Monthly Archives: January 2017

MONTHLY ENGAGEMENT WITH THE VICE CHANCELLOR OF UTM – FEB 2017

YBhg. Prof./Saudara,


Sukacitanya, seluruh warga Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM) dijemput untuk hadir ke Majlis Perhimpunan Bulanan (Februari) bersama YBhg. Datuk Naib Canselor yang akan diadakan pada 06 Februari 2017 (Isnin).

Dimaklumkan, mana-mana Fakulti/Bahagian/Persatuan yang berhasrat untuk menyertai slot di dalam perhimpunan bulanan ini perlu memaklumkan kepada pihak urusetia (Pejabat Hal Ehwal Korporat) selewat-lewatnya 5 hari sebelum majlis berlangsung.

Perincian Perhimpunan Bulanan (Februari) adalah seperti berikut:
Tarikh : 06 Februari 2017 (Isnin).
Masa : 8.00 pagi
Tempat :

i. Dewan Azman Hashim, UTM Kuala Lumpur.
ii.
Dewan Senat & Dewan Bankuet, UTM Johor Bahru. [LINTAS LANGSUNG]

Pakaian:
– Pakaian korporat.

Atur cara:
7.40 pagi : Staf mengambil tempat
8.00 pagi : Ketibaan YBhg. Datuk Naib Canselor
: Nyanyian Lagu Negaraku
: Bacaan Doa
: Pembentangan oleh YBhg. Datuk Naib Canselor

: Slot / Penghargaan Khas (jika berkaitan)
: Penyampaian sijil kenaikan pangkat, dll (UTM KL & UTM JB)
: Lagu Keunggulan Terbilang
: Bersurai

Segala sokongan dan komitmen YBhg. Prof/Saudara untuk hadir amatlah dihargai.

Sekian dimaklumkan.​​​​

​​

‘innovative . entrepreneurial . global’
 
 
Faizal Jalal
Senior Assistant Registrar
 
Office of Corporate Affairs
Level 2, Bangunan Canseleri Sultan Ibrahim
Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, 81310 Johor Bahru, Johor.
 
office +607 5530008 | mobile +60192210685  [no. singkat 6014]
e-mail: faizaljalal@utm.my | weblog : http://corporateaffairs.utm.my/faizaljalal/ | site: corporateaffairs.utm.my

INTEGRITY MESSAGE SERIES 15 : 5 OFFICE CLEANING TIPS

Salam dan good day to everyone,

This time, we would like to share about office cleaning tips. It’s good to notify that a clean office makes for a clear head,but who has time to organize with your workload? Setting up systems and sticking to them allows you to work smarter while you work harder. It also gives the impression that you’re on the top of things when your boss makes an impromptu visit to your office. Who wants to leave her standing there while you shuffle through mounds of paperwork to find the one file folder she needs? Here are the five tips to get you started.
1. File As You Go
One of the biggest office offenders is piles of paper – on your desk, on your shelves, and eventually on your floor. It’s easy to get busy and start stacking papers to file for later, but before you know it, you have a task that’s too big to tackle. The key is to process papers as you go. Set up system of trays or file folders that are clearly labeled and make it a habit to use them. The same goes for your computer desktop.
2. Clean Your Electronics 
Hey you, with the food spattered monitor and keyboard full of crumbs. We know that you eat at your desk so you can work through lunch. And it certainly impresses your boss, but your co-worker are probably snickering about the week old coffee stains. Fortunately, it’s a simple fix. Head to your local office supply store, pick up some wipes that are specifically made for electronics, make it a point to wipe down your keyboard and monitor daily. Not only it keep dust and debris from gumming up your computer, but it also helps keep germs at bay.
 
3. Declutter Your Desk 
If you’re like many people, your desk probably acts as a kitchen table for your office. It’s a place where everything get dropped, and pretty soon you have to dig to get to your computer. A clean desk will guarantee more productivity, but you’re already so busy trying to be productive, who has time to stop and clean? The key is to schedule it daily, and treat it like it’s a meeting you can’t miss. It helps if you minimize the picture frame and only keep work essentials on, in and around your desk.
 
