1st iPhone 3G sale on March 20

Monday, March 16, 2009

The Jakarta Post , JAKARTA | Sat, 03/14/2009 1:09 PM | Business

PT Telkomsel, the country’s largest cellular operator, is slated to sell the country’s first iPhone 3G mobile handset on March 20 at the Pacific Place shopping center in Jakarta.

In its statement late on Thursday, the company said the handset would be available also at GraPARI outlets with a price starting at Rp 2.62 million (US$188)

“iPhone 3G will redefine our consumers’ mobile phone experience,” said Telkomsel president director Sarwoto Atmosutarno.

iPhone 3G combines three products in one -- a mobile phone, widescreen iPod and internet device. It also includes fast 3G networking, GPS mapping and support for enterprise features including Microsoft Exchange.

iPhone 3G is available in over 70 countries worldwide.

In its statement, Telkomsel also said it would invest $1.5 billion this year to expand its 3G network.

Telkomsel was the first operator in Indonesia to launch 3G services in September 2006, and had the biggest 3G community with more than 9.2 million subscribers in more than 140 cities.

Telkomsel has 69 million subscribers or more than 50 percent of the market share.

Telkomsel is 65 percent owned by state-run PT Telkom, the country’s largest telecommunications company. The remaining 35 percent is owned by Singapore Telecom Mobile Pte Ltd.

Facilities embedded in iPhone 3G have put the gadget in competition with Research in Motion Ltd.’s BlackBerry and Nokia’s smart phones, which are designed for business users.

The arrival of the iPhone is likely to heat up competition among mobile operators tapping cash-rich business clients, who account for a smaller proportion of the market’s customer base. Indonesia’s cellular operators primarily target the market of middle to lower-income users, which accounts for an average of more than 70 percent of the customer base for cellular providers.


Source : www.thejakartapost.com

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Kids learn business in fun ways

The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Thu, 03/12/2009 1:35 PM | City

Relax Mom: A 1st grader massages a parent as part of a business fair at the High/Scope school, South Jakarta on Friday. The 15-minute massage cost Rp 15,000 (US$1.2). (Courtesy of High/Scope)
Relax Mom:
A 1st grader massages a parent as part of a business fair at the High/Scope school, South Jakarta on Friday. The 15-minute massage cost Rp 15,000 (US$1.2). (Courtesy of High/Scope)

What can we expect when children from kindergarten to middle school have a business fair? Students from High/Scope school in South Jakarta recently and it was full of sweet treats, face paint, loud karaoke and an iguana!

Children from Kindergarten to Grade 5 turned their classrooms into shops in a two-day business fair last week.

In one, the children transformed their classroom into a beauty parlor, a vision in pink, just like a little girl's room, with small booths for manicures, makeup and hairstyling.

The "shop" was titled (in pink): Beautiful Fairies. The d*cor was cute, girly, and pink. Looks like the boys gave in to the girls here.

Inside the classroom, mothers took turns to have a manicure or have a custom-made bracelet or necklace crafted by the children and ready within a few minutes.

In a corner, a parent sat on a reclining chair with little boys and girls massaging his arms and feet. The man looked amused, while the children were dutifully performing their tasks. "It is Rp 15,000 for a 15-minute massage," said Desy, the class teacher.

"Unlike their bigger brothers and sisters who did market research surveys for their businesses, the younger children came up with their business plans through brainstorming," she said.

She said her students had set a goal of going to Ancol Dreamland Park in North Jakarta, using the profit from their one-day business. There had been a lot of different suggestions, though. Earlier they had planned to go to a movie together.

In another classroom-turned-shop, the 2nd and 3rd Grade students magically turned the place into a night zoo. It was titled Night Safari. In one corner, children took turns to get photographed with a large iguana or a small alligator. The iguana's owner, Prana - a 3rd Grade student - said it was the whole class' idea to have a zoo in the classroom.

"To get a picture with the alligator or the iguana, you have to pay Rp 25,000," said Sabrina, the cashier of the safari shop.

"A visit to the mini zoo will cost you Rp 20,000 and for games, Rp 10,000," the little cashier said.

Sabrina, along with other girls, Lilu, Mika and Gaby, performed in themed plays, one called "Camping in the Jungle" and the other entitled "A Trip to the Amazonian Rainforest." The plays lasted for about 15 minutes and visitors had to pay Rp 25,000.

The girls merrily said they now knew how to do business. They said they wanted to use the profit to go to Kidzania, a children's recreational center.

"Or we can use it to have a party in the classroom!" said Sabrina.

