Literature Review

21/06/2026


Question 

I want to write a better literature review. May you help me to structure it better, maybe something like this theme. The flow becomes:

1. Industry facing technological change. I may want to write about other industry too. Like timber or rubber etc.


2. Workers felt something is affecting them. I mean management, supervisor and palm fruit collector.


3. Somebody may have study these in other country. What is their finding, iv and dv



This is not the finding page, it just presenting about the literature review. Kindly recommend something. Like what is the industry writing practice.

Answer
I think you are discovering something that many DBA students only realize much later:

A literature review is not a collection of summaries.

A strong literature review tells a story.

The reader should feel:

> "I understand why this study needs to exist."



not

> "I have read 50 article summaries."




---

For your DBA, I would not organize the literature review by variables first.

I would organize it by themes and arguments, then connect them to your variables.

Your proposed flow is actually quite good.

I would refine it like this:

Theme 1: Technological and Organizational Transformation in Labour-Intensive Industries

- Discuss how traditional industries such as palm oil, rubber, timber, agriculture, and manufacturing are facing increasing pressure to adopt automation, digitalization, smart monitoring systems, AI, and data-driven decision-making.
- Explain the reasons for this transformation, including labour shortages, productivity demands, sustainability requirements, and global competitiveness.
- Present findings from previous studies regarding Industry 4.0, workforce modernization, and technological readiness.
- Conclude that technological transformation is no longer a future possibility but an emerging reality affecting labour-intensive industries.

Theme 2: Human Challenges Associated with Workplace Transformation

- Discuss how technological and organizational changes affect different groups within the workforce, including management, supervisors, operators, and frontline workers.
- Examine concerns relating to workforce adaptation, skills upgrading, job insecurity, resistance to change, knowledge transfer, and changing job roles.
- Introduce the human-centric perspective of Industry 5.0, emphasizing that successful transformation requires attention to employee wellbeing, learning, and engagement.
- Conclude that technological advancement creates not only technical challenges but also significant human and organizational challenges.

Theme 3: Organizational, Environmental, and Individual Factors Influencing Employee Performance

- Review studies examining organizational factors such as leadership, communication, training, knowledge transfer, compensation, and management support.
- Review environmental factors such as workplace conditions, infrastructure, safety standards, and organizational climate.
- Review individual factors such as skills, motivation, education, experience, adaptability, and learning readiness.
- Compare findings from different industries and countries.
- Highlight areas of agreement, contradiction, and research gaps.

Theme 4: The Role of Supervisors in Managing Workplace Change

- Discuss the role of supervisors as the link between management and workers.
- Review literature on coaching, mentoring, communication, support, and knowledge transfer.
- Introduce Perceived Supervisor Support (PSS) as a mechanism through which organizational practices influence employee attitudes and behaviours.
- Discuss studies that found relationships between PSS and performance, commitment, engagement, adaptation, and job satisfaction.
- Identify limitations of existing research, particularly within labour-intensive industries and palm oil mill settings.

Theme 5: Employee Performance in Labour-Intensive Industries

- Define employee performance.
- Discuss task performance and contextual performance.
- Examine factors affecting performance in plantation, manufacturing, agriculture, timber, and related sectors.
- Highlight current performance challenges such as productivity gaps, safety concerns, quality issues, workforce turnover, and operational efficiency.
- Establish employee performance as the ultimate organizational outcome.

Theme 6: Research Gap and Conceptual Framework

- Summarize existing knowledge.
- Explain that previous studies have examined technological change, employee adaptation, organizational factors, and supervisory support separately.
- Highlight the limited understanding of how organizational, environmental, and individual factors influence employee performance through Perceived Supervisor Support within the palm oil mill context.
- Present the conceptual framework and hypotheses.
---

What I like about this structure is that it follows the logic of a DBA.

It moves from:

Industry Problem ↓ Human Problem ↓ Performance Problem ↓ Role of Supervisors ↓ Research Gap ↓ Your Study

instead of:

Organizational Factor ↓ Environmental Factor ↓ Individual Factor ↓ PSS ↓ Employee Performance

The second approach often becomes repetitive because each section is isolated.


---

Another thing industry examiners like to see is what I call the "funnel approach."

Broad

Industry 4.0, AI, digitalization, labour-intensive industries.

