Welcome to Redesign Malaysia: For Better Broadband, For the Rakyat. - Internet, Broadband, Malaysia, WiFi, Wireless, WiMax, Streamyx, Jaring and more…

This website is an initiative to improve Malaysia’s broadband facilities. It contains a broadband coverage map, articles on Malaysia broadband, comparisions of internet service providers and feature articles.

Redesign Malaysia is an initiative to improve Malaysia's broadband internet penetration, quality and reliability.We aim to achieve this through the compilation of relevant news articles, allowing users to have a voice, enlightening consumers on the options that are available, providing comparative statistics on ISPs, as well as the production of special features and commentary.


It is designed to be a community effort, to utilize information and feedback from broadband users and potential customers across Malaysia. We also aim to gain cooperation from the various broadband players in Malaysia, as well as support from government agencies and regulators.


Currently, we are focused on the Klang Valley, however in time we aim to expand this initiative nationwide. Let's all collaborate - to make fast, cheap and efficient broadband available throughout Malaysia.



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by Josh Lim
April 11 2008 || 1:07 am

This site has not been updated much lately, very sorry about that. It’s nice to see though that a lot of visitors are visiting this blog through the search engines (still in the hundreds although not much updates) - so, let me direct you to probably the most useful page on this site, the ISP list of all Internet Service Providers in Malaysia.

Notice a lot of you have stuff to say - thanks for the comments. I will try to blog more, and probably set a schedule or something. Guest writers are always welcome - please get in touch with me at josh.lim@josh.com.my

Latest Update
- I’ve gotten Maxis Broadband, and I am not happy with it at all. More on that soon. Meantime, check out this thread comparing Digi, Maxis & Celcom broadband.

- I have been using a lot of data services on my Sony Ericsson W910i mobile phone so far. Whee. Strangely enough, I have become one of those people that download mobile games, to my own surprise. Opera Mini is highly recommended to replace your default phone browser, its one of the best around.

New ISPs:
Izzi - http://www.izzi.com.my/
Packet One (P1) - http://www.p1.com.my/
Redtone Broadband - http://www.redtone.com/services/

To Do / To Blog List
- RedesignMalaysia 2.0, lots of new features (August, hopefully if not too busy with Advertlets stuff.)
- Launch cooperative project with surprise ISP partner (hint, we talk a lot about them)
- News submission service (for users to submit useful news on Malaysian broadband, like Digg)
- Clean up ISP page (is Atlasone dead or what?)
- Area based ISP feedback (tell how much this ISP sucks in your area)

Need Help
- If you work in ANY Malaysian ISP, we would like to hear from you. Drop a comment or mail me.
- We’re looking into researching more on the Singaporean Broadband scene - anyone with information is welcome, especially on IP ranges and geolocation.
- Anyone starting a new Malaysian ISP? Contact me for lots of really good feedback.

Yup, that’s it for now. Cheers.

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by Josh Lim
November 21 2007 || 12:50 am

Some of you might be wondering why our site was down - don’t worry, we weren’t hacked, we’ve just been busy with Advertlets and some new projects…which don’t just involve web design, but also the future of broadband in Malaysia. Somewhere in those few months we forgot to renew our hosting for this site, thanks for the reminders.

We have been talking to 3 ISPs - some new, some old, and the results of which you will see coming to fruition in the next 1 month. Maybe sooner. Meantime, we are looking at having more contributing writers to help us maintain this site - e-mail me for details.

Anyway, if you’re new here, do check out one of the most useful pages on the site - The ISP list : Bet you didn’t know there are more than 15 ISPs in Malaysia. We’ll be updating it soon with new ISPs, including the recently launched IZZI.

Lastly, expect RedesignMalaysia 2.0 in Q1/Q2 2008. Great to be back, sorry for going missing…we won’t do it again :)

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Noorizam Shah writes about his Celcom 3G Data Card connection:

“Saya mula gunakan celcom 3G sejak 5 bulan lalu. Dan saya perlu membayar RM103.05 setiap bulan, untuk masuk ke laman web eBay.com saya boleh menghabiskan masa dengan makan malam, menonton televisyen siaran satu jam, mandi dan laman web yang saya nak masuk, masih lagi tak lepas-lepas. Apa nih?”