4. Assign a Place for Everything 
The key to make cleaning your office easy is to put everything in its rightful place. So, this means that, you need to assign a place for everything and label it clearly so you can find it in a pinch. Once you get in a habit of putting things away, decluttering becomes a quick task that’s second nature. This also means not filling up every single inch of storage. New items will come into play and need a place to live, so keep a few empty shelves or drawers to make room for the new.
5. Get Rid of Junk 
The magnet business cards, the colorful array of cheap pens, the coffee cups, the calendars – all freebies that you just couldn’t say no to. Now, they’re strewn all over your desk. It may seem like stuff that’s useful, but really it’s just stuff that clutters up your space and makes you feel guilty for throwing it away. We know it’s hard to resist free item, but learn to say ‘no’.
We hope that these tips give benefit to you. Work harder, work smarter, and note to have a clean work environment and stick to your priority.
With that, thank you for reading this message.
 
MORAL : Education is a progressive discovery of our own ignorance – Will Durant (quoted in The 8th Habit From Effectiveness to Greatness – Stephen R. Covey)
 
Cited from : howstuffworks.com
 
RAIHAN BINTI ABD KARIM 
Pegawai Integriti Bertauliah /Certified Integrity Officer (CeIO)
UTM Pejabat Penasihat Undang-Undang / UTM Chambers of The Legal Adviser
Sultan Ibrahim Chancellery Building
Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM)
81310 UTM Skudai
Johor Darul Ta’zim
MALAYSIA.

Primary Email  : raihan.ak@utm.my 

Phone No        : 07 – 5330437 

Using agile project management for SEO & digital marketing

by Marcus Miller on January 25, 2017

This article is obtained from here.

Using Agile Principles for SEO & Digital MarketingSEO and digital marketing are incredibly complicated, and the digital landscape is in constant evolution and flux. New platforms. New competitors. The new world of marketing has evolved, yet processes for managing and adapting to change have not always kept pace.

There is much to learn here from the worlds of manufacturing and software development. New project management strategies have evolved that have revolutionized these industries. We hear very little about these approaches in the world of marketing, even though they are well suited to the ever-changing landscape of SEO and digital marketing.

At the core of these approaches is a burning desire to inspect and adapt, to eliminate waste and to strive for constant improvement. This is coupled with an agile approach, which leads to improvements in speed, reductions in costs and improved results.

In this article, I discuss Scrum, the project management strategy we use at my company to manage client projects and improve our internal processes. I explain what Scrum is and detail how we’ve taken this framework (typically used for software development) and applied it to our SEO and digital marketing projects.

Scrum: Continuous improvement

Scrum is a lightweight approach to project management that helps small teams develop complex software systems. Scrum is typically used for software development, but it can work for anything from a house renovation project to managing a marketing campaign.

A Scrum team usually consists of several people who work together in short bursts of work, known as “sprints.” These sprints include time for review and reflection, with the driving goals to remove wasted time and effort while striving for constant improvement.

Roles

A Scrum team has only three distinct roles: Product Owner, Scrum Master and Team Member. These three roles work together to deliver the stated goals of the project.

Product Owner/Project Owner

The Product Owner has the overall vision and goals for the project. They drive the project by focusing efforts on the most important work. That is, the Product Owner prioritizes tasks that will deliver results. Typically, the Product Owner will take the customer’s requirements and then add them to the to-do list (known in Scrum as “the backlog”).

In a marketing capacity, we refer to the Product Owner as the Project Owner.

Scrum Master

The Scrum Master (cool name) exists to keep things moving as fast as possible and to remove any barriers the Team Members have to doing the work. The team’s deliverable is always the project and objectives, yet the Scrum Master focuses on delivering a high-performing team.

The Scrum Master will help team members understand how Scrum works and how to apply agile thinking to the project. The Scrum Master should always be available to remove any obstacles a team may face.

The Scrum Master is not the boss (just in case that Scrum Master title got you excited and ready for a power trip!). The Scrum Master is the most knowledgeable and experienced team member, the person who helps the others work in the most effective way. The project Yoda!

