Heute 3569

Gestern 6764

Insgesamt 43793478

Samstag, 21.06.2025
Transforming Government since 2001

TH: Thailand

  • 400,000 Free Wi-Fi hotspots in Thailand by 2014

    Thailand is to have a total of 400,000 free Wi-Fi hotspots nationwide by 2014, announced the ICT Minister, Anudith Nakornthap. About 270,000 free hotspots were installed in the last two years, with another 150,000 to be added next year.

    In 2012, National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) of Thailand allocated THB 950 million (US $30 million) for the ICT Ministry’s free Wi-Fi project which started in 2011. The Wi-Fi hotspots will serve about 7.7-10 million people.

  • Anudith vows to boost Thailand's ICT rankings

    The Information and Communications Technology Ministry has vowed to boost Thailand's ranking in the Networked Readiness Index (NRI) into the top 50 next year - up from 74th place this year through continued promotion of ICT initiatives.

    It has wants to boost our ranking for e-government capacity, as scored on an index done by Japan's Waseda University to 15th place - from the present 20th place before the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) comes into being.

  • Asia: Shaping our AI future

    I've been wondering how far artificial intelligence (AI) can go to make human life easier and, amid the current pandemic, safer. A good place to start is Japan, where AI is gaining ground in fields from fashion to elder care.

    For example, apparel companies hit by the pandemic have been tapping AI technology to boost sagging sales, using it to predict trending designs and colours.

  • Back on the Track: Transforming Thailand under the Wing of ICT Minister

    After completing his first year as Thailand’s ICT Minister, Group Captain Anudith Nakornthap, in an exclusive interview with FutureGov, shares on the key challenges encountered in projects in leveraging ICT to deliver government promises to citizens and realigning the country’s modernisation path with its long-term vision.

    A successful government is judged by its capacity to turn policy into action, but a capable government can only be enabled by a wide variety of parameters — a crucial one being a country’s political stability.

  • Bahraini, Thai IT, e-Government cooperation discussed

    e-Government CEO Mohammed Ali Al Qaed today discussed with Thai Ambassador to Bahrain, Chayapan Bamrungphong, ways to promote cooperation in the field of IT and e-Government.

    The two sides also discussed creating new joint venture investment opportunities in various areas.

  • BUREAUCRATIC REFORM: Special panel planned

    The government is to set up a 10-person commission of experienced outsiders and civil servants to oversee the implementation of bureaucratic reforms, according to Deputy Prime Minister Vishanu Kruangam.
  • Connected ‘smart city’ in Thailand encompasses kiosks, street lighting, Wi-Fi, parking

    A "smart city" in Thailand supported by a single communications network supports kiosks, outdoor Wi-Fi, street lighting, parking and more, according to a press release.

    The 5G Open RAN Smart City in Ban Chang, Thailand is able to support use cases across industrial robots, factory automation, remote telemedicine, aviation, logistics and agriculture.

  • Digital economy on the move in Thailand

    The value of Thailand’s digital economy has swelled by 20 per cent this year to Bt2.5 trillion, accounting for 17 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP), with even faster growth pencilled in for next year by a leading forecaster.

    The Centre for Economic and Business Forecasting of University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce (UTCC) expects the information technology-related economy will expand 25 per cent next year to Bt3.2 trillion next year, making up 19 per cent of GDP. The centre’s projection is based on an assumed national economic growth of more than four per cent.

  • Doubling of Thai internet users this year

    The number of internet users in Thailand could reach 52 million this year thanks to the proliferation of smartphones and increasing availability of broadband.

    Gp Capt Anudith Nakornthap, the information and communication technology (ICT) minister, said the number would represent a doubling in users and credited lower prices for smartphones and tablets.

    At the end of last year, Thailand had 26 million internet users or about 37% of the population.

  • E-government needs a data-protection law

    For the past few months, one of the most widely and hotly discussed issues has been the establishment of the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) and the e-government policy.
  • E-GOVERNMENT: 'First fight the hackers'

    The government should make doubly sure of the security of its e-government and e-procurement networks from hackers before promoting them heavily, a security guru warned yesterday.
  • Exclusive: The future of Thailand’s digital services

    The country’s digital government chief, Dr Sak Segkhoonthod, on his priorities.

