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Showing posts with label National Instruments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Instruments. Show all posts

Thursday 23 August 2012

Riding the hi-tech waves

Penangite to return home soon as R&D director after 37 years abroad


GEORGE TOWN: A small electric fan and transistor radio were the only ‘luxury items’ his family possessed, but today, US-based Yong Kit Chin is a high-tech success story.

The 56-year-old National Instruments (NI) R&D director recalled that back then, his father owned a small shoe store in George Town.

The business was barely enough to feed the family and pay the workers’ wages.

“On occasions, when my father couldn’t sell a single pair of shoes and he had very little cash for groceries, we’d have only vegetarian meals,” he said.

Yong said the family didn’t own a car or a telephone and they had their first refrigerator and television set when he was 17.

“Hence, my siblings and I were brought up to be thrifty and we vowed to work hard to improve our lot.

“We couldn’t afford tuition classes, so we learned to be independent and to work harder than other kids,” he said.

When he was about 10, Yong became very interested in technology.

“Later, I became fascinated by electricity and would dismantle and re-assemble the rice cooker, electric iron and radio,” he said in an e-mail interview.

He remembered being “so thrilled” when his uncle gave him a RM5 reward for repairing a transistor radio’s corroded battery terminal.

The former Chung Ling High School boy did well in his school exams and was among the state’s top MCE achievers invited by then Chief Minister, Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu, to a tea reception at his official residence to celebrate the achievement.

He left the country in the mid-70s after securing a scholarship from Columbia University in New York and has been living overseas for 37 years.

“It was a totally new experience as I moved from the lovely and peaceful Penang island to the hustle and bustle of Manhattan,” he said.

Upon graduating with Master and Bachelor degrees in Electrical Engineering, he worked as a Hewlett-Packard production engineer in Singapore.

After over three decades of technical, business and managerial experience in the high-tech industries abroad, Yong is coming home.

He joined NI, a pioneer in modular and software-based instrumentation in Austin, last year.

Yong will return to his home state by the end of September as R&D director at NI’s facility here.

“I am very excited as I finally have the opportunity to work and live in Penang since I left for studies in the United States.

“I am willing to be a mentor to young engineers in Malaysia and share my experiences with them,” he added.

Yong said the thing he missed most about Malaysia was Penang’s delicious hawker food.

“The experience of savouring a plate of freshly prepared ‘char koay teow and sipping a cup of ‘teh tarik’ while chatting with friends is just priceless,” he added.

By CHRISTINA CHIN sgchris@thestar.com.my  

Related post:
National Instruments to set up its largest R&D facility outside US in Penang
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Friday 27 July 2012

National Instruments to set up its largest R&D facility outside US in Penang

KUALA LUMPUR: US-based National Instruments (NI) is aiming to set up its largest research and development (R&D) facility outside the United States with the expansion of its facilities in Penang.

“Currently we are operating in a rented space. With this expansion, we will have our own infrastructure to support our business in the region,” NI Penang managing director Raj Purushothaman told a press briefing on the expansion plans of the company yesterday.

The company also aims to increase its manufacturing capacity to support an additional US$1bil in the company's growth.

Raj: ‘With this expansion, we will have our own infrastructure to support our business in the region.”

The capacity would add another 40% to its global hardware manufacturing capacity which would include the manufacturing of academic products, embedded controllers, industrial chassis and modular instruments.

Its manufacturing arm is slated to be operational in the fourth quarter.

In tandem with the planned five to 10-year expansion, the company is aiming to expand its local headcount to 1,000-1,500 employees from its current 165.

This includes 250 engineers in electrical, mechanical and engineering management fields.

The technology hardware and software provider began operations in Malaysia in 2009 with an US$80mil capital investment.

Raj said as part of the planned investment, the expansion was envisioned to transform its facilities in Penang to be the Asia-Pacific hub, serving its clients in the region and elsewhere.

“It will be an integrated operations centre, which manages R&D, manufacturing, supply chain, product distribution, product services, IT and finance,” he said.

Its expansion includes the construction of a 314,000 sq ft office and manufacturing space on a 23-acre site in Batu Maung, Penang.

Its manufacturing arm slated to be operational in the fourth quarter would have the capacity to support an additional US$1bil in the company's growth.

NI is among other American multinationals that have established its presence in Malaysia such as Honeywell, Dell, Intel, General Electric, Western Digital and Motorola.

At the event, International Trade and Industry Minister Datuk Seri Mustapa Mohamed said the United States was the third largest foreign investor in the manufacturing sector in 2011 with RM2.5bil.

The investments were mainly in electrical and electronics, chemical and chemicals products, transport equipment and wood & wood products.

“The electrical and electronics (E&E) industry continues to be a major contributor to Malaysia's gross domestic product growth . For the period January to May 2012, E&E exports were 32.27% of the total country's exports and 48.73% of the manufactured exports,” he said in his speech delivered by Malaysian Investment Development Authority (Mida) chief executive officer Datuk Noharuddin Nordin.

- The Star

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