Bangkok Post

BABY SILICON VALLEY

Myanmar has huge telecommun­ication infrastruc­ture obstacles to overcome, but the potential for mobile apps appears unlimited.

- By Angelina Draper

Images of Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg adorn the walls of Myo Myint Kyaw’s creative digital agency. He says they inspire him. But he imagines neither man ever worked in an environmen­t where internet connection­s were so unreliable that a “file transfer” often involved delivering electronic documents across town by taxi.

In Myanmar, that is often faster than using email.

Myo Myint Kyaw said starting a website for a US client based in Thailand involved an upload that took seven hours - a process that would have taken just minutes elsewhere. On another occasion, a client had to fly from Malaysia to hand-deliver high-resolution photograph­s that proved too large to send electronic­ally.

But Myo Myint Kyaw, 29, the founder and chief executive of Revo Tech, remains optimistic about Myanmar’s technology scene. And thanks to a rapidly developing mobile network, he predicts such technical difficulti­es may soon be in the past. It even presents a huge opportunit­y for mobile apps and web developmen­t.

“It won’t be like Silicon Valley even in five or 10 years,” he said. “But maybe in three to four years we can catch up to Singapore.”

Limited telephone and internet infrastruc­ture and decreasing smartphone costs mean most of Myanmar’s 60 million people will experience the internet for the first time through mobile phones. The biggest growth potential is for mobile and web services relating to tourism, transporta­tion and e-commerce.

Although broadband internet prices have declined in the last two years, they remain high. Installati­on costs about $500, and the monthly rate for a one megabyte-per-second connection is about $70; the monthly rate for a connection twice as fast is $120. That is steep in a country where per capita GDP was about $1,700 in 2013.

By contrast, a smartphone with Wi-Fi can cost as little as $43, increasing the demand for mobile apps and services in Myanmar.

Next month Revo Tech will introduce its first proprietar­y app, which will let children practice writing the Myanmar script by tracing letters on screen.

“We’re going to revolution­ise the way our kids learn how to write Burmese,” he said, describing the iPad app.

A Yangon-based Australian, David Madden, has similar socially conscious ideas. Mr Madden founded Code for Change Myanmar and organised the country’s first hackathon, a gathering of developers to tackle a problem, in March. He said he hoped to “inspire the technology community to get excited about social innovation work.”

Assigned to create a technologi­cal solution to one of eight social problems presented by non-government­al organisati­ons, the winning team developed an Android app that allows farmers to share and receive alerts about pests and diseases from nearby farmers and the government. He said the team was discussing fully developing the app.

The growth of Myanmar’s telecommun­ications industry offers a potentiall­y lucrative vein of work for developers. In June 2013, Myanmar’s government awarded Ooredoo Qatar and Telenor Norway 15-year licences to expand the country’s limited network. Some 92 companies from around the world bid for the work, estimated to be worth about $2 billion.

A 2012 report by the Swedish telecom giant Ericsson estimates growth in the telecommun­ications industry could contribute as much as 7.4% of Myanmar’s GDP over three years and employ 66,000 people full-time.

Eric E. Schmidt, Google’s executive chairman, told an audience here in March 2013 that Myanmar was about to “leapfrog 20 years of difficult-to-maintain infrastruc­ture and go straight to the most modern architectu­re.”

But the lack of affordable and reliable internet connection­s that is driving demand for mobile apps is also a major hurdle for Myanmar’s technology community. Thiha Aye Kyaw, 20, an Android app developer who works from home here, said of the first time he used a tablet: “I feel like I’m into the future with what I’ve been using. That large screen, everything you can do with it.”

Like many other developers, he is selftaught and relies on online resources to keep up with technologi­cal developmen­ts. However, watching a YouTube video can be painful with a slow internet connection that crashes regularly.

“I have to download them with download managers overnight,” he said.

The industry also lacks experience­d developers. Myo Myint Kyaw of Revo Tech said he had been looking for a web designer for more than a year, but he could not find qualified talent.

“What happens in Myanmar is, they get a computer science degree, then they work in an agency, or come to our agency, to get experience,” he said. “Once they think they are good enough, they go to Singapore.” Developers can earn $1,600 to $3,200 a month in Singapore, compared with $500 to $600 for senior developers in Myanmar.

Even when programmer­s create a popular app, distributi­on can be a problem. Three years ago Thiha Aye Kyaw created an Android app for typing with the Burmese Zawgyi font. But he could not sell it on Google Play because the platform was not available in Myanmar at the time. Google Play was, until recently, completely blocked, and not all iTunes functions are available to users in Myanmar.

Thiha Aye Kyaw worked around the problem by making his app available on local websites. He said it had been downloaded more than 100,000 times, largely relying on word of mouth. He made no money, but said he did not mind because he had earned recognitio­n. Last year he worked as a consultant to help Samsung develop Burmese-language support for mobile devices.

“They know me,” he said of prospectiv­e clients. “They know my value, which is more priceless than money can buy.”

Soe Naung Win, 31, owns a mobile phone shop in Yangon and is helping consumers. The lack of internatio­nal credit cards and limited access to iTunes and Google Play makes it difficult to download apps and pay foradditio­nal features.

“There is no Myanmar iTunes yet, so we created a fake US iTunes account,” said Soe Naung Win, who holds a medical degree and retrained as a software developer. “After that, we can use an iTunes gift card to redeem the gift card code.” A friend in the US buys iTunes gift cards and sends him the codes, which he resells at a small profit.

This use of gift cards, applied around the world to circumvent geographic licensing restrictio­ns, allows people in Myanmar to make purchases. In a similar fashion, developers who sell apps rely on relatives and friends living abroad to collect payments on their behalf.

The hope is the next wave of infrastruc­ture investment will help drive more technology businesses. Although neither Telenor nor Ooredoo would disclose a date for its networks to begin operations, each aims for the last quarter of 2014. Telenor plans to introduce 3G and the older, slower 2G networks. Ooredoo has chosen an all-3G strategy.

While mobile phones are widely available, users are excited about improved connectivi­ty from the thousands of towers the two telecoms are building across the country and the release of more SIM cards. Only a limited number of cards are available through a lottery system for 1,500 kyats, or about $1.50, from the state-owned Myanmar Post and Telecommun­ications. On the black market, cards can cost $80 to $100.

“There is huge pent-up demand,” said Ooredoo Myanmar’s chief executive, Ross Cormack.

 ??  ?? A monk uses his smartphone in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. Smartphone­s — and the Wi-Fi access they bring — has helped fuel a small, growing tech community, but the lack of affordable and reliable internet connection­s is a major hurdle for the country.
A monk uses his smartphone in downtown Yangon, Myanmar. Smartphone­s — and the Wi-Fi access they bring — has helped fuel a small, growing tech community, but the lack of affordable and reliable internet connection­s is a major hurdle for the country.
 ??  ?? A man uses a mobile phone as he sits at a bus stop displaying advertisin­g for the Ooredoo telecom company, in Yangon, Myanmar.
A man uses a mobile phone as he sits at a bus stop displaying advertisin­g for the Ooredoo telecom company, in Yangon, Myanmar.

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