Translation: I started using Celcom 3G since 5 months ago. And, I have to pay RM103.05 every month, to go into ebay.com. I can spend some time waiting - having dinner, watching TV for one hour, and then hae a bath…and then, the website that I want to visit, will still not have loaded! WTF?

Read more here: Do you pay RM103.05 a month for a GPRS connection / Anda bayar 103.05 sebulan untuk koneksi GPRS?
Interestingly, a commentator on that blog also comments on Maxis 3G - he mentions that on a rainy day, the connection will drop to just GPRS - when usually, he can get HSDPA. Is the connection really affected by rain? I know that satellite transmission speeds are, but HSDPA? A simple search on Google returns varied results.

And for the unitiated - from fastest to slowest, this is the order: HSDPA, 3G, GPRS, WAP. HSDPA being the fastest, and WAP being the slowest. And also, connections for both Maxis 3G and Celcom 3G are meant to switch seamlessly to the fastest network available at the time, meaning if either HSDPA or 3G is not available, it will default to GPRS.

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Time dotCom has launched Netlynx, a collaboration with Palette Multimedia Berhad.

The service will be made available in Damansara Perdana from 3 September 2007 onwards. Managing Director Dato’ Baharum Salleh says that Netlynx will be expanded to other parts of Klang Valley, Penang and Johor Bahru within the next six months.

Currently four packages are offered:

  1. Netlynx 2Mbps/512Kbps(Dynamic IP)- RM79 (RM119 with Voice)
  2. Netlynx 4Mbps/512Kbps(Dynamic IP)- RM179 (RM219 with Voice)
  3. Netlynx 6Mbps/512Kbps(Fixed IP)- RM269 (RM319 with Voice)
  4. Netlynx 10Mbps/512Kbps(Fixed IP)- RM469 (RM519 with Voice)

Note:

    • All voice service is optional
    • Promotion price will end 31 December 2007
    • All packages comes with 100MB email account
    • Voice packages comes with a single line phone
    • One time service activation fee: RM75
    • One time service installation fee: RM88
    • 12 Months contract

I have tested out the 10Mbps during the launch in Damansara Perdana yesterday. While local sites loads up very fast, it was very slow on YouTube. I believe YouTube or the international link was having problem during the test. According to DU Meter, I was allocated a bandwidth of 37Mbps, but the technical team during the live demo claims that it was using the 10Mbps package.

Netlynx is a Metro-e network, IP based, connected to mBone at 30Gbps. The collaboration with Palette will allow Netlynx to offer services like VoIP(Voice over Internet Protocol), VOBB (Voice over Broadband), IPTV and so on.

According to Time dotCom, Netlynx will offer speed up to 100Mbps for business users within the next few months.

Read: “Time just launched Netlynx” -Lowyat.net

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by Josh Lim
August 29 2007 || 2:16 pm

This news struck me as a surprise, and was relatively quietly announced - I didn’t get to know about it until someone told me recently.

Apparently, TM is the lead player in a consortium to implement an Asia-US submarine cable, formed by AT&T Inc. (USA), Bharti AirTel (India), Government of Brunei Darussalam (Brunei), British Telecom Global Network Services (UK), CAT Telekom (Thailand), Eastern Telecommunications Philippines Inc. (Philippines), Indosat (Indonesia), Pacific Communications Pte Ltd (Cambodia), Philippines Long Distance Telephone Co. (Philippines), PT Telkom (Indonesia), Saigon Postal Corporation (Vietnam), StarHub (Singapore), Telstra (Australia), Telecom New Zealand International (New Zealand), Viettel (Vietnam) and Vietnam Post & Telecommunications Group of Vietnam (Vietnam).