Team Member

The backbone of all agile teams is, of course, the Team Members. These teams should have total authority over how the work gets done. Of course, the Project Owner and Scrum Master can help and set priorities, but the team should own the actual implementation of the work.

For an agile team to succeed, that team must be made up of members who have all the skills required to do the work. In a digital marketing capacity, this usually means SEO, PPC, Social and Content, with some analytics and conversion rate optimization skills thrown in for good measure.

While a team will have specialties, they must work together to deliver the end result: the project objectives or goals. This will mean that, while most people will play to their strengths, there will be times when people chip in and help where possible to move everything along as quickly as possible.

The key takeaway here is that the focus should be on doing the job and not doing my job — and generating results rather than just doing work.

Project Owner & Scrum Master

At Bowler Hat (my company), the Project Owner and Scrum Master tend to be the same person. Typically, this person is also the digital marketing strategist. Often, that is me. Not to say this is the way you should or have to do it, but we have found this to work best for most projects.

Agile tools

The team uses a series of tools to make the process visible to all team members and to accelerate results.

Project backlog

The project backlog is a list of all jobs. Ideally, these will be attached to a clear deliverable or objective. We want to keep that connection with the client’s actual goals (more business), rather than focus on the minutiae of day-to-day SEO tasks.

The Project Owner should order tasks by priority. That is, stories at the top of the board are the highest priority. These high-priority tasks should be small enough that they can be picked up and worked on by team members. Tasks lower down the board may not yet be fully fleshed out and can be higher level — just remember that as they move up the list, they will need to be more clearly defined.

Project tasks should all have the following information:

  • Business objective
  • What needs to be done
  • Work/time units
  • Acceptance criteria

Sprint backlog

Work is broken up into short cycles often known as sprints. A sprint could be a day, a week or a month, but typically no longer. For an agency where there is a focus on multiple clients, the sprint is likely pretty short. For example, one sprint of five days may be conducted each month for that client.

Project tasks are moved from the project backlog into the sprint backlog by the Project Owner. The Team Members can then determine how to best tackle the jobs in the current sprint.

Burn charts

Burn charts are a visual tool that show the relationship between time and scope. Where a project has five people for a five-day sprint, it may have 200 hours of work (or units). The burndown chart shows how as time progresses, work is completed. This can be a strong motivational tool and something for the Project Owner and Scrum Master to glance at and provide input.

Burn charts work well for bigger projects where there’s work to be done over a sustained period of time, but they can help a team see progress. At the end of each day, work units have to be shown against the burndown chart for completed tasks. This can’t use hours as such, but rather estimated hours based on completion of tasks.

The burndown chart then gives visual feedback if the team is on track and helps give them a nudge if they are not. This helps teams pull together when not on track and drives team happiness when things are going well.

burndown chartVisual task board

An important aspect of agile project management is visualizing the work that needs to be done. This allows all team members to easily see and review the work that needs doing or is in progress. Tasks for the current work cycle (sprint) are moved from the project backlog to the task board for team members to work on.

The most simple boards have three columns:

  • To do
  • Doing
  • Done

Tasks are simply moved across the board as they are in progress (generally using sticky notes). Team members can see what everyone is doing, communicate and help each other. And project owners can quickly and easily see the progress a team is making.

visual task board

The sprint cycle

Work is tackled in short bursts known as sprints. Sprints can vary in length, and this is where using this for a marketing agency with many clients differs the most from using this for software development teams (or even for marketing teams with one unified objective).

Ultimately, your sprint or cycle is a fixed period of time where you take care of small chunks of the overall project. This could be one person doing a day a month or a team working on something solidly for a month. The important takeaway here is that we are looking to inspect and adapt our working practice and learn from that.

Sprints typically consist of:

  • Sprint planning — what will be done
  • Daily meeting (or scrum) — no more than 15 minutes
  • Sprint review — demonstrate results
  • Retrospective — identify a couple of strategic changes that can improve results

Let’s look at these individually to see how they contribute to the overall process.

