Tag: Singapore

  • Khairudin Aljunied: Jangan Patah Hati, Tanam Semangat Untuk Terus Belajar

    Khairudin Aljunied: Jangan Patah Hati, Tanam Semangat Untuk Terus Belajar

    Ramai di kalangan teman saya katakan pada saya bahawa mereka memang tidak minat sambung belajar kerana dalam soal membaca buku dan mengkaji, mereka agak bengap.

    Sebenarnya, tiada manusia yang bengap. Semuanya diberikan keupayaan untuk mempelajari apa sahaja dengan kemampuan mereka kecuali yang langsung tidak boleh berfikir kerana kecacatan atau hilang akal atau yang sakit.

    Pernah saya berkawan dengan seorang yang dari kecil tidak pernah lulus di sekolah. Namun bila dah sampai zaman remaja mula sedar yang dia mempunyai keupayaan untuk belajar. Dia langsung sambung belajar hingga ke menara gading. Hari ini, beliau berjawatan tinggi, bergaji lumayan.

    Tiada manusia yang bodoh belajar. Yang ada hanyalah yang tidak mahu belajar. Maka mereka ketinggalan sementara yang kurang upaya merai kejayaan dalam hidup kerana kecekalan dan semangat untuk terus belajar.

     

    Source: Khairudin Aljunied

  • Magnanimous Singtel Gives Existing Customers Cheat Codes To Avoid Paying Admin Fee To Recontract

    Magnanimous Singtel Gives Existing Customers Cheat Codes To Avoid Paying Admin Fee To Recontract

    Note 1: Article was first published at 2pm, 14th September 2016.

    Note 2: Updated at 4pm for more clarity on M1 and StarHub’s stance.

    Note 3: Updated at 5.20pm with more inputs from Singtel, and an additional option to avoid the admin fee.

    Registered interest for the new iPhone 7? It's now time to reserve your preferred variety and collection arrangements.

    Registered interest for the new iPhone 7? It’s now time to reserve your preferred variety and collection arrangements.

    Apple’s new iPhone 7 is just around the corner from being launched in stores worldwide as 16th September draws closer.

    Keen customers of our local telcos would probably have registered their interest to pre-orderApple’s new flagship smartphone. Singtel customers who’ve indicated their interest would probably have received an email to remind them to reserve their phone today (14th September) from 3pm. Through the reservation process, you can specify the iPhone 7 model, colour, capacity and preferred method of purchase/collection options.

    While all sounds well, we noticed a small note in the T&C section of the email reminder sent out to reserve the new phone that raised our eyebrows:-

    Yup, that highlighted text in green is new.

    Yup, that highlighted text in green is new.

    Let’s face it, nobody likes admin fees, but it is part and parcel of a business organization to add a cost to such admin tasks and its related maintenance matters to quantify the related backend paperwork. So it’s understandable if you’re signing up a new mobile line, depending on the prevailing promotional terms, you may have to cough up an admin fee.

    However, if you’re already an existing customer of the telco, we find it hard to justify yet another admin fee of S$10.70 to be levied just to re-contract with a new phone; it’s almost as if you’re paying a penalty to be their customer. More so, you’re tied to the telco for another two years and the cost isn’t absorbed as part of your monthly payment obligations. Yet that’s exactly what Singtel is doing it seems, starting with the new iPhone 7.

    Looks like this new admin fee will be effective from 15th September, just when the new iPhones are about to be launched.

    Just to be clear, the usual expected norm is you pay admin charges + any handphone offset charges should you change to a lower tier plan when your contractual period isn’t over.

    The new rule effectively makes you pay the admin fee regardless of the state of your existing plan when you want to re-contract with Singtel  – whether your previous contract has expired, or you’re at the 21st month (when telcos usually allow you to re-contract) or if you’re still half-way through the current plan. As long as there’s a change to your current plan, you pay the admin charge. Should you downgrade the plan prematurely or end the contract altogether prematurely, other charges will come into play to recover the mobile phone offset offered for your ongoing plan – these aspects don’t change. Here are further inputs from Singtel on this matter:-

    The S$10.70 administrative fee covers the handling and processing cost for the purchase of a subsidised handset for recontracting customers. It will not apply when customers upgrade to a higher tier Combo Mobile Plan (example, upgrade from Combo 2 to Combo 3).

