logo
First City University College Celebrates 2025 Graduation Ceremony

First City University College Celebrates 2025 Graduation Ceremony

Daily Expressa day ago
Published on: Friday, August 01, 2025
Published on: Fri, Aug 01, 2025 Text Size: PETALING JAYA: In a vibrant celebration of academic excellence and personal achievement, First City University College conferred degrees and diplomas to 214 graduates at its 2025 Graduation Ceremony held at One World Hotel, Bandar Utama. Surrounded by proud families, friends, and family, the graduates marked a major milestone in their educational journeys. This year's graduates comprised 46 students from the Faculty of Business and Communication, 131 from the Faculty of Design and Built Environment, and 37 from the Faculty of Computer Science and Technology. The qualifications awarded spanned Diploma, Bachelor's and Master's levels across a wide range of industry-relevant programmes such as Business Administration, Accounting and Finance, Fashion Marketing, Interior Architecture and Design, Computer Science, and Information Technology. The ceremony was graced by prominent figures including YgBhg Tan Sri Dato' IR (Dr) Teo Chiang Kok, Chairman of the Board of Governors; YgBhg Tan Sri Dato' (Dr) Teo Chiang Liang, Director and Board Member; Datuk Yaacob Bin Wan Ibrahim, Chancellor of First City University College; Professor Dr. Saw Sor Heoh, Vice-Chancellor; Professor Dr. Hing Hiang Lian, Deputy Vice-Chancellor; as well as members of the Board of Governors and senior academic staff. In her address to the graduating class, Vice-Chancellor Professor Dr. Saw Sor Heoh praised the students for their determination and resilience, remarking, 'We are truly proud of your success and the journey you undertook to reach this significant milestone. As you embark on the next chapter of your lives, remember that the spirit of First City University College will always be with you. Lead with passion in all that you pursue, act with integrity in every decision you make, and uphold professionalism as you grow in your careers and contributions.' The ceremony also recognised four exceptional graduates through the Industry Excellence Awards, which were presented in collaboration with prominent industry partners. These awards honoured graduates who had demonstrated outstanding academic performance, impactful project work, strong internship results, and meaningful engagement with industry. Lee Zhi Guan, who graduated with a Bachelor of Information Systems (Honours) in Business Management, received his award from Mr. Lawrence Law of Zchwantech Sdn. Bhd. Man Yuet Thung, a graduate of the Bachelor of Arts (Hons) Interior Architecture and Design, received hers from Ms. Debbie Leow of MyKey Global. Tong Kar Chun, from the Bachelor of Science (Honours) Accounting and Finance programme, received his award from Prof. Dato Dr. Chan Khin Thiam of eSecretary.my. Meanwhile, Cornileus Jasper Patrick, a graduate of the Bachelor of Software Engineering (Honours), received his award from Ms. Kogila A/P Kamalanathan of Kollect Systems Sdn. Bhd. Reflecting on his journey, Lee Zhi Guan encouraged his fellow graduate to embrace the future with courage and curiosity. 'As we take our next steps whether into jobs, new cities, further studies, or just into the unknown, I hope we carry that question with us. Not as pressure, but as permission. Permission to try. To explore. To dream big, and to risk failing, because maybe that's how we find our real limits or realize there aren't any.' Cornileus Jasper Patrick echoed this sense of possibility, sharing that 'Graduation marks not just the end of our studies, but the beginning of new opportunities. It's a reminder that hard work and determination always pay off.' The event reflected First City University College's deep commitment to producing industry-ready graduates equipped with both academic knowledge and real-world skills. As these graduates move forward in tor their careers or further studies, they carry forward not only their qualifications, but also the values, experiences, and aspirations that will define their contributions to society. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available.
Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

First City University College Celebrates 2025 Graduation Ceremony
First City University College Celebrates 2025 Graduation Ceremony

