• 中文版
  • BM
  • News
  • Deals
  • Reviews
    • First Impressions
    • Hands-on
    • Comparisons
  • Tech
    • Mobile
    • Computers
    • Cameras
    • Wearables
    • Audio
    • Drones
  • Telco
    • Celcom
    • Digi
    • Maxis
    • Time
    • Tune Talk
    • U Mobile
    • Unifi
    • Yes
  • Cars
  • Contribute
  • Jobs
Menu
  • 中文版
  • BM
  • News
  • Deals
  • Reviews
    • First Impressions
    • Hands-on
    • Comparisons
  • Tech
    • Mobile
    • Computers
    • Cameras
    • Wearables
    • Audio
    • Drones
  • Telco
    • Celcom
    • Digi
    • Maxis
    • Time
    • Tune Talk
    • U Mobile
    • Unifi
    • Yes
  • Cars
  • Contribute
  • Jobs
Search
  • Tech
    • News
    • Mobile
    • Computers
    • Cameras
    • Wearables
    • Audio
    • Drones
  • Telco
    • Celcom
    • Digi
    • Maxis
    • Time
    • U Mobile
    • Unifi
    • Yes
  • Reviews
    • First Impressions
    • Hands-on
    • Comparisons
  • Buyer’s Guide
  • Opinions
  • Digital Life
  • Video
  • Deals
  • How-To
  • Cars
  • Bahasa Melayu
  • EV
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
Menu
  • Tech
    • News
    • Mobile
    • Computers
    • Cameras
    • Wearables
    • Audio
    • Drones
  • Telco
    • Celcom
    • Digi
    • Maxis
    • Time
    • U Mobile
    • Unifi
    • Yes
  • Reviews
    • First Impressions
    • Hands-on
    • Comparisons
  • Buyer’s Guide
  • Opinions
  • Digital Life
  • Video
  • Deals
  • How-To
  • Cars
  • Bahasa Melayu
  • EV
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
Search
Close
Home Digital Life Apps

[UPDATED] Malaysian-born tech entrepreneur behind New Zealand’s version of MySejahtera

  • BY Dzamira Dzafri
  • 1 September 2021
  • 7:01 pm
  • Comment
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

[ UPDATE 6/9/2020 18:00 ]: While Alan suggested to New Zealand’s Ministry of Health that QR codes might be the way forward, New Zealand company Rush worked with their Government on the development of the technology and the app. Read more here.

New Zealand news source RNZ featured Kiwi tech entrepreneur Alan Chew, whose best-known work is the NZ COVID Tracer app—which is basically the New Zealand version of MySejahtera. In the feature, we also found out that Chew is Malaysian born, as pointed out by Senior Consultant Paediatrician Dr Amar Singh HSS.

The man behind NZ's number-one tool in the fight against Covid-19 (Malaysian born) https://t.co/7O7MpMe1D4

— Amar-Singh HSS (@DrAmarMOH) September 1, 2021

The RNZ profile on Chew is extremely detailed, touching on how his father immigrated from Guangdong, China to Kuala Lumpur—where he met his mother. Chew remarked that growing up in his Malaysian village was “the happiest time of his life”, when thought he was “raised in abject poverty and deprivation”.

The article also touched on him leaving Malaysia to study in New Zealand. In 1979, he graduated from Waikato University with a Bachelor of Management Studies with Honours, majoring in accounting.

“My education was free and more than that, [I value] the free love that I get from people here. Malaysia was a dog-eat-dog society, probably because of its dense population.  There are racial conflicts between one race and another. Compared to people in New Zealand, [this country] was a completely new world to me.  It totally bowled me over when I came here and I always felt that I needed to thank New Zealand for that,” said Chew.

As businesses in New Zealand were affected by COVID-19, Chew’s company Houston Productivity Solutions created a simple contact tracing system, similar to what we have in Malaysia. He started working with his team in March 2020, just before the pandemic hit, and he helped devise the prototype for the tracing technology.

“We wanted contact tracing to be adopted rapidly.  With the QR code, all you need is a piece of paper and all you need is a mobile phone,” said Chew.

Their first prototype of the app failed. However, Chew said he has “benefitted so much from New Zealand society and wanted to give back”.

Chew’s NZ COVID Tracer is a New Zealand’s Ministry of Health app. Apart from being able to scan QR codes at places New Zealanders visit, the app lets them use a “digital diary”—which lets you add certain locations in case you forget to check in. There is also Bluetooth tracing, which allows users to create an anonymised record of the people they’ve been near. 

COVID-19 cases in New Zealand is currently on the rise—with a 7-day average of 59 cases a day, and has been rising since mid-August. In Malaysia, we’re averaging about 20,000 cases a day.

[ SOURCE, IMAGE SOURCE ]

Tags: covid-19MySejahteraNew ZealandNZ COVID Tracer
Dzamira Dzafri

Dzamira Dzafri

POPULAR

Malaysia’s first 5g advanced Broadband: What You Get for RM68/month

January 14, 2026

Neta V now available for only RM40k, but with a limited 6-month warranty

January 31, 2026

[UPDATED] Malaysian-born tech entrepreneur behind New Zealand’s version of MySejahtera

September 1, 2021

Perodua QV-E only costs RM1.4k to maintain for 5 years, cheaper than Axia

January 30, 2026

Zeekr 9X coming to Malaysia: 1,381hp luxury 6-seat PHEV, expected to be priced above RM500K

February 3, 2026
Proton e.MAS 5

Record high 3,276 Proton e.MAS EVs delivered in January 2026

February 2, 2026

Copyright © 2025 · SoyaCincau.com
Mind Blow Sdn Bhd (1076827-P)

  • ADVERTISE
  • DISCLAIMER

Copyright © 2026 · SoyaCincau.com – Mind Blow Sdn Bhd (1076827-P)

  • ADVERTISE
  • DISCLAIMER