    According to inputs from Singtel and as seen in the above exchange on the Singtel’s Facebook page, there are a few escape options where Singtel’s re-contract admin fee won’t apply though:

    • Re-contract to higher tier plan
    • Re-contract online (via singtelshop.com or easymobile.sg)
    • If you are a Singtel Circle nominated keylines, Red Prestige customer, or a Singtel UOB credit card holder

    So if you’re a Singtel customer, the easiest way moving forward to avoid the admin fee is to re-contract online.

    Our HardwareZone community members have also caught wind of this change and there’s adiscussion thread dedicated to the mandatory admin fee over here.

    Does this admin charge for re-contracting also apply to other telcos?

    In short, no.

    We quickly reached out to check on the policies from other telcos and we are glad to confirm that that M1 and StarHub don’t levy an admin fee for eligible re-contractual periods (when your old contract has expired) – no matter whichever plan you will be signing up next. You can also re-contract before your contract expires and not incur any charges – so long as you don’t downgrade your plan since it will affect the handset subsidies provided for the former contract.

    For more iPhone 7 related stories, follow us here, and do factor the admin fee consideration along with the expected telco price plans across all the three telcos.

     

    Source: www.hardwarezone.com.sg

  • Former Journalist Ismail Kassim: PAP Should Nominate Strong Minority Candidate For Upcoming Presidential Elections, Not Amend Constitution To Stifle Competition

    Former Journalist Ismail Kassim: PAP Should Nominate Strong Minority Candidate For Upcoming Presidential Elections, Not Amend Constitution To Stifle Competition

    A note to PM

    Dear Prime Minister

    By now you ought to know how divisive your proposal to amend the EP system has become. I cannot think of any issue in the last three decades that has caused such a wide and deep division within the electorate.

    The tragedy is that your aim to ensure that members from minority communities too have a chance at becoming an EP is commendable, and has its merits.

    Unfortunately, the way and timing of your move have also prompted considerable misgivings over your real motive:

    Is it really to ensure minority representation or is it to prevent an independent-minded citizen from being elected EP in 2017?

    Because of suspicions and emotions aroused over motive, it has become very difficult, even for those in the middle ground, to look at the proposed changes in a calm and objective manner.

    And any rush to implement a system that is deemed unfair may have adverse repercussions on the EP itself.

    Reserving the post for a particular minority is fundamentally flawed and goes against the grain of multiracialism and meritocracy. Likewise, the obsession with higher qualifications without giving due weight to strength of character and integrity is both elitist and undemocratic.

    Will any good arise from foisting a minority candidate in a closed race open only to members from that community on the nation; in all likelihood too, it is likely to become a farce, reminiscent of a past EP election, when a businessman was forced to compete to give the semblance of a democratic race.

    Such an EP is unlikely to command wide respect, and in all probability will be regarded as a ‘kayu’ (wood) by significant sections of the people, including members from his own community.

    There is still time for you to salvage the situation; just make sure that whatever changes that will be adopted will not come into effect in the 2017 presidential election.

    In this way, your protestations that they are not aimed against any individual will instantly become more credible.

    The minority community that has not yet produced an EP for the last 47 years will not mind waiting a little longer.

    As far as I know, they have grumbled over a lot of things such as continuing discrimination in the military and national service for their males and the unfair banning of their tudung-clad females from becoming nurses and policewomen.

    But over the EP, there is none.

    The PAP, notwithstanding its faults, is a great party with a sterling record.

    If you feel strongly, you should nominate a minority for the coming EP and use all the powers at your disposal to get him elected.

    If you think it is too risky, you can always field a stronger candidate. There is someone with impeccable credentials from your ranks who cannot become PM because of his ethnic origins. I think he will be unbeatable in any contest.

    These are the heroic options, which a party with a solid reputation to protect, should choose.

    Do not stoop so low now as to amend the Constitution out of fear, just to exclude opponents and independent-minded citizens.

    So Mr Prime Minister, I hope you will reconsider all your options, and choose one that will unite the people, and not divide them further.

    Ismail Kassim
    14th November 2016

     

    Source: Ismail Kassim

  • Woman Loses Singaporean Husband And Father In Motorbike Accident

    Woman Loses Singaporean Husband And Father In Motorbike Accident

    Every year, without fail, her family would balik kampung (Malay for return home) to spend Hari Raya Aidilfitri and Hari Raya Haji with her parents.