Daily Express

timea day ago

  • Daily Express

First City University College Celebrates 2025 Graduation Ceremony

Published on: Friday, August 01, 2025 Published on: Fri, Aug 01, 2025 Text Size: PETALING JAYA: In a vibrant celebration of academic excellence and personal achievement, First City University College conferred degrees and diplomas to 214 graduates at its 2025 Graduation Ceremony held at One World Hotel, Bandar Utama. Surrounded by proud families, friends, and family, the graduates marked a major milestone in their educational journeys. This year's graduates comprised 46 students from the Faculty of Business and Communication, 131 from the Faculty of Design and Built Environment, and 37 from the Faculty of Computer Science and Technology. The qualifications awarded spanned Diploma, Bachelor's and Master's levels across a wide range of industry-relevant programmes such as Business Administration, Accounting and Finance, Fashion Marketing, Interior Architecture and Design, Computer Science, and Information Technology. The ceremony was graced by prominent figures including YgBhg Tan Sri Dato' IR (Dr) Teo Chiang Kok, Chairman of the Board of Governors; YgBhg Tan Sri Dato' (Dr) Teo Chiang Liang, Director and Board Member; Datuk Yaacob Bin Wan Ibrahim, Chancellor of First City University College; Professor Dr. Saw Sor Heoh, Vice-Chancellor; Professor Dr. Hing Hiang Lian, Deputy Vice-Chancellor; as well as members of the Board of Governors and senior academic staff. In her address to the graduating class, Vice-Chancellor Professor Dr. Saw Sor Heoh praised the students for their determination and resilience, remarking, 'We are truly proud of your success and the journey you undertook to reach this significant milestone. As you embark on the next chapter of your lives, remember that the spirit of First City University College will always be with you. Lead with passion in all that you pursue, act with integrity in every decision you make, and uphold professionalism as you grow in your careers and contributions.' The ceremony also recognised four exceptional graduates through the Industry Excellence Awards, which were presented in collaboration with prominent industry partners. These awards honoured graduates who had demonstrated outstanding academic performance, impactful project work, strong internship results, and meaningful engagement with industry. Lee Zhi Guan, who graduated with a Bachelor of Information Systems (Honours) in Business Management, received his award from Mr. Lawrence Law of Zchwantech Sdn. Bhd. Man Yuet Thung, a graduate of the Bachelor of Arts (Hons) Interior Architecture and Design, received hers from Ms. Debbie Leow of MyKey Global. Tong Kar Chun, from the Bachelor of Science (Honours) Accounting and Finance programme, received his award from Prof. Dato Dr. Chan Khin Thiam of Meanwhile, Cornileus Jasper Patrick, a graduate of the Bachelor of Software Engineering (Honours), received his award from Ms. Kogila A/P Kamalanathan of Kollect Systems Sdn. Bhd. Reflecting on his journey, Lee Zhi Guan encouraged his fellow graduate to embrace the future with courage and curiosity. 'As we take our next steps whether into jobs, new cities, further studies, or just into the unknown, I hope we carry that question with us. Not as pressure, but as permission. Permission to try. To explore. To dream big, and to risk failing, because maybe that's how we find our real limits or realize there aren't any.' Cornileus Jasper Patrick echoed this sense of possibility, sharing that 'Graduation marks not just the end of our studies, but the beginning of new opportunities. It's a reminder that hard work and determination always pay off.' The event reflected First City University College's deep commitment to producing industry-ready graduates equipped with both academic knowledge and real-world skills. As these graduates move forward in tor their careers or further studies, they carry forward not only their qualifications, but also the values, experiences, and aspirations that will define their contributions to society. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia

