Dr Mahathir has high hopes for the mutimedia city.
Published:
10 August 1999 y., Tuesday
The Malaysian Prime Minister, Mahathir Mohammed, has opened a new multimedia garden city known as Cyberjaya which he says will be the nerve centre of the country_s high-technology development. The latest of Malaysia_s prestigious mega-projects will have cost an estimated $15bn by the time it is completed in the next millennium. Designed to be the Malaysian answer to Silicon Valley, it will be intelligent, high-tech, low density and environmentally friendly. For the moment Cyberjaya, situated 40km south of the capital, is still a dusty building site and most of its inhabitants are immigrant Bangladeshi and Indonesian construction workers. But it does boast world class infrastructure and high profile international companies, including computer giant Microsoft, have decided to locate themselves there. Many have been attracted by generous tax incentives offered by the Malaysian Government. The developers say the vision behind the new city is one which fuses man_s technological ingenuity with nature_s bounty.The city lies at the heart of Malaysia_s so-called Multimedia Super-Corridor (MSC), with the soaring heights of the Petronas Towers - the world_s tallest building - at one end and the new Kuala Lumpur International Airport at the other. The corridor covers some 750 square kilometers (300 square miles) and is wired with the latest fibre-optic technology. The MSC will also be home to Malaysia_s new administrative capital, Putrajaya, which is also under construction. Dr Mahathir sees the project as being the key to Malaysia_s entry into developed world status by the year 2020 - a concept he calls Vision 2020. At the opening ceremony he said multimedia technology would be the engine to achieve the required economic growth.
Šaltinis:
Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Tipped off by American officials, Italian police shut down two rings of hackers who attacked Web sites belonging to the U.S. Army and NASA
more »
Yokohama Mayor Hiroshi Nakada decided Friday to allow residents of the city to choose whether their personal data can be registered in a national resident registry network to be launched Monday by the central government
more »
An Israeli startup takes on Moore's law--and Texas Instruments
more »
Wal-Mart, the most mass-market retailer imaginable, is committing an outrageous form of computing heresy: On its Web site, it's selling Windows-compatible personal computers without Windows
more »
Businesses in the US and UK agree that spam is a problem, but according to MessageLabs many users cannot reach a consensus on its definition
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
FORMER FSB OFFICER TESTIFIES ABOUT 1999 APARTMENT-BUILDING BOMBINGS...
more »
Microsoft on Wednesday acknowledged that its .Net plan has been slow to catch on and laid out an agenda to move the software strategy ahead
more »
Police Show Up Only to Find Infected WebTVs.
more »
Filters fail to block 'pro-terrorist' messages
more »