Voter Registration

As someone who is actively involved with registering voters in our country, I have some thoughts on what Jagdeep Singh Deo said about automatic voter registration.

  1. Automatic Registration using MyKAD
    “voter registration exercises were outdated as Malaysians now have MyKads that contained all necessary information.”
    This I will need to agree with. We have put in so much information and security into the MyKAD that it does not make sense not to. Our National Registration Department (NRD) has all the necessary information in their database and they already share this with their counterparts in the Elections Commission (EC). All voter registration needs to be done using the exact information in the MyKAD. If we registered a different address than the one on the MyKAD, the registration would actually be rejected by the EC. So, it does not make sense not to just put all the information into the EC database directly. In fact, with the right software in place, all the work of sorting out constituencies will be automated too. It just makes perfect economic sense to do it.
  2. Compulsory Voting
    “In some countries, voting is compulsory and eligible voters who do not vote are penalised.”
    This I cannot agree with. I am a strong believer in personal liberty. We cannot and must never force someone to vote. If that person has no interest in voting and makes no effort in understanding the issues, that person should not be encouraged to vote. Voting should ideally be done by informed voters – people who know enough about issues to form an opinion and then go out to express that opinion at the ballot box. We must never compel someone to vote. It will just ruin the outcome of the votes because these people would end up voting based on some random thing like gender, race, religion and whether or not the candidate wore white on polling day. Garbage-in, garbage-out is the term to describe the outcome of such an election where voters voted randomly.
  3. Reduced Voting Age
    “If we are serious about becoming a truly developed and international class country, we should seriously consider reducing the age of voting eligibility to 18.”
    This is another thing that I cannot agree to simply because, I do not think that we should draw the line at any arbitrary number such as 18. If our criteria is that people should be mature enough to think and decide on issues, then I don’t understand the rationale for picking the number 18 since kids these days are so mature that they can probably tell you the right thing to do at the age of 15 or younger. I think that voting age should be drawn along the lines of – if you are old enough to be affected by the decisions made by silly politicians, you should be allowed to vote. But this would not be practical as babies would fall into this category. So, maybe a more practical solution would be to allow anyone who is old enough to work to vote. Their jobs would be directly affected by the decisions made by politicians and they should have the right to express their grievances.

Anyway, if you have not yet registered to vote, please do so tomorrow. You can request a form from any post office in the country. It is a fairly straight-forward form to fill – you just need to be careful about entering the information exactly as found on your MyKAD. Then, wait about 4-6 months and check your registration status at the SPR website. If you have successfully registered, you will see the information online.

Finally, when it comes time for the general elections, please check online for your exact voting station. There will not be any letter or notice sent out to you officially. Just go online and check for the information. Turn out to vote as your employer cannot deny you the right to cast your vote. In fact, drag your employer along with you!

PS: You can find me at a certain pasar malam every week, shouting and signing up voters on the spot. I am doing it because I see it as a civic duty, personally.

Gaming will Save the World

http://video.ted.com/assets/player/swf/EmbedPlayer.swf

Exploiting the ultimate cloud computer – our fellow human beings!

UnFiT

Our most expensive local ISP is back-peddling on its decision to cap downloads. While they may spin it as a monopoly listening to customer feedback, I think that someone truly dropped the ball on this one. Considering the fact that tax-payers forked out more than RM 2-billion to help subsidise the infrastructure deployment, our rakyat should really not have things shoved up their behinds as a thank you.

This high-speed broad band is only good for the country if the rakyat are able to reap its benefits. Capping your download to 2GB is basically capping the amount of knowledge that a child can learn in a day, which is just dumb. It was a seriously dumb move from a business sense too, since their HSBB packages actually make their ADSL packages look good.

Someone really dropped the ball on this one. It’s just good that they are back-peddling on their decision.

I just do not like the idea of them reserving the right to cap bandwidth in the future. They must remember that the rakyat are stake-holders in the infrastructure as well. The people subsidised its deployment and should actually get a heavy discount on the packages instead.