The cable is called the AAG, or Asia America Gateway. The AAG will provide a seamless direct link between the US and other Asian countries via one single cable. It also has the ability to be expanded to Australia, India, Africa, and Europe. Spanning over 20,000 km, AAG will link Malaysia to the US via Singapore, Thailand, Brunei, Vietnam, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Guam, Hawaii and the West coast of the US. The cable system is designed to provide a capacity of up to 1.92 Terabits per second of data bandwidth.
It will have an initial capacity of 480Gbps.

TM holds 9% in the equity of the project (majority shareholder). The contract is worth approximately $US500 Million. (Which means TM’s 9% equity is $US45 million / RM157million).

A quote from CEO, Datuk Abdul Wahid Omar: “While we are present in 13 countries in the region and involved in seven existing major submarine cable consortiums, this initiative is still one of the biggest we have undertaken. It will provide TM with additional 60Gbps of capacity, which will help reduce any future potential congestion we may face.”

Another quote: As the AAG is from a single cable network, not only will it have improvements in lowering latency, it will also simultaneously ramp up the international bandwidth capacity to Malaysia at more competitive costs.”

“This impressive joint-effort will go a long way in increasing broadband uptake in this region, which will in turn increase the overall appeal for global investments and increase the competitiveness of the countries benefiting from direct links to the Asia-America Gateway,”

Analysis: Assuming this goes well, Malaysia will surpass Singapore and Thailand in being a regional hub. That means, just like how Malacca was a hub for international trade in the days of yore, Malaysia could be come a hub for international traffic.

Congratulations TM! Let’s hope this happens soon, and that we can see some speed improvements by early next year. My internet connection is getting slower as of late…and from the news article, this project is scheduled to be completed only by December 2008…

You can read more here, on IT Wire, or on TM’s press release section on its official website.

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by Josh Lim
August 19 2007 || 12:48 pm

You might be either surprised, or not surprised at all, but Earl’s connection speed is back to terrible again.

The Lowyat.net boys have their say on earlier visit here: TMNet CEO Visits Streamyx Customer, Earl-Ku’s House

Rigged? TC_Boy has this to say: “There was an article posted here (on Lowyat.net) before about how ISPs usually mark certain ips to be given max bandwidth & high priority because it belongs to broadband speed test sites. They have fooled the user and the press. The speed maybe for real too but only for him or his DSLAM.”

Hmm…

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The Story In Summary:

1. Earl, not happy with TMNet, wrote a letter to The Malay Mail
2. The Malay Mail published the letter.
3. He got a couple of phone calls.
4. Next thing he knows, the CEO of TMNet is in his house, sitting on his bed
5. Earl shows the CEO his connection speed of 10-12kB/s
6. CEO plugs in his own laptop and gets 160-170kB/s
7. When Earl asked…how can the speed be so different?
8. They said its maybe because of “spyware”, or his “processor”.
9. Earl is still not happy.
10. Earl tests his connection again later in the day.
11. His speed is now 130-155 kB/s. Wow.
12. My speed still sucks.
13. So, when can I expect a visit?

Consumers, getting faster broadband speeds with Streamyx is now easy. Just sign up with your nearest friendly Streamyx reseller. Then, after you’ve set up your connection, all you have to do is write a letter, get it published, get the CEO of TMNet to show up in your house, and your connection will be super fast!

PS: Earl is not making the whole story up. I have a few of the same namecards and have spoken to a few of the same people, and spoken to him on the phone regarding this issue.

Earl’s latest result:

My latest result:

Do I get a visit too? Please?

Consumers: Here’s an important thing to note. (Update: yes guys, my mistake, its capitalization not the / that marks the difference. I’m happily surprised two of you noticed it, and just to be clear, as you said: “Kb/s or Kbps is the same thing.. the different is kBps or kB/s where the former is bits and the latter is Bytes. Notice the capital B for bytes.”) Use this to convert if you’re not sure.

Also, if you want to do a speed test on Speedtest.net, use an international server, not a local one. Local servers are much faster, and don’t give you a “true” idea of what the speed of your connection is to the outside world.

Here’s also some “insider” information I know, draw your own conclusions.