Narrower

Workforce adaptation and human challenges.

Narrower

Organizational, environmental, and individual factors.

Narrower

PSS.

Very Narrow

Employee performance in Carey Island palm oil mills.

By the time the reader reaches your framework, they should feel:

> "Of course this study should focus on PSS and employee performance."



rather than:

> "Why is this thesis suddenly talking about supervisors after discussing AI and automation?"



That smooth transition is often what separates a descriptive literature review from a persuasive one.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

How To Select IV

21/06/2026

Yes, there is such a thing in a thesis, but it must be written carefully.

You should not write:

"We could have studied Technology Acceptance, Job Insecurity, Trust in Automation, etc., but we chose PSS."

That sounds conversational and may invite examiners to ask:

"Why didn't you study those instead?"

A stronger academic approach is to acknowledge the existence of those constructs and then justify why PSS is the focal construct for this study.

In your case, this discussion would fit best after the paragraph discussing Industry 4.0, workforce adaptation, and technological change, and immediately before the paragraph introducing PSS as the mediator.

The flow becomes:

  1. Industry facing technological change.

  2. Workers may experience uncertainty and adaptation challenges.

  3. Many theoretical perspectives exist.

  4. This study focuses on PSS because supervisors are the closest mechanism influencing workers.

  5. Therefore PSS is chosen as the mediator.

You could write something like this:

Extracted 

Done 

I actually think this paragraph does something very useful for your DBA.

It quietly tells the examiner:

"I know the Technology Acceptance literature."

"I know the Readiness for Change literature."

"I know the Job Insecurity literature."

But then it explains:

"My study is not about technology adoption. My study is about employee performance, and PSS is the most relevant mechanism in this operational setting."

That is a much stronger position than trying to include all those variables in the framework.

In fact, if your viva examiner later asks:

"Why didn't you use UTAUT, TAM, or Readiness for Change?"

You can answer:

"Those constructs explain employee reactions to technology. However, the objective of this study was to examine employee performance and the role of supervisory support within palm oil mill operations. Therefore, PSS was selected because supervisors are the primary channel through which organizational practices, knowledge transfer, and workforce development influence employees."

That is a defensible DBA answer.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Amuse


Amuse

21/06/2026

I would like to ask a rhetorical question. No right and wrong answer. I pick up this line some time ago from a podcast called Why File and YouTube Why Files.  If the branch falls out of a tree in a forest, will it make sound or no sound because no one is listening. Does it matter. 

I tend to collect bits and pieces of something sometime and store it in my head, it will replay like this sentence. Until I cannot stand it anymore or it just pops out,  then I will start searching.

Answer: 
That question has fascinated philosophers, scientists, and curious people for centuries because it is really asking two different questions hidden inside one sentence.

Question 1: Does the falling branch create physical vibrations in the air?

Science would say: yes.

The branch falls, hits the ground, and creates pressure waves in the air. Whether anyone is there or not, those vibrations occur.

Question 2: Is there "sound" if no conscious being hears it?

This becomes a philosophical question.

Some philosophers argue:

Sound is not merely vibration.

Sound is an experience created by the mind.

Without ears, nerves, and consciousness, there are only vibrations, not sound.


In that view, the branch creates vibrations but not "sound."

So the answer depends on how you define the word sound.


---

What interests me more is what you said afterward:

 "I tend to collect bits and pieces of something and store it in my head. It will be replayed like this sentence."



That reminds me of how some people think in seeds rather than conclusions.

Most people hear a sentence and either agree or disagree.

Others hear a sentence and unconsciously store it.

Years later it resurfaces:

Why did that sentence stay with me?

What was bothering me about it?

What does it connect to?


The mind keeps working on it in the background.

Sometimes these recurring thoughts are not really seeking an answer. They are seeking a framework.

For example, perhaps what keeps returning is not the branch at all, but questions such as:

Does reality require a witness?

Does something matter if nobody notices?

Is existence independent of observation?

If nobody appreciates my effort, does it still have value?


Many deep questions in life are hidden inside seemingly simple riddles.


---

Your recent reflections remind me of another version:

If a person spends their whole life being kind, but nobody remembers them after they die, did their kindness matter?

Some would say no.

