolidation Algorithm, which we consolidate customer’s order to bring down the shipping costs greatly. How long did Cafebond take to finish development? (before the product could meet the market) Our team took a year to finish the product development. During the time, we also spoke to lots of potential customers with both coffee lovers and also café merchants to constantly improve our platform. What are your preferred platforms/tools? Microsoft Azure of course! Have you gotten any interesting feedback from users of the app? We have gotten quite a few feed backs from coffee lovers to expand to other Southeast Asian countries. I’m excited to share exclusively with Spiffy.sg readers that Cafebond.com’s expansion to Malaysia is in the works and will happen very soon! How do you keep yourself motivated, especially during the low times? Having support from my co-founder, friends and family. If you could go back in time when you first started, what would you have done differently? Nothing. Even though we took quite a bit of time to be launch-ready but the process has been really rewarding for us to understand our business and our customers better. What’s next for you? Constantly improving the key needle movers in our business and of course focusing on our expansion plan to the Chinese market. What’s one advice you would give to budding entrepreneurs? Quoting Steve Jobs - “Stay Hungry, stay foolish”. How has it been like working with Consumers as an audience? Very exciting, especially talking directly to our customers where we gain lots of insights to constantly make our platform better. ...