    Madam Noraini Hassan, 35, and her family reached her parents’ home at Kampung Seri Lalang near Kluang, Johor, safely last Sunday, the eve of Hari Raya Haji.

    But around 12.40am on Monday, fate dealt the Malaysian woman a devastating double blow.

    The two men dearest to her – her Singaporean husband of 10 years and her father – were cruelly snatched away in a fatal road accident.

    Her father, Mr Mohamed Hassan Ali, 65, was riding with her husband, Mr Noraripen Surni, 48, on his motorcycle when it collided with another motorcycle ridden by Mr Muhammad Hafiz Ghazali, 21.

    Mr Muhammad Ekmal Yussry Md Yassin, who was riding behind Mr Hafiz, could not brake in time and his motorcycle crashed into the other two bikes.

    Mr Noraripen and Mr Hafiz were killed on the spot.

    Mr Hassan died in hospital after he was taken there by a neighbour who was riding behind them when the accident occurred.

     

    Mr Ekmal was also taken to hospital with injuries. His condition is not known.

    Madam Noraini, who works as an admin officer in Johor Baru, told The New Paper in Malay yesterday: “I was devastated when I found out that my husband and father were involved in an accident.”

    She said they were returning home after having drinks with other villagers at a coffee shop nearby.

    The accident occurred about a kilometre from her parents’ house.

    PHONE CALL

    When a neighbour went to the house to tell her about the accident, she immediately called her husband on his mobile phone, but a man who identified himself as a doctor answered and told her to go to the accident scene.

    Madam Noraini went there with her two children, Norqiestina, nine, and Izzul Zikri, four.

    On the way, she kept hoping that her husband and father were still alive, and tried to maintain her composure for the sake of her children.

    “In the car, my neighbour told me to take deep breaths to calm down,” she said.

    When she reached the scene, her husband’s body was already in an ambulance.

    “My heart broke into pieces when I saw their bodies, especially when my daughter started crying.”

    Madam Noraini said her neighbour later said that “when she told me about the accident, she already knew my husband was gone but could not bear to tell me the news”.

    Her father and husband were buried at the Muslim cemetery in Kampung Seri Lalang on Monday afternoon.

     

    During the burial ceremony, her son asked her: “Why is ayah (Malay for dad) being put in the hole?”

    “It pained me to explain to him what happened. I told him, ‘You’ll see him again in heaven, God willing,’” said Madam Noraini.

    “My husband was a truly wonderful, amazing man. There will never be another one like him.

    “I met him through a mutual friend, and we became friends. When I introduced him to my father, he was immediately taken with him. My father was the one who suggested that we got married.

    “I fell in love with my husband because of what a great person he was. He was a man of few words, very quiet, but he’s one of the best people I know.

    “He would always take time off to spend time with us as a family. Every Hari Raya, he would take our family to balik kampung.”

    Mr Noraripen had worked in a Japanese food factory at Senoko Road for close to 20 years. He moved to live in JB after their marriage 10 years ago, and would commute to and from work daily.

    He was the youngest of five siblings. They grew up in Singapore, but, like him, two of them also moved to JB, and another to Kuala Lumpur.

    His siblings and mother attended his funeral.

    DEVASTATED

    His sister, Madam Norizah Surni, told TNP that she last saw him alive at her house in JB last Saturday.

    The 53-year-old housewife received a call from her sister-in-law at 1.04am on Monday to tell her that Mr Noraripen had met with an accident.

    The call left her fearing the worst, and she was devastated when Madam Noraini later confirmed her brother had died.

    “I was upset that I would never see him again, no more seeing him every week at my house,” said Madam Norizah.

    “I lost one of the most important people in my life. This was my brother. He was the one I always talked to whenever I faced any problems. I told him everything.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Appeal For Witness: Lorry Hit-And-Run, Biker Left With Spinal Fractures

    Appeal For Witness: Lorry Hit-And-Run, Biker Left With Spinal Fractures

    Hi all, my friend who’s riding a blue Honda CB400 motorbike had a serious accident with spinal fracture yesterday (13-9-2016) at 2.45pm with a hit-and-run lorry at AYE (Tuas)…

    Another lorry driver and the passenger came to the aid of my friend…

    I am appealing for witnesses or car DVR videos of the accident… I only managed to get this photo from a bike group…

    Please do share with me the accident videos if you have it…

    Thank you…

     

    Source: Beh Chia Loh – Singapore Road

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