More downloads means more traffic, means we get to buy bandwidth from the international hubs in larger quantities, meaning that the bulk prices we pay per bit will be lower, ultimately driving the price of broad-band dramatically downwards. I seriously urge all early HSBB adopters to download to their hearts’ content so that the rest of us can pay less for it later.

UniFi Sucks

I guess that I am not alone in thinking that UniFi sucks. According to TheStar, consumers had their bubbles burst when the packages were announced. However, the article got some of the facts wrong.

In Singapore, a 1Gbps (gigabit per second) service – which is five times the speed of a 20Mbps connection – only costs about RM200.

A 1Gbps service is not five times the speed of a 20Mbps connection, it is fifty times the speed at a similar price point. To say that our broad-band services are expensive is just laughable. It is sad that our national monopoly cannot get its act together to give our citizens what they need. If it is about buying aggregated bandwidth from the international hubs, we have 10 times the number of citizens in this country compared to Singapore. Our bandwidth consumption should be 10 times more than Singapore. So, that excuse just does not fly.

Telekom Malaysia CEO Datuk Zamzamzairani Mohd Isa said at a press conference to announce the UniFi pricing yesterday that the measures were part of its Fair Usage Policy. This policy is a standard industry practice to ensure that all subscribers get to enjoy the same web surfing quality.

While I agree that fair-usage policies need to be implemented, it is unfair to cap the bandwidth at such a low value. The caps are hardly enough for a single user, much less a house-hold. However, they have no caps for business users and the business packages are only slightly more expensive than the home packages. So, I would recommend that consumers subscribe to the business packages instead of the home packages, if that was possible.

I Fin U

Malaysia’s largest ISP – TMNet – has just launched the much awaited High-speed Broadband (HSBB) services in Malaysia. These include things like fibre-to-the-home technology that allows one to have a very high speed connection to the Internet. The initial packages have been announced to be 5Mbps@RM149, 10Mbps@RM199 and 20Mbps@RM249.

But wait, there is a catch – a really big one.

One might think that having such a high speed is excellent for streaming videos off the Internet. I can certainly imagine myself watching more YouTube and TED videos. It would also be excellent for downloading games such as from the PlayStation Network and other online stores. However, it’s all wishful thinking on our parts.

Our national ISP has decided to screw its HSBB customers in the behind by imposing a cap.

The whole idea of having a high-speed broadband service is to bring information into the home. I’m sure that it was the main thrust of the programme drafted out by our government. By bringing the Internet into more households in Malaysia (50% penetration target), we would be able to bring knowledge right into the door-steps and our kids would be able to get the best exposure to all kinds of information around the world.

But our dreams have been crushed.

With a 60GB cap a month for the 5Mbps line, it essentially works out to be 2GB per day. Now, if we were truly utilising the 5Mbps bandwidth, we would hit the cap with just 53 minutes of downloading a day. Think about that for a minute. You may think that this is actually quite fair but you are assuming that there is only one person using the internet per household.

Let us think of a typical scenario, of a unit family with two parents and two kids. The boy wants to download and play the latest games, the girl wants to watch her favourite series on YouTube, the parents want to use the Internet to shop, work and for business. Consider also for a moment that YouTube videos are already in the process of being streamed in high-definition. The games played online already incorporate voice and some video team-play. Our online applications are becoming ever more flash-based which sucks up bandwidth.

This means that the caps are useless.

We may have a big pipe coming into the houses, but our water is being rationed. One wonders, what is the point of having the big pipes and what did the taxpayers actually pay for. I am so not excited about this development.

PS: You get more download with a 1Mbps ADSL subscription. If you saturate your ADSL, you can actually download 10GB of data per day, with no cap.

FLL Judging

Wow, they actually bothered to give us a letter of appreciation! Nice! I’ll definitely volunteer again next year!

Transferring Files

I learned something interesting today – if you have to choose between transferring files between two machines via a flash drive or a gigabit network, choose the latter. The transfer speeds are blazingly fast on a gigabit network. I managed to move a bunch of DVD isos across the network at speeds of about 250Mbps. Flash drives generally transfer at a tenth of the speed.

Oh yes, I’m playing with a bunch of servers at work these days – ones that cost the price of a car and sound like jet planes taking off whenever they are powered up. Vrroooom!