Charting a new technological era
Charting a new technological era

The Star

time4 days ago

  • The Star

Charting a new technological era

GLOBAL supply chains face mounting pressure from shifting geopolitical forces and escalating tariff tensions — placing Asean at a crucial inflection point. Within this evolving landscape, Malaysia is strategically positioning itself through the National Semiconductor Strategy (NSS) to contribute meaningfully to regional integration and innovation. At the Asean Semiconductor Summit (ASEMIS) 2025, about 500 policymakers, analysts, economists, sovereign fund representatives and industry leaders gathered to discuss how Asean can respond to global trade shifts and build a united, resilient and competitive semiconductor ecosystem. Held on July 24 at One World Hotel, Petaling Jaya, the summit — themed 'Shaping the future of Asean's semiconductor industry' — focused on strengthening Asean's role as a global hub for semiconductor manufacturing, innovation and technological security. Strategic ambition Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, in his keynote address, reaffirmed Malaysia's ambition to move beyond its traditional role as an assembly and testing hub. 'Our journey in the semiconductor sector began over 50 years ago, with Intel opening its first overseas production in Penang. Today, we are an indispensable node in the global semiconductor supply chain. But the NSS is not about staying where we are – it's about moving forward, capturing more value through research and development, integrated circuit (IC) design and advanced manufacturing.' Anwar emphasised a mindset shift from 'Made in Malaysia' to 'Made by Malaysia' products, highlighting the need for deeper regional collaboration and greater self-reliance through the development of homegrown champions. 'We had a series of discussions with our Asean partners on how to utilise this experience and work together to benefit our region.' He explained that the immediate focus is to deliver the '10+100' target. 'This means building 10 Malaysian semiconductor and supply chain companies with revenues between RM1bil and RM4.7bil and nurturing at least 100 more to approach the RM1bil mark. These companies will not only export Malaysian products to the world but also bring our knowledge, value creation and talent into Asean – and together with Asean – to the global markets. They will be our flag-bearers abroad, rooted at home.' This vision is already supported by tangible progress under the NSS: RM63bil in investments, 13 local companies emerging as potential national champions and initiatives to train 60,000 engineers by 2030. National asset Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz shared how the NSS has quickly become the backbone of Malaysia's economic transformation. In 2024 alone, semiconductors contributed RM313bil in exports – more than 20% of the nation's total. Despite global volatility, semiconductor exports grew by 15.7% in the first half of 2025, outpacing overall export performance. Anwar delivering his keynote address at the inaugural Asean Semiconductor Summit 2025. 'By harmonising policies, fostering talent mobility and attracting strategic investments, we can enhance Asean's competitiveness via a robust and truly integrated regional semiconductor ecosystem supply chain that benefits all our peoples. 'We must continue to act decisively to capture this once-in-a-generation opportunity to secure long-term economic resilience and technological leadership.' He described the semiconductor industry as a strategic national asset and a cornerstone of Malaysia's ambition to lead in innovation, trade and shared prosperity. He further highlighted the cascading economic benefits of the electrical and electronic (E&E) industry, which supports over 1.5 million jobs directly and indirectly, generated more than RM4.9 trillion in economic output last year, and drives growth across Penang, Selangor, Kedah, Negeri Sembilan, Perak and Sarawak – lifting nearly 1,000 small and medium enterprises. Malaysia Semiconductor Industry Association (MSIA) president Datuk Seri Wong Siew Hai, in his welcome address, shared that the inaugural summit – hosted during Malaysia's Asean chairmanship – is aimed at defining the bloc's collective ambition in the global semiconductor and E&E value chain. 'We must rise from being the factory of the world to becoming the brain of the value chain. 'We must think big, act boldly, and collaborate deeply. Asean can become not just a part of the trillion-dollar future - but an architect of it.' Collective challenge The panel discussion, 'Navigating Geopolitical Headwinds: Government strategies to strengthen Asean's semiconductor supply chain,' moderated by former Deputy International Trade and Industry Minister and Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) board member Prof Dr Ong Kian Ming, highlighted both the complexities and opportunities surrounding regional coordination. As the United States (US) reimposes tariffs under a new administration, Asean nations find themselves balancing national interests with the need for collective resilience. Panellist Maria Monica Wihardja, visiting fellow and coordinator of the Media, Technology and Society Programme at the ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute, pointed to Asean's structural challenge – diverse economies with differing stakes in US trade relations. 'This is a coordination issue. In an ideal world, Asean would have its own approach to counter the US reciprocal tariffs. But it's difficult to imagine, as member countries come from different starting points and have varying stakes in their negotiations with the US.' Fellow panellist and Economic Research Institute for Asean and East Asia (ERIA) president Tetsuya Watanabe cited the Asean Framework for Integrated Semiconductor Supply Chain (AFISS) and the Asean Geoeconomics Task Force as concrete steps in the right direction. 'Asean's response in establishing the task force is remarkable. Asean member states are committed to collectively promoting regional integration, using this crisis as an opportunity to strengthen resilience and move toward a single market in the long term future. The AFISS offers a good policy framework to complement one another in advancing Asean's vision as a regional hub for semiconductor manufacturing.' Regional catalyst As co-chair of the Asean Geoeconomics Task Force, Deputy Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Liew Chin Tong emphasised Malaysia's leadership in shaping policy alignments that serve the region. 'We must reframe how we think about wages, foreign direct investment and regional integration. It's time for us to build Asean multinationals that can drive innovation and industrialisation.' As a panellist, Liew also stressed the need for horizontal integration – linking the semiconductor industry across sectors like automotive, defence, medical technology and data infrastructure. With the right strategy, both Malaysia and Asean can shift from being production sites to becoming growth markets in their own right. In his opening remarks at ASEMIS 2025, Liew noted that Malaysia has long been an integral part of the global semiconductor ecosystem and is home to over 5,000 companies in the E&E sector, including seven of the world's top 10 semiconductor companies. Panellist Norjamin Gallardo-Delos Reyes, commercial counsellor at the Philippine Trade and Investment Center, reminded participants that each Asean economy brings unique strengths to the table. 'Each Asean economy brings its own strengths, whether it be advanced packaging, design, or emerging tech capabilities. Let us make sure that we complement and integrate – and ensure that no one is left behind.' Fellow panellist Narit Therdsteerasukdi, secretary-general of Thailand's Board of Investment, highlighted how cross-sector synergies – between the bio-circular and green industry, electric vehicles and key components, semiconductors and advanced electronics, digital industry and international business centres – are driving Thailand's transformation. 'Semiconductors are key to supplying many industries, including electric vehicles, medical devices, electronic devices and even survival appliances.' He also cited Thailand's goal of training at least 80,000 talents for the semiconductor sector. This includes collaborations with seven leading companies, 15 local universities and the establishment of three national semiconductor training centres in partnership with foreign universities.'Collaboration between Asean members for talent development is very important.' Talent and technology Talent development is central to Malaysia's NSS. Both Anwar and Tengku Zafrul emphasised the urgency of closing the global engineering talent gap. More than 13,000 high-skilled workers have been trained under initiatives led by Collaborative Research in Engineering, Science and Technology (CREST) and Talent Corporation Malaysia Bhd (TalentCorp). In addition, the Investment, Trade and Industry Ministry (Miti) has also implemented programmes to strengthen the semiconductor value chain. Tengku Zafrul highlighted that the involvement of global multinational companies (MNCs) is creating important stepping stones to anchor Malaysia as a competitive semiconductor R&D hub and co-development partner for MNCs. Tengku Zafrul also congratulated the MSIA, Singapore Semiconductor Industry Association (SSIA), Semiconductor and Electronics Industries in the Philippines Foundation Inc (SEIPI), Thai Semiconductor Industry Trade Association (THSIA) and Vietnam Electronic Industries Association (VEIA) on signing a Memorandum of Understanding during the summit. This, he said, is a significant step towards fostering a more integrated and robust Asean semiconductor ecosystem. There was also an exchange of MoUs between CREST and Human Resource Development Corporation (HRD Corp) – an essential talent partnership under the NSS. The initiative forms part of a broader national effort to contribute towards the goal of upskilling 60,000 engineers by 2030.