Sprint planning

Where a project has a backlog of prioritized tasks, this should be pretty simple. The Project Owner makes sure tasks are ready to be worked on, and the team members pick them up. The Scrum Master can then support the team with any questions or problems.

You have two questions to answer here:

  • What will we do this sprint?
  • How will we do it?

Scale is important here — if this is a one-day sprint, then spend 10 minutes planning. If this is a week’s work, then spend a few hours on your sprint planning.

Daily meeting (or Scrum)

The daily meeting, or Scrum, is an integral part of the process. The idea is that this should be brief (15 minutes maximum), and often these meetings are held standing to ensure brevity.

The main objective here is for each team member to detail what they have done, what they are doing today, and any problems or hold-ups they encountered. Problems are not solved in this meeting, but rather a team member may state an issue and another team member may pledge to help them solve that issue.

This drives the flow of communication and knowledge sharing, and it ensures hold-ups are quickly removed.

Inspect and adapt — inspect in the meeting, adapt after the meeting.

In an agency setting with multiple clients, this often means we are looking at problems with processes and always striving to optimize and improve the processes that underlie the various marketing activities.

Sprint review

This is where achievements are detailed and connected to objectives. In an agency as we use it, this often forms the basis of our client reporting: what we have done, how it helps us achieve our objectives and what we will do next in the next work cycle.

Retrospective

The retrospective is a meeting held at the end of each sprint cycle. At Bowler Hat, this is something we do at the end of each month. Here, we are really looking to inspect and adapt our own processes for SEO, PPC, social and content marketing.

  • What was learned during this month?
  • What problems did we have this month?
  • How can we improve?

This is not intended to generate a long laundry list of tasks. Rather, the idea is to identify one or two small strategic improvements to the process. This often takes the form of one or two issues for each tactical approach.

Inspect and adapt. Continuous improvement. These are key to doing better work for our clients and getting better results. These are also key to staying afloat and on top of new opportunities in the rapidly evolving digital marketing landscape.

How this all works together

The magic here is when all of these small components work together. The daily Scrum helps teams continuously inspect, adapt and share knowledge. This removes hold-ups and creates happier teams. The retrospective helps to underline where strategic improvements can be made for the coming month.

Putting this into practice for client projects

At Bowler Hat, we have a hugely varied customer base. We have companies that use us for a single tactical channel like local SEO, and we have customers that trust us to take care of SEO, PPC, social and content marketing. This means a client may have a single team member taking care of their work or a larger team with several team members.

Applying classic agile approaches here is a little tough and has needed some tweaks to the basic model. We use agile thinking here to review and improve our approach to agile marketing: inspect and adapt, make strategic changes. There is always room for improvement, so we strive for it.

The following is an overview of how we tend to put this into practice for our own clients:

Project backlog

To know what to do, we need to determine the project backlog. This is typically the job of the strategist and will often involve audits. As an example for an SEO project, we would typically perform a detailed SEO audit and create a list of tasks. We will also look at creating a basic digital marketing plan, which will also detail various action points.

The Project Owner will then prioritize these tasks into the project backlog.

Sprint planning

For a client’s work in any given sprint cycle, we will pick the highest-priority tasks from the project backlog and add them to the sprint plan for this coming period.

Task board

We have a two-sided approach here:

We create digital boards for each project using Asana. (Historically, we used Trello — both are free.) We can then have comments and keep communication and information regarding the project on the digital board. All followers of that board are alerted whenever there is an update, and all information is kept in one centralized place away from email.

We also use actual boards with sticky notes for internal processes and larger projects. This would likely be recreated in Asana and notes added there, but the physical board makes the work and progress visible.

Ideally, I’d want to combine the two and use a projector to display boards visually but centralize all changes in one place — the best of both worlds.

Doing the work

Team members do the work. No matter how efficient we become, the work still has to be done.

Daily Scrum (15 minutes)

We have a daily Scrum where everyone details what they worked on yesterday, what they are working on today, and any problems, lessons, improvements and so on. When a team member airs an issue, another team member (or the Scrum Master) will arrange to help after the daily meeting. When a team member overcomes a problem, that knowledge is quickly shared. This keeps the flow of communication strong and creates happy, helpful teams.