    “When you want to start a business in Thailand, there will be no need to bring any documents,” says Dr Sak Segkhoonthod, Chief Executive of E-Government Agency, Thailand. Citizens will also have a single card to transact across agencies, and they will automatically be told the taxes they owe without having to provide information to the government.

  • Free wifi spots to be expanded across Thailand: authority

    Thai government’s free wifi service will cover 80 percent of the country by May next year, according to the authority, Thai News Agency reported on Saturday.

    Anudith Nakornthap, Minister of the Information and Communications Technology Ministry (ICT) said on Friday that the ministry was allocated a new budget of 27.15 million U.S. dollars to expand the free wifi coverage which is currently available at 200,000 spots nationwide.

    The service is partly to facilitate first grade students who have been given free tablet computers for education under the government’s “Smart Thailand” policy, he said.

  • Government Targets Smart Thailand In 4 Years

    The new Thai government has set a target to develop the Kingdom to become "Smart Thailand" over the next four years, reports Thai news agency TNA.

    Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Minister Anudith Nakornthap announced the plan on Monday when inaugurating a seminar on "Smart Thailand: Modern Public Services through High Speed Internet", in which executives and senior officials of all ministries and government agencies took part.

  • ICT cited as key to stronger, more unified Thailand

    Kingdom sets out seven-step vision

    Thailand has defined its vision to increase and improve its use of ICT to help develop a stronger economy as well as boost social equality and environmental friendliness by 2020, as part of the Smart Thailand concept.

    Speaking at a public hearing hosted by Ministry of Information and Communication Technology, Chadamas Thuvasethakul, Nectec's deputy executive director , said ICT can be used to strengthen the kingdom's economy and reduce the social gap by boosting the public's knowledge and the quantity of smart human capital through increasing the availability of high-speed Internet.

  • ICT Ministry speeds up Smart Thailand operation

    The Ministry of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) will speed up the electronic service development plan for the public sector and high-speed internet connection following the smart Thailand strategy.

    ICT Minister Group Captain Anudith Nakornthap said when he presided over a seminar on Smart Thailand that the ministry has a policy to extend internet coverage to 80-85% nationwide within four years and to improve readiness of the public service in the same time.

  • Integration to drive a Smart Thailand

    Thailand has laid out a 2020 ICT Masterplan to create a Smart Thailand by transforming e-government to i-government, focussing on the integration of government agencies and public and private sector services.

    Jirawan Boonperm, Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology (MICT), said today that this i-government stands for “intelligence, integration and inclusion” and the plan will “respond to the development goals laid out in the national economic and social development plans”.

    Underlying the masterplan is a key goal of integration. Boonperm said to FutureGov Asia Pacific: “We want to see an integration of goals of governance, various agencies of government, public and private sector services, and the services of different departments.”

  • Khon Kaen takes lead in Thailand's race to smarten up

    Khon Kaen has been chosen to be the government's model smart city for other provinces to learn from.

    Last Saturday, Khon Kaen hosted the Smart City Expo 2018, an event designed to showcase a variety of projects aimed at achieving the goal.

  • KR: [Hello Thailand] From EVs to smart cities: Thailand seeks to unlock growth potential with Korea

    South Korea and Thailand could seek synergy in diverse sectors, from electronic vehicle manufacturing to smart city development to waste management, according to senior executives of the Southeast Asian country's state economic development authorities.

    The Korea Herald interviewed three senior executives while they were visiting Korea for the Ignite Thailand-Korea Business Forum held last month. The executives highlighted that Thailand can offer streamlined investment procedures for foreign capital and that the country seeks integrated, balanced growth.

  • Lightening the load: online tax filing in Thailand

    Jantima Sirisaengtaksin, Chief Information Officer at Thailand’s Revenue Department, reveals the success of this year’s e-filing exercise.

    There has been a lot of overtime recently at Thailand’s Revenue Department. The agency has just concluded personal tax filings for the year, and it has been busier than ever: the total number of taxpayers has risen to around 7.4 million, up on the previous year’s total of 6.6 million. Partially as a result of this increase in the number of taxpayers, Jantima Siriseangtaksin’s 250-strong IT team have been putting in three shifts a day to provide 24-hour support to the work of the Revenue Department’s 25,000 staff.

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