ChatGPT will soon shop online, make PowerPoints on your behalf
ChatGPT will soon shop online, make PowerPoints on your behalf

The Star

time18-07-2025

  • The Star

ChatGPT will soon shop online, make PowerPoints on your behalf

FILE - The OpenAI logo is seen on a mobile phone in front of a computer screen displaying output from ChatGPT, March 21, 2023, in Boston. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File) OpenAI is rolling out new options for chatbot ChatGPT to carry out a variety of increasingly complicated tasks on a user's behalf, part of its push to bring so-called AI agents to the mainstream. ChatGPT agent, set to be unveiled during a livestreamed event on Thursday, is designed to streamline personal and professional projects, such as planning a meal and ordering ingredients for it online, or creating a slideshow for a business meeting. The tool works through OpenAI's flagship chatbot and combines the capabilities of two AI services it rolled out earlier this year: Operator, which can browse, type and click on the internet much in the way a human would; and Deep Research, which is meant to handle time-consuming online research. The San Francisco-based company said the agent features will be available immediately to its paid Pro, Plus and Team subscribers, with plans to release it later this summer to other enterprise and education customers. Some of the details of the software were previously reported by the Information. A growing number of tech companies, including OpenAI backer Microsoft Corp and rival Anthropic, are focusing on agents, or AI software that can complete multistep tasks for users with minimal supervision. OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman previously said agents will be "the next giant breakthrough' for AI. The hope is that such tools can save users time and thereby live up to the long-held promise that AI will make people more productive. For now, however, the software can still be frustrating and slow. In a demonstration of the ChatGPT agent this week, Neel Ajjarapu, OpenAI's product manager for the software, gave the chatbot a detailed prompt: Browse Etsy for vintage-style lamps that are under a couple hundred dollars and available with free shipping, then put the best-looking items in his online shopping cart and provide a URL for each one. OpenAI has also experimented with using the tool to make presentations and PowerPoints, Ajjarapu said, though he cautioned it's more for making "very early rough drafts' of presentations people can then refine. Microsoft, the company that makes PowerPoint, also offers AI tools to help professionals draft presentations. Ajjarapu said the AI model that powers the tool uses a computer and web browser to complete assignments. It can also take in feedback from the user while a task is underway and alter its approach, he said. While users are accustomed to chatting in nearly real time with ChatGPT, it can take much longer – several minutes at least – for the chatbot to complete agent-like tasks. AI agents present new safety and security risks, given the potential for AI to make mistakes or be misused by bad actors. The company said ChatGPT agent is meant to turn down some tasks, including those related to finances or legal advice. There are also a number of actions the tool will seek permission for before carrying out, including making purchases, the company said. For some tasks, such as writing emails, the service will require a user to supervise it. As with the launches of Operator and Deep Research, the company acknowledged its latest agent effort still needs work. "It is far from perfect,' said OpenAI Chief Product Officer Kevin Weil during the demonstration. "But I think if we had gone back six months ago or 12 months ago and said this was going to be possible today, we would have been pretty excited about it.' – Bloomberg

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store