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Malaysia Team #3 – Spastic Childrens Association of Johor

March 21st, 2010

Original Post: https://www-146.ibm.com/corporateservicecorps/node/5260

Our client is the Spastic Childrens Association of Johor, which focuses on providing education services to children and adults with Cerebral Palsy. The client is located in Johor Bahru and was founded in 1967. The association is mainly funded by royalty, but also from grants and donations. The education programs provided range from early childhood to various elementary and junior education levels including vocational, language, mathematics, music, and sport studies. The association enrolls 72 students and about 40 teachers and aides. Gabriella Kokas and I are leading this project.

Today is the start of our second week here in Johor, so I thought it would be a good idea to recap last week and provide some insight into our activities for this week.
During the week of March 15th, our first week of this project, we were given a tour of the client’s estate. Two very interesting experiences impressed me. First, the fact that the sports education program has produced several Paralympics Athletes, a few of who have competed and won nationally and internationally! Second, the sensory room (sponsored by Ronald McDonald Charity) was an experience of its own. The room is equipped with several tools in the form of games that children can use to simulate their visual and auditory senses to create sensations.

The rest of the first week was spent understanding the association, speaking with the teachers, touring the premise, and studying the scope of the project. Our project will focus on providing recommendations to the education and learning methodology at the association and applying assistive computer technologies for the computer education program for the children.

Our goal for this week is to understand the Malaysia Education Ministry’s special education programs and begin analyzing and developing recommendations for teaching process and assistive computer technology at the association. This week is a crucial week to the success of our 4 week assignment. Back to work!

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Impact National Conference 2008: IBM Luncheon Keynote

March 18th, 2009

Back in November 2008, I delivered a keynote (on behalf of IBM) at the Impact National Conference in Toronto. I’ve finally made a playlist of the 40 minute speech. I wrote the speech in less than 6 days (including the weekend) so any comments are welcome!

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My personality

March 6th, 2009

I like to take 1 personality test a year, just to see if I change. Here is the latest results from this website:

You Have A Type A- Personality
You are one of the most balanced people around
Motivated and focused, you are good at getting what you want
You rule at success, but success doesn’t rule you.

When it’s playtime, you really know how to kick back
Whether it’s hanging out with friends or doing something you love!
You live life to the fullest – incorporating the best of both worlds

admin Me

Exeunt from IBM Rational

November 12th, 2008

Some of you know, some don’t; but its been a few months now so I’ve decided to put it in official writing.  Late last quarter I accepted a new position at IBM, in the Global Technology Services (GTS) division as an IT Architect doing Strategy and Change related work; thus, marking the end of my 4 year stint in Software Group (SWG).

I feel that I leave on a high note.  During my last few months in SWG, I led our team to the release of IBM Rational AppScan v7.7 GA (Developer and Build Edition).  As the Software Architect and Development Lead for these products, we successfully managed to provide brand new security-related offerings (based on Eclipse) in the IBM Rational portfolio in almost exactly a 1 year timeframe.  The products have been setup for a great amount of marketplace and technological potential, and as I exeunt from IBM Rational I leave my team with this potential, knowledge, and my mentorship to break new ground.

All in all, I have enjoyed my years within the IBM Rational brand.  I have come to learn about the Rational brand, provided value across various SWG brands (such as Rational, Tivoli, WebSphere), contributed to the open source Eclipse project, led several software products in architecture and development capacities, enhanced my leadership skills, and met a lot of smart people.  I don’t discount coming back to IBM SWG, but perhaps in a different capacity.

admin IBM, Me, Software Industry

IBM Rational AppScan Developer Edition v7.7 Open Beta 2

June 21st, 2008

There are been a lot of buzz around our latest earth-shattering beta release of IBM Rational AppScan Developer Edition v7.7, and I’m happy to now talk a bit more about it!  After Beta 1 (in December 2007), I led our development team into the creation of a security analysis tool that goes beyond the typical blackbox testing (aka Dynamic Analysis in our product documentation) of a website.

As the AppScan DE Architect, it became quickly known within the team that we needed to start creating technology that gives developers a stronger “confidence level”in the security issues reported to them.  We all know a developer’s job is tedious, and knowing which issues are the most critcal to fix is very important because in reality even if a tool reports 100 issues, only the top 10 may get fixed at development time – so its imparitive that we as tool creators let the developer know which are the 10 most critical issues to fix.

So we set out to do some innovation of our own!  We started engaging the idea of integration other forms of analysis with dynamic analysis, specifically static and runtime analysis, to help us get that confidence level we wanted.  Shortly after the new year, we spent the last 4 months creating value with this idea.

Last night, really late last night actually, we released a refresh to our official Beta 2 release (that went out on May 31, 2008, just before the IBM Rational Software Development Conference – RSDC 2008).  In addition to the delivery of 100 bug fixes, we released two versions of our product.  Yes you heard me, two versions – which is what the market has been asking for – believe it or not.

