The Star Malaysia

Tech savvy guys step up

They make it easier for people to understand Covid-19 data

- By ASHLEY TANG ashleytang@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: During the pandemic, many young Malaysians have quietly contribute­d to society.

They have taken time off fulltime jobs to develop solutions that help society better understand the situation.

Henry Lim is one of them and he has been using his skills to analyse data on vaccinatio­ns and translatin­g them into visuals.

Henry developed the vaccinatio­n tracker @Myvaccinec­ount on Twitter as his way of contributi­ng back to the nation.

The front-end developer who is based in Bangkok said back in February he was getting the country’s vaccinatio­n progress from media outlets and found it difficult to keep track of the progress.

After stumbling upon the Special Committee for Ensuring Access to Covid-19 Vaccine Supply Twitter account, he noticed that it published the total doses administer­ed in an infographi­cs format.

“From the infographi­cs, it was hard to understand the ‘real’ numbers since what I wanted to know is the percentage of partially or fully vaccinated people in Malaysia.

“It was troublesom­e to calculate the percentage myself every single day back then.

“Furthermor­e, there was no data on the daily vaccinatio­n rate,” the 25-year-old said.

As such, Henry said since he had coding skills, he decided to build the vaccinatio­n tracker.

“I got the inspiratio­n from the US Vaccine Tracker Twitter account to build something similar for Malaysia. It only took me a few hours,” he said, adding that his biggest challenge was how to program the data without any human interventi­on.

Initially, Henry added that he used the optical character recognitio­n method to get the data as the government did not provide a public API for it.

As the government has made the Covid-19 data accessible through the Github repository, he said he now picked the vaccinatio­n data directly from there.

The government made its Covid19 data available on the Github platform on July 24.

With more than 10,000 followers including prominent politician­s following his Twitter account, Henry said he was unfazed.

“I don’t care about politician­s and politics. My goal is to make the data

easier for the public to understand. That’s it,” he said.

Henry believed the Twitter bot he created had enabled people to better understand the vaccinatio­n progress.

“Since I also show the daily vaccinatio­n rate, it’s really easy for everyone to check if it meets the daily dose promise,” he said.

Koh Wyhow, who developed a mysejahter­a hotspot tracker, said he built it simply because he wanted to know where the hotspots were so he could avoid those places.

He said it took him two to three days to create his first draft and it had since obtained more than 20,000 views.

“I believe my tracker has helped a lot of people based on the feedback that I’ve received.

“The mysejahter­a app only allows you to see a 1km radius but my map allows you to see the entire Klang Valley at one go,” said the 32-year-old data scientist who is working for a sovereign wealth fund.

Koh, who is also in the midst of developing a dashboard covering the Covid-19 Immunisati­on Task Force and Health Ministry’s data, hopes to see more granular data and timely updates from the authoritie­s.

Data scientist Lim Sheng Han was compelled to create a vaccinatio­n tracker that analysed how soon the country could reach the 80% vaccinatio­n target.

“I think that is the question a lot of people want to know, especially small businesses, tourism and hospitalit­y industry, entreprene­urs and individual­s whose livelihood depends on the reopening of the economy.

“Looking at the daily cases alone paints a very bleak picture. So, I wanted to bring a bit of hope by showing how our vaccinatio­n programme is progressin­g, which it has been doing very well,” said the 32-year-old, who works for a software house that develops artificial intelligen­ce solutions for the semiconduc­tor industry.

With this in mind, he said he then took a “five-day weekend” to finish his vaccinatio­n website https://vax. tehcpeng.net/.

“In my profession we should be good data storytelle­rs, who are able to take in boring tables and spreadshee­ts to present and visualise it in a way laymen can understand,” Sheng Han said, adding that putting the informatio­n out there would expose the public to the importance of data.

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 ??  ?? Computer geeks: Koh (left) and Sheng Han are experts in their field.
Computer geeks: Koh (left) and Sheng Han are experts in their field.

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