Other classes had themes such as the Night Carnival or Pasar Malam Tjilandak where culinary delights were sold and the Pet Shop where people could buy rabbits clothed in colorful costumes.

Bullish business: Middle schoolers prepare sweet treats for their guests at the High/Scope school, South Jakarta, on Thursday last week. (Courtesy of High/Scope)

Bullish business: Middle schoolers prepare sweet treats for their guests at the High/Scope school, South Jakarta, on Thursday last week. (Courtesy of High/Scope)

On the previous day, six classes - the 6th and 7th Grade students - had taken their turn opening a one-day business - mostly selling food - with real customers, actually their parents, friends and teachers.

The school's basketball court was divided into six large areas, filled with small tables and booths for games, face painting and karaoke. Children ran around with scary, big-haired, full-head masks and black capes, holding cups of ice-cream or Korean japchae noodles.

"Would you like to try these?" A 6th Grade boy offered sticks of marshmallow dripping in chocolate. His face was painted to look like a smiling cat, drawn by his friends from the face painting booth that was decorated with Halloween pumpkins cut from paperboard.

Ivan was his name. "Our capital from the investors was Rp 3 million," he said proudly. The investors were their parents. "We have to return the loan of course, but we haven't counted the revenue yet. It seems that we have covered all our costs."

The face painting booth had many customers. The booth was located in the same space as the stall selling chocolate and marshmallows. It was titled Go Scream. The color theme of the business was black. All the officers on duty wore black.

Etika Hia, the school's assistant principal, said each class received a Rp 700,000 loan from the school as starting capital, and they had had to present their business plans in front of potential investors few days earlier.

It was not only a day for them to try to make a profit, but also a time to have hands-on experience of good teamwork and to see whether their business selection had been the right choice.

"I am one of the production team, we have 24 students each class, and everybody has their own duties," Ivan said. "The choice of what to sell in our business came from the answers we received through our market research survey."

They created a written survey that they then distributed to teachers, parents, older and younger students and all school staff including the security officers.

On another stall, a 6th Grade student, Citta, was carefully counting the cash, dividing it into neat piles. She was the cashier of a shop called Redlines, where girls were busy frying cirengs - a pita-bread-like dough - filled with chicken, cheese, spaghetti sauce or smoked beef, and selling them for Rp 5,000 (40 US cent) per piece.

Iin Pramono, Citta's mother said, "My daughter was always been selected as the cashier by her friends." She said Citta's attitude toward money was prudent.

"She would compare the price of books she wanted to buy in different bookstores first. Perhaps that comes from her duties at school events," she laughed.

Interestingly, the open-air stall also offered instant noodles which received a warm welcome, with children queuing up to get their orders. They happily waited for the MSG-laden noodles to be prepared.

Iin said, "It might be because they are not allowed these instant noodles at home, that they have them for sale here."

In front of Redlines was an all-blue stall, named Schwasz Creamery. It offered banana splits, poffertjes, waffles and other cold treats. The rest of the stalls also offered many kinds of sweet treats and games.

Another stall was titled Carcique. This was where all the loud noise came from. A cafe with karaoke, the booth was full of 7th Grade students taking turns to sing their favorite songs.

Young children were having a wonderful time on the first day of the business fair. Little girls and boys walked hand in hand led by their teacher to visit the "shops".

They looked at the colorful stands in awe, watching their big brothers and sisters cooking fries or squeezing whipped cream on top of bowls of ice-cream. (iwp)


Source : www.thejakartapost.com

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RI and Singapore

Thursday, March 12, 2009

The Jakarta Post | Tue, 03/10/2009 6:12 PM | National 


Inked in black: RI and Singaporean Foreign Ministers Hassan Wirajuda (right) and George Yeo exchange agreement documents signed at Pancasila Building, Deplu Complex, Jakarta, on Tuesday. The Indonesian and Singaporean governments agreed on Nipah and Tuas islands of the Singapore Straits as the most western maritime border of the two countries after four years of tough negotiations (JP/R. Berto Wedhatama)

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Apple's small new 4-gigabyte iPod shuffle can talk

The Associated Press , Seattle, US | Thu, 03/12/2009 9:23 AM | Sci-Tech 

In this product image released by Apple Inc., a new version of the iPod Shuffle is shown. Apple touts the new $79 device, which stores 4 gigabytes -- up to about 1,000 songs -- as "significantly" smaller than a double-A battery. AP/Apple Inc.

Apple Inc. unveiled a minuscule new iPod Shuffle on Wednesday that takes its "smaller is better" mantra to a whole new level.