Sprint review (reporting)

The sprint review forms the basis of our reporting. An individual or a group will review what has been done, what the results are, and what we need to do next. We may also look at what metrics/KPIs we expect to see movement on after this work has been completed.

Retrospective

We have a retrospective meeting at the end of each month. Typically, we are looking at work completed, successes, problems and what we can do to improve across all tactical channels and the sub-tasks within each channel. What worked in link building? What worked in local SEO? What worked in paid search? What worked in social ads?

In our retrospective, we review each client as a team and look at the information from the sprint review. We then review all of our internal processes for each marketing activity.

Here, we are trying to identify wasted time and opportunities for improvement in our processes and client work so we can improve the results we generate for our customers. At the very least, we don’t want to repeat mistakes or repeatedly go down rabbit holes where we are not seeing results.

Inspect and adapt

Learning to inspect and adapt is crucial. Whether an entire strategy is not performing or a specific approach for a given client is just not delivering the goods, this inspection allows for change. What works well for one client can fall flat on its face for another.

Creating an “inspect and adapt” culture improves the work you do for clients, helps spot problems or wasted time/effort more quickly and ensures you do the very best work possible at all times.

We are still adapting our approach. Asana for task boards. Projectors to make these digital boards centralized and visible to all. Merging Project Owner and Scrum Master roles. We constantly tinker and make changes. Sometimes they work. Sometimes they don’t. Inspect and adapt.

We operate in a marketing environment where change can be swift and the slow can be left behind. Inspecting the situation for all marketing activities ensures you are agile enough to spot opportunities and react to develop a strategic advantage.

Eliminating waste

The old 80/20 rule is key here. Twenty percent of the effort creates 80 percent of the value. This also means that 80 percent of time spent is often wasted or could certainly be more productive. By striving to identify weaker areas of our approach, along with those that are really delivering, we can better focus our time and deliver better results.

What worked this month? What did not work? What really delivered? Could any of the time be better spent? Individually, we often know the answers, as we are doing the work and seeing the results — but this inspection surfaces them so we can make that strategic improvement.

Continuous improvement

Continuous improvement is also key. Twelve months of small iterative changes to your internal processes results in far more improved results for your clients. Sharing of knowledge and resolutions ensures constant improvement for your team members. Team members knocking down problems that seemed previously insurmountable creates happy teams. Customers’ problems resolved by knowledgeable and hard working teams creates happy clients.

SEO is a black box. Digital marketing is really tough. So many moving parts. Inspect and adapt to eliminate waste, focus on what works, and strive for constant improvement.

This process is helping my agency do better work than ever before and to some extent hold on to our sanity in the crazy, multichannel, ever-changing, interconnected world of digital marketing.

Chances are that an agile approach can help improve your marketing projects, whether you are an agency or an in-house marketer. And of course, if you champion the approach, you get to call yourself the “Scrum Master” — which is always a big win.


Marcus Miller is an experienced SEO and PPC consultant based in Birmingham, UK. Marcus focuses on strategy, audits, local SEO, technical SEO, PPC and just generally helping businesses dominate search and social. Marcus is managing director of the UK SEO and digital marketing company Bowler Hat and also runs wArmour aka WordPress Armour which focuses on helping WordPress owners get their security, SEO and site maintenance dialled in without breaking the bank.

DRABOT ROBOTICS WORKSHOP- FEB 2017

“Learn how to be a developer, rather than a user!!”
“From ZERO to HERO!!”