- VPS services, can bypass traffic shaping or throttling or speed limiting utilities.
- There is a certain allocation of bandwidth in Malaysia for “VIP” users that remains strictly allocated for those usrs, whether or not the “VIP” users are using it or not.

TMNet’s getting smarter
Back to the topic. So, what do you think is happening here? One thing’s pretty surprising though - TMNet is actually getting pretty smart at this (my personal congratulations to you, “A.B”, no malice intended), and it was a well planned “ambush”. From what Earl told me, TMNet brought some journalists and photographers as well with them when the CEO came to Earl’s house. And there was no prior warning that the CEO and everyone was going to be there. Earl was told that only a technician would be coming - not the whole entourage.

Which sucks, because the plan was to have myself and other people to test the connection as well, on our own hardware and make note of any special settings that they might have configured during the event…the secret “unlock” mechanism? As I’ve heard a rumour that some people have bribed TMNet technicians to improve their individual connections, which means that there is some “hidden” bandwidth available.

I would dismiss the whole thing as PR spin and VPS tomfoolery, but the fact is seriously, his connection is fast now. Congratulations, TMNet. And congratulations, Earl!

But where does that leave everybody else? Normal consumers?
This leaves me with the following possible conclusions:

- Although each subscriber is promised unlimited bandwidth, not everyone gets it.
- It could be because it’ll cost more to actually deliver the service as promised to consumers.
- Prominent complainers could get better connections, as then TMNet has no choice.
- So, do you know what to do next? Start writing…

In conclusion, here’s a quote made by TMNet, taken slightly out of context as the speaker was referring to P2P. However, could the same thing apply to even normal usage? Think of it, and remember that the Internet And Multimedia business of TM’s revenue contribution was RM869.9 million for Q4 2006.

we cannot upgrade our infrastructure (merely) for the benefit of the minority.

And my closing comment? Sure you can, just take a bit off the marketing budget. And how much is too much? Given the current situation, I think TMNet can afford to spend a lot more. When in doubt, remember that South Korea only became the most advanced broadband nation simply because the goverment was willing to go into debt and temporarily, for a while have more broadband supply than there was demand - the price for progress is expensive, but you’re a GLC, you can afford it! Please :)

Footnote (and this is also to A.B as well): No disrespect intended to TMNet, I think it was a good thing that the effort was taken to address the situation (although I disagree with the means slightly), but wouldn’t it be great to also address complaints online, not just those that appear in the mainstream media? There has not been one official reply to any comments here, even though it has been nearly a year since this site has been online…

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The Malaysian Communication and Multimedia Commission has released a mandatory standard for Quality of broadband service in Malaysia starting 1 January 2008.

Here are the conclusions(Applies to all ISPs):

  • 80% of installation orders must be fulfilled within 24 hours from the time and date requested by the customer.
  • 80% of service restoration must be completed within 24 hours from the time and date requested by the customer.
  • 90% of billing complaints must be resolved in 15 business days of receipt of the complaint.
  • Network latency to the nearest edge node(BRAS), shall be no more than 85ms(95% of the time)
  • Bandwidth utilisation between the user and the nearest edge node of the regional broadband network(BRAS) should be no less than 80% of the subscribed level(95% of the me)-it means local sites will load faster
  • Packet loss should not exceed 1% between the user and the nearest edge node of the regional broadband network(BRAS)

BRAS-Broadband Remote Access Server

On top of all theses mandatory standards, all ISPs must produce a report to MCMC every six months.

Mandatory Standards for Quality of Service(Broadband Access Service)-PDF file

The question is:

  • What if the customers are still not satisfied on the service offered? (MCMC will be judging the service based on the report produced by the ISPs, what about consumers?)
  • Do I still pay RM77 when service is always not available, or when the technical guy is taking his sweet time to come over to my place?
  • What happens to the ISPs if the mandatory standards are not fulfilled?
  • Why “best effort” still remains? Does MCMC support these terms?
  • Why wait until January,2008? Does it mean that we will suffer until then and no action can be taken on the ISP?

Comments are most welcomed.

Update: You can read more on this at : http://forum.lowyat.net/topic/486176

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