Our Beta 1 was released to be an extension ontop of the RAD 7.5 Open Beta; however, the uptake on that release wasn’t what we wanted.  In the new year I repeatedly asked management “What are customers saying? How many downloads do we have? Any feedback?” – in the true sense of Agile development I suppose I was just doing my job :)   The answer back was “urgghh”.  I quickly figured out that we needed something light-weight and quick and dirty for users to use, so I proposed the plain eclipse solution.  Eclipse has an integrated update mechanism known as the Classic Update Manager, and naturally integrating the delivery of our software through that mechanism was the path we needed to take.  Hence, our Beta 2 release now includes two installation routes, you can use whichever you prefer:

So enough yammering from me, here is some product highlights for our new functionality in Beta 2:

Product Information (Click here to view the IBM product page)

  • Integrated dynamic, runtime, and static analysis: In one scan, you can conduct these types of analyses -
    • Static analysis: Also known as white box analysis, this type of analysis allows you to check Java source code for security vulnerabilities.
    • Dynamic analysis: With dynamic analysis (also known as black box analysis), you step through your application from a hacker’s perspective, tampering with inputs to uncover security holes.
    • Runtime analysis: When you create a scan that includes dynamic analysis testing, you can set the scan to track the flow of execution for any security issues that are found.

Also a shout out to our team (Babita, Alexei, Jennifer, Jeff, and me) who made this beta possible, we all worked extremely hard!

admin Me

Human’s can put man on moon, but…

February 22nd, 2008

Human’s can put man on moon, but human’s still haven’t invented a microwave that is long lasting…  The other day my Panasonic Inverter microwave NN H665WF “died”.  You know how when a microwave turns on, it starts off with a low-speed fan sound then jumps up to a high-speed fan noise?  Well with my oven now, it starts off at a low-speed and stays there….that’s it! This is our family’s 4th Panasonic oven and we’re now ready to try something else!

I called Futureshop, where I purchased the oven back in August 2005, they told me the warranty was for 1 year from Panasonic – so tough luck.  In consideration that I may just end up getting a new oven if the repair costs were outrageous, I asked the fellow if he knows which oven has the lowest after-purchase claims; but I got no answer from the guy…useless.  Here I am talking to a Futureshop “warranty” expert and he apparently isn’t an expert.  My next question to him was if he could recommend any repair shops in Toronto where I could take the oven.  He tells me there aren’t any!  At this point he’s already earned a status lower than “idiot” and “jerk” whatever that may be – perhaps the opposite of “genius”?

At this point I decide to check out Panasonic’s website.  In 5 seconds I load up a list of 5 repair shops in my area using their customer support webpage!  I start off by calling each one.  The first one I get a Chinese lady who doesn’t apparently understand my English, so I tell her I’ll call back some other time.  The second person I call, I try to explain my problem but I get the feeling they aren’t listening to me because the fellow keeps saying “just bring it in, we’ll look at it”.  I get suspicious and ask him “is there a cost to just look at the oven?”.  The fellow says “$16″.  I’m thinking “gotcha, bugger”! The next, and last place I call, the lady on the phone explains to me that she’s seen the problem before and its about $40-60 to fix.  I mention to her that I might as well get a new one, she laughs and says “yeah, its probably a better idea”!  Now that I got her on my good side, I ask her what the Futureshop expert couldn’t answer, “is there any brand that you recommend I try other than Panasonic”.  She mentions that she’s had a General Electric (GE) microwave oven for over 7 years and she’s never had a problem!  I’m thinking bingo!  I search up GE microwaves on Futureshop, Bestbuy, Sears, and Wal-mart’s websites.  Futureshop and Bestbuy don’t carry anything other than Panasonic and Danby.  Sears carries some GE, but they appear to be high-end models.  Wal-mart has exactly what I’m looking for, 1.1 cu ft with 1100 watts and its ol sale for $85!

I just picked up the GE oven and we’ll see how it compares to the Panasonic over the next few weeks!

admin Did you know?, Me

The Lost Temples of India

December 19th, 2007

If you enjoy reading or listening about history as much as I do, I think you’ll enjoy this video.

admin Me

Microsoft Surface Parody

December 18th, 2007

Knightsbridge Towers

July 9th, 2007

If you are like me, and you love puzzles, your going to love this. Check out Knightsbridge Towers

Knightsbridge Towers

The object of the game is to move all seven diamonds from the far left to the far right tower. See how you do!

admin Did you know?, Me

Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics

February 24th, 2007

I’ll be attending the LEAP conference in San Jose, CA. I put my name into the barrell back in 2005, and finally a spot opened up for me yesterday. This event will run from Feb 26 – March 2.

Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics, Inc. (LEAP) has been intent on “growing leaders” within the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities across the country. When LEAP opened its doors 25 years ago, it had a simple yet powerful idea: that in order for AAPI communities to realize their full potential and to foster robust participation in the larger democratic process, those communities would have to begin producing leaders who could advocate and speak on their behalf.

Through the creation of culturally relevant workshops and programs, 125,000 people across the nation have participated in over 2,500 leadership development programs, organizational development workshops, career management and diversity trainings for an extensive roster of clients, including colleges and universities, community and student organizations, federal and state government agencies and Fortune 1000 companies across the country. Click here to view client list.

I’m really looking forward to meeting all the people from various organizations. It will be really interesting networking opportunity.

We’re also being put up in a sweet mansion, yep you heard that right…a MANSION. Its the Dolce Hayes Mansion in SJ, CA. Check it out below:



admin IBM, Me