* LIMITED SEATS *

Date: 4, 5, 18, 19, 25 & 26 Feb 2017
Time: 8.30 am – 6.00 pm
Venue: Seminar Room, UTM KL Library, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia,
Jalan Sultan Yahya Petra, 54100 Kuala Lumpur
Target Participant: 15 years old and above

Details:
========

Course: Introduction to Programming & Arduino
Code: ARDU 1001
Date: 4 Feb 2017 (Saturday)
Fee: RM 50

Course: Arduino-based Radar System
Code: ARDU 1004
Date: 5 Feb 2017 (Sunday)
Fee: RM 50
* Add RM 50 to bring back your own kit

Course: Introduction to Multirotor Aerial Robotics (Drone)
Code: ARDU 1002
Date: 18 Feb 2017 (Saturday)
Fee: RM 70

Course: Arduino-based Bluetooth Controlled Robot Boat
Code: ARDU 1005
Date: 19 Feb 2017 (Sunday)
Fee: RM 150 (FREE DIY Robot Boat Kit!)

Course: Arduino-based Bluetooth Car
Code: ARDU 1006
Date: 25 Feb 2017 (Saturday)
Fee: RM 170 (with FREE DIY BLUETOOTH CAR KIT worth RM 250!!!)

Course: Arduino-based Auto Car
Code: ARDU 1007
Date: 26 Feb 2017 (Sunday)
Fee: RM 170 (with FREE DIY AUTO CAR KIT worth RM 250!!!)

Registration
==========
Please SMS/WhatsApp
<Code (e.g. ARDU 1001> <Full Name> <IC No.> to 011-10880900

* For those register more than one course OR more than one seat, you can receive a RM 5 discount *
* This program is one of our Corporate Social Responsibility programs (CSR) *

* Don’t miss your chance!! * * Limited SEATS!! *
* Please distribute this info!! *

Tel: 011-10880900
Email: training@drabot.com
FB Page: www.facebook.com/drabot.robotics
Website: www.drabot.com/about

ways technology is revolutionizing the world of construction as we know it

by The Manufacturer

Technology has changed the world we know in many ways. The rise of the on-demand consumer economy where you can order something from home and have it delivered in a matter of days from around the world or minutes from a local warehouse, is only matched by the on-demand availability of information and entertainment. So how is technology revolutionizing the construction?

3D printing

3D printing is one of the five ways technology is revolutionizing the world of construction as we know it. China proudly produced the world’s first 3D printed house in 2016. To be honest, it was a concrete shell of a house. It lacked plumbing, electrical connections and a roof. As 3D printing technology matures, you’ll see more 3D printed concrete structures like the playhouses being printed in the US to resemble Disney castles.

Drones

While drones get a bad rap for spying on people, they provide invaluable insights for the construction industry. Sending a drone flying along the power lines to check for damage or locating downed lines is cheaper and safer than sending human teams to climb or drive along them.

Drones are being sent up beside buildings to check for damage that previously required someone with experience best used mountain climbing. If the drone finds damage, than a human is sent up to verify or assess the severity of it. But by using drones, you don’t have to send someone scaling the side of a tower to look for damage, minimizing the risk to humans and associated labor costs. Then there is the use of drones checking aging infrastructure like pipes for leaks instead of sending people underground.

Building information modeling

3D computer aided drafting is already the norm for designing products from furniture to cars. Building information modeling software brings this technology to the construction industry.

Combining building information modeling with geographic information systems (GIS) ensures that you don’t plan on building a patio on top of a critical utility line or connection point. Some building modeling software applications also perform energy usage calculations such as determining how much the building will cost to heat and the amount of natural light each area receives.

Construction management software

Construction Management Software is a type of project management software specific to construction and renovation projects. Construction management software brings lists of the tasks for the project into one database. It identifies scheduling and resource constraints for a project while making the critical path obvious. It alerts project managers to problems such as when an electrical contractor’s delays could hurt the entire project timeline and gives them the opportunity to rearrange work to speed up the whole project or prevent people from being idle while another task is delayed.

GPS

GPS tracking of construction equipment has become routine. Insurance providers incentivize it so that equipment is found almost as soon as it is stolen, and tracking software lets you know almost immediately when the equipment is somewhere it shouldn’t be.

Technology like construction management software, drones and GPS offers project managers new ways to save on time and money while reducing the risk to the crew. Building information modeling and the design verification it permits helps prevent the horror stories of costly corrections during construction.