The third-generation Shuffle, a slim aluminum rectangle less than 2 inches long, takes up about half as much space as the previous version even as it doubles music storage space to 4 gigabytes. To achieve such a tiny form, Apple had to remove most of the buttons from the body of the $79 device and build them into the headphone cord instead.

"Smaller has tended to work very well for us," said Greg Joswiak, a marketing vice president at Apple.

The trade-off for a sub-$100 Shuffle always has been the lack of a screen to visually navigate the music stored on the device. The first-generation Shuffle, which launched in 2005, could hold about 240 songs, arguably not enough to warrant a screen.

Now that the device can carry 1,000 songs, Apple has come up with a way for people to identify the music they're listening to or find songs they want. A new feature called VoiceOver can, at the push of a button, speak the song and artist name or rattle off the list of custom mixes - called playlists - that the owner has loaded onto the device.

Here's how it works: As you synchronize a new Shuffle using an updated version of iTunes, your PC or Mac looks at each track and playlist and creates a small file of a computerized voice speaking the title, artist or playlist name.

When you tap a button on the headphones, the voice speaks the title and artist as the music plays. (If a song is in Spanish, Chinese or any one of 12 other languages, the software figures this out and speaks in the appropriate language.) When you hold down the headphone button, the device reads a list of your playlists, and you can pick one by tapping again.

It's not possible to scroll through all of the songs on the device to jump right to one favorite, unless you know it's at the start of a certain playlist.

The new Shuffle, which comes in silver or black aluminum with a shiny stainless steel clip, is set to go on sale Thursday. Joswiak said Apple's own earphones will be the only option for early buyers, but that other companies plan to make compatible headphones as well as adapters for regular headphones.

Ross Rubin, an analyst for market researcher NPD Group, said there's no such thing as "too small" for gadget-happy consumers as long as Apple stays focused on ergonomics and provides a way to secure the device and keep it from getting lost.

But people who do buy a new Shuffle will be paying a premium for Apple's design, he added, noting less-expensive mini-models like SanDisk Corp.'s Sansa Clip ($60 for a 4-gigabyte model) and Creative Technology Ltd.'s Zen Stone (less than $50 for a 2-gigabyte version on Amazon.com).

Shares of Cupertino, Calif.-based Apple jumped $4.05, or 4.6 percent, to $92.68.

Source : www.thejakartapost.com

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Rhino life

Friday, March 6, 2009

The Jakarta Post | Thu, 03/05/2009 5:40 PM | Sci-Tech


In this image made from undated video released by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), mud bathing Javan Rhinos are captured by a camera trap in Ujung Kulon Wildlife Park, Java island, Indonesia. The numbers the world's rarest rhino in Indonesia over the past 50 years have been decimated by rampant poaching for horns used in traditional Chinese medicines and destruction of forests. (AP/WWF)

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BI drops key rate to 7.75 percent

The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Wed, 03/04/2009 4:50 PM | Business

Bank Indonesia (BI) has reduced its key interest rate by 50 basis points to 7.75 percent, as part of efforts to help the banking sector cope with worsening impacts of the global financial downturn, kompas.com reports.

On Wednesday, BI strategic planning and communication bureau head Didy Laksmono R. said that before deciding to reduce the rate, BI had evaluated the performance of the domestic and global economies.

“Inflation pressure was relatively low – at 0.21 percent – during February, thanks to lower fuel prices and availability of food supplies,” Didy said.

The lower prices of international commodities were another factor causing the low inflation pressure, he added.

Bank Indonesia said in a statement the economic slump was "taking a steeper turn" and developing countries were being hit by a fall in exports and negative market sentiment.

Indonesia's exports fell 36 percent in January from a year earlier, the biggest drop since 1986, due to plunging demand for natural resources and manufactured goods, the statistic's agency reported Monday.

It was the fourth straight month the central bank has cut the rate, lowering it a total of one and three quarter points from 9.5 percent since early December.

Indonesia had been struggling to bring down inflation topping 10 percent, but that figure slowed to 8.6 percent on year and 0.2 percent month-on-month in February, the bank said.

The central bank forecast a slowdown in economic growth to 4 percent in 2009, from an estimated 6.1 percent in 2008, "with considerable downside risk if global economic growth worsens even more than expected."

At the same time, Indonesia's banking system - which collapsed just over a decade ago in the Asian financial crisis - was in "stable condition," the bank said.

International reserves stand at $50.56 billion, with an additional $3 billion from government bond issues and a $2 billion World Bank loan also available. (ewd)

Source : www.thejakartapost.com

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