Three weeks ago, three friends from Sun
Microsystems and I visited Malaysia's most happening school--SMJK Dindings.
Stuck out in the middle of nowhere amid an oil palm estate and a fishing
village, SMJK Dindings is probably the most wired public school in the
country today.
The story behind this is worthwhile recounting.
School principal Tiong Ting Ming spent his
first seven years there raising RM500,000 for a new school block complete
with underground trunking. He lobbied and secured sponsorship in kind
from U.S. power company Thomas & Betts, networking giant 3Com Corp
and local conglomerate Sapura Holdings. He recruited his former students,
who ran MyDirectory Sdn Bhd, to help out with troubleshooting and maintenance.
Many more good souls, touched by Tiong's quest and impressed by his perseverance,
sent money. Even his 15-year-old son, a student there, was roped in to
be systems administrator.
For the next two years, Tiong and his students
kept plugging on, single-handedly refurbishing computers for a local area
network, porting over applications, and setting up servers for specific
functions.
News of this cyber school soon spread within
its vicinity, and before long the student population had grown from 320
to 800-plus. Today, SMJK's population of teenagers are more comfortable
reading Linux, Macromedia Flash, Ethernet Gigabyte and other computer-related
manuals than fiction. Most of the students harbor dreams of running their
own IT startups or joining the industry as COOs, system engineers, technicians,
analysts and Web designers.
And all because one man dared to dream