KEPUTUSAN PEMILIHAN AHLI SENAT BAGI TEMPOH 2017-2020

Assalamualaikum Yang Berbahagia Datuk/Dato’/Datin/Prof./Dr./Tuan/Puan,
Dengan hormatnya saya merujuk kepada perkara di atas.

  1. Sukacita dimaklumkan bahawa Pemilihan Ahli Senat Di Bawah Subperenggan 22 (1)(d) Perlembagaan Universiti Teknologi Malaysia Bagi Tempoh 2017-2020 telah dilaksanakan pada Khamis, 19 Januari 2017 yang lalu;
  1. Sehubungan itu, Ahli Senat yang telah dipilih di bawah subperenggan tersebut adalah seperti berikut :
BIL. NAMA CALON
BIDANG KEJURUTERAAN
1. PROF. DR. ABD. LATIF BIN SALEH
2. PROF. DATO’ DR. AHMAD BIN DARUS
3. PROF. DR. AZMAN BIN HASSAN
4. PROF. IR. DR. HASANAN BIN MD NOR
5. PROF. DR. KAMARUL ‘ASRI BIN IBRAHIM
6. PROF. DR. MOHAMMAD NAZRI BIN MOHD JAAFAR
7. PROF. IR. DR. MOHD. AZRAAI BIN KASSIM
8. PROF. DR. NORDIN BIN YAHAYA
9. PROF. DR. OMAR BIN YAAKOB
10. PROF. DR. SHAHRIN BIN MOHAMMAD
11. PROF. DR. YAHAYA BIN MD SAM
12. PROF. IR. DATO’ DR. ZAINAI BIN MOHAMED
BIDANG SAINS DAN TEKNOLOGI
13. PROF. DR. ABDULL RAHIM BIN HJ MOHD YUSOFF
14. PROF. DATO’ DR. AHMAD NAZRI BIN MUHAMAD LUDIN
15. PROF. DR. MADZLAN BIN AZIZ
16. PROF. DR. MOHD HAMDAN BIN HAJI AHMAD
17. PROF. DR. NAOMIE BT SALIM
18. PROF. DR. WAN AZELEE BIN WAN ABU BAKAR
BIDANG SAINS SOSIAL
19. PROF. DR. FARAHWAHIDA BINTI MOHD YUSOF
20. PROF. DR. ZAINAB BTE KHALIFAH
  1. Pelantikan ini berkuatkuasa selama tiga tahun mulai 20 Januari 2017 sehingga 19 Januari 2020;
  1. Jawatankuasa Pemilihan Ahli Senat mengucap tahniah kepada semua calon yang telah dipilih dan selamat menjalankan tugas bagi memacu dan memperkasakan pembangunan akademik UTM.

Sekian, harap maklum.

‘innovative . entrepreneurial . global’

Dzulhelmi bin Mohd Razali

Senior Assistant Registrar

Academic Management Division

UTM Academic Registrar Office

Office of Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academic and International)
Ground Floor, Wing A

Bangunan F54

Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
81310 UTM Johor Bahru
Johor, Malaysia

IEEE Young Professionals Malaysia Executive Committee 2017

Following our annual general meeting which was held on Wednesday 18th January 2017 at the Faculty of Engineering, UPM, I am proud to announce the new line-up of IEEE Young Professionals Excom for this session. The list is as below:-
Chair: Zaid Omar, UTM
Vice Chair: Afnizanfaizal Abdullah, UTM
Past Chair: Anang Hudaya Muhammad Amin, MMU
Secretary: Nadiah Husseini Zainol Abidin, UPM
Treasurer: Mohd Adham Isa, UTM
Exco Members:
1. Hussain Falih Mahdi, UKM
2. Simon Yeoh Hong Boon
3. Norhana Arsad, UKM
4. Zuraidah Zan, UPM
5. Mohd Farid Omar, ANGKASA
6. Osman Ayop, UTM
We welcome any ideas for collaboration among the IEEE community. Find out more about IEEE YP and our activities from our Facebook page IEEE YoungProfessionals Malaysia.
Thank you for your support in us thus far, and we hope for your continuous support and encouragement to take IEEE YP to new heights and beyond this year!
Zaid Omar
Chair,
IEEE YP 2017

INVITATION TO UTM IBS OPEN DAY

Greetings to all!

