
Published on October 16, 2007

Developers
After several months of effort by contestants for the Thailand ICT Awards 2007, the country's annual software development contest, 13 local software development applications were selected as winners. They will also be representatives from Thailand to show their software-development capabilities in the Asia Pacific ICT Alliance (APICTA) Awards 2007, which will be held in Singapore next month.
Category: Application and Infrastructure Tools
Winner: Planet G
Project: 3D Face Making Engine
Category: Communications Application
Winner: Sun Systems Corporation
Project: CallStreamONE
Category: Education and Training
Winner: Cyberplanet Interactive
Project: World Traveller
Category: E-Government and Services
Winner: Asia Info Solution
Project: Hangar-Soft
The sophisticated process of aeroplane maintenance can be simplified. Hangar-Soft allows the military and commercial aviation companies to have more systematic processes to repair and maintain their aircraft. The software allows the maintenance staff to know every step that the plane needs in repair operations and this will allow them to see the complete picture of the maintenance cycle and make better aircraft management.
Category: General Application
Winner: Arunsawad Dot Com
Project: @2claim (anywhere to claim)
The system allows officials in the field to get customer details and the location of the accident on their personal assistant device and they can use the device to complete the online claim process immediately through the mobile-phone network.
Category: Industrial Application
Winner: Thailand Textile Institute & MSL
Software (Thailand)
Project: Textile ERP Suite
Category: Logistics and Supply Chain
Winner: Embes Technology (Thailand)
Project: Real Time Logistics Monitoring System
Category: Media and Entertainment
Winner: Cyberplanet Interactive and
True Corporation
Project: True Life
This is instant messaging software that combines seven main features of personal chat - group chat, television broadcasting online, radio broadcasting online, personalised content daily update, offline messaging and VoIP phones - with 3D avatars.
The service allows users to select or create their own 3D avatar in the chat program so they can express emotions and interact with friends through avatar expression.
Users of True Life can chat with friends across several platforms including MSN Messenger, Yahoo Messenger, Google Talk and ICQ.
Category: Research and Development
Winner: Larngear Technology
Project: AR Studio
Developing imaginary three-dimensional objects, which can appear in the real world under the augment-reality concept, is not too hard to do. With a development tool called AR studio, designers and artists can now build 3D objects in just 10 minutes, instead of taking months as before, and with no need to have computer or technical knowledge. The tool brings computer-generated objects to life, allowing users to interact with them as if an actual physical object there is there.
Category: Secondary Student Project
Winner: Natt Piyapramote
Project: Tanjai OCR - Input at the Speed of Thought
This is a kind of optical character recognition (OCR) program that can convert scanned documents into text files. Tanjai, instead of using scanned documents, allows users to input text documents captured from a digital camera and then the software will convert text in the image into a text file for further editing. Currently, the software can recognise printed Thai text with 90-per-cent accuracy.
Category: Security
Winner: Iconcepts
Project: Livescan4All
Livescan4All is a biometric fingerprint-capturing system for security purposes. It was designed to minimise human error when it comes to identification. Fingerprint information is captured by a scanner and can be sent through the Internet for fingerprint matching to identify each individual. The system is intended to replace the ordinary paper-based fingerprint cards used now.
Category: Tourism and Hospitality
Winner: AISoft
Project: +IBE
Category: Tertiary Student Project
Winner: Waiyawuth Euachongprasit,
Chulalongkorn University
Project: Hum me a tune… Here comes
the song
Searching for a song is now easier. Just by humming, you can find the song you want. Hum me a tune… Here comes the song is a content-based retrieval system that allows users to search for a number of songs by humming only a particular part of the song. The system is also designed to support user variations such as pitch error and tempo error so even if the humming is not absolutely correct, the system can recognise the tune and make searching for the songs that are most similar to the humming-tune query in music database.
Pongpen Sutharoj
The Nation