It’s our pleasure to announce that International Business School (UTM IBS) will be organizing #IBSOPENDAY to prospective students and surrounding communities as follows:-

Date : Saturday, 21st January 2017
Time: 11am – 1 pm
Venue : Dewan Seminar, Menara Razak UTM KL

Don’t miss the opportunity to be with us. See you there!

For confirmation of attendance:
https://docs.google.com/…/1FAIpQLSc7VDZgQLkcKUmLI…/viewform…

~The absolute place for your business education~


Thank You.
 

SITI RAHMAH OTHMAN

Assistant Registrar (Marketing)
 
UTM International Business School (UTM-IBS) 
Level 10, Menara Razak,
Universiti Teknologi Malaysia Kuala Lumpur,
Jalan Sultan Yahya Petra,
54100 Kuala Lumpur
 
Office: +603-2180 5031 | Fax: +603-2180 5608 | Website: www.ibs.utm.my

Mykie: Bosch’s Little Robotic Elf for Your Kitchen

This article is obtained from here.

 

By Evan Ackerman

Posted
Mykie, Bosch's Little Robotic Elf for Your Kitchen

At CES last week, one of the major themes was connectivity. Absolutely everything was covered in sensors and connected to the Internet with some sort of app, even if it wasn’t obvious why you’d ever need it to be.

Kitchen appliances were no exception, and Bosch announced both a connected fridge and a connected oven. While an oven that you can control remotely and a fridge that knows what’s inside it are handy enough by themselves, the whole point of a kitchen is to use the food you have in combination with the necessary appliances to create tasty and nutritious meals. Mykie is a little countertop robot that Bosch developed in order to help tie your kitchen hardware together to recipes to make cooking easy and fun.

Mykie is short for “My Kitchen Elf.” I have no idea why it’s an elf, except that it’s small and, er, helpful, I guess? More generally, Mykie is a product concept designed to to be a personal kitchen assistant that can interface with the other appliances in your home. It’s intended to be an embodiment of your smart kitchen—rather than talking directly to your stove or your fridge, which might be weird, you can talk to Mykie, who will listen to you, talk back, and then control the rest of your connected appliances for you.

In addition to voice control, Mykie has a touchscreen you can poke at, but its most useful feature has to be a powerful little projector in his butt. Or, where his butt would be if he had one. Rather than having to rely on Mykie’s little screen, you can just set the robot on the counter, and it’ll project a much larger image onto your kitchen wall. This is especially useful if you need help with your cooking: Mykie can take you through recipes step by step, displaying pictures and videos of the cooking techniques you should be using.

Bosch is hoping that a substantial amount of Mykie’s usefulness will come from the way it can integrate into the rest of your kitchen. For example, you can ask Mykie to come up with recipes that use the food you currently have in your smart fridge, and as you start cooking, the robot will preheat the oven to the right temperature for you at the right time. You can also use Mykie’s “virtual social cooking” to remotely attend cooking classes in real time, following along in your kitchen at home as both Mykie and a human instructor help you cook something that you might not otherwise be comfortable cooking on your own.

Mykie does seem to have a potentially useful niche picked out for itself among a herd of social robots promising to do a little bit of everything. We asked Philip Roan, senior robotics engineer at Bosch Home Appliances and a software developer for Mykie, about what he thought about Mykie’s very “social robot” look, and he told us that Mykie’s designers simply “went for a design that meshes with the rest of our kitchen aesthetic.” In other words, the robot needed to be small and white to fit in with most people’s kitchens, which is the sort of thing we’ve been hearing from other small home robot designers as well.

Mykie is a product concept right now, and as such, Bosch isn’t sharing any information on price or availability. It seems reasonable to expect that they’re not just designing and building robots for fun, though, and our guess is that that Mykie might show up in kitchens within a year or so, if we’re lucky.