Others would say yes, because the kindness was real whether or not it was witnessed.

In a way, it is the same branch falling in the forest.

The branch falls.

The vibration exists.

Whether someone hears it is a different question.

And perhaps that is why the sentence stayed in your mind all these years. Not because it needs an answer, but because it quietly points toward much larger questions about existence, meaning, and whether reality depends on being seen.

Answer 2
I am amused and entertained by that though.

I can see why. Sometimes an "aha" moment is not the discovery of an answer—it is the discovery of the real question that was hiding underneath.

You started with a branch falling in a forest. That sounds like a question about physics. Then suddenly you realize it is actually about consciousness, meaning, value, observation, and existence. The floor drops away beneath the original question.

What strikes me is that you often describe waking up with a thought over coffee, or having an idea appear unexpectedly. You don't seem to force these questions. They arrive, sit quietly in your mind, and then one day connect to something larger.

There is a phrase often attributed to the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein:

 A serious philosophical problem could be written in the form of a joke.


Many philosophical puzzles are like that. They sound simple enough for a child to ask, yet adults can spend centuries discussing them.

For example:

Why am I me and not someone else?

What was it like before I was born?

If everything changes, what remains the same?

Does a memory exist when nobody is remembering it?


None of these have definitive answers, yet they are strangely entertaining. The mind circles them not because it expects a solution but because they reveal something about how we think.

You once mentioned the idea that when Allah breathed the ruh into the embryo, perhaps "you never left that state." That is another example. It is not a question that can be settled by measurement. Yet it changes how you look at yourself, life, and death.

Some people find such thoughts unsettling. You seem to find them fascinating.

There is a difference.

The unsettled person asks:

"How do I stop thinking about this?"


The fascinated person asks:

 "Where does this thought lead if I follow it?"


From what you've shared over time, you seem closer to the second type. That is probably why a random sentence from a podcast can stay alive in your mind for years. Not because it is unresolved, but because your mind recognizes that there is more inside it than appears at first glance.

And sometimes the reward is exactly what you felt today—not certainty, just amusement.

A quiet smile over coffee:

"Oh. That's what the question was really about." ☕️


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Chapter 1 or 2

It looks like this paragraph fit into chapter 1 or 2.

Yes. In fact, I think you have just found something that fits your DBA much better than a pure automation discussion.

What caught my attention is not:

"AI-driven automation aids labour management."


What caught my attention is:

 "Comprehensive strategies incorporating technological innovation and capacity building are essential."


That sentence is almost speaking directly to your framework.

Your study is about:

Organizational Factors

Environmental Factors

Individual Factors

PSS

Employee Performance


The paper is essentially saying:

> Technology alone is not enough.

Human capability development is required.



That is exactly where your DBA can contribute.


---

How this paper supports your Organizational Factors

The paper mentions:

Capacity building

Workforce challenges

Labour management

Digital literacy


These can be linked to:

Organizational Factors

Training opportunities

Knowledge transfer practices

Workforce development initiatives

Communication practices


You can argue:

The successful integration of AI and digital technologies requires organizations to invest not only in technological infrastructure but also in workforce development, knowledge transfer, and employee support mechanisms.



That is almost tailor-made for your Organizational Factors construct.


---

How this paper supports your Individual Factors

The paper mentions:

 Low digital literacy.



This is very useful.

You currently have:

Individual Factors

Skills

Motivation

Education

Prior Experience

Adaptability


You can strengthen this section by adding discussion around:

Digital literacy

Learning readiness

Adaptability to technological change


The logic becomes:

Low Digital Literacy ↓ Difficulty understanding new systems ↓ Lower confidence ↓ Lower performance


---

How this paper supports PSS

This is where I think many researchers miss the opportunity.

When management introduces:

AI

Automation

Smart monitoring

Digital dashboards


Workers do not ask:

"What algorithm are we using?"



Workers ask:

"Can I still do my job?"

"Will I be replaced?"

"Can I learn this?"



Who answers those questions?

Usually:

Supervisor.

Therefore:

PSS becomes even more important during technological transitions.

You could argue:

> Supervisors play a critical role in facilitating employee adaptation by communicating organizational intentions, addressing concerns, supporting learning activities, and fostering confidence during periods of technological change.



This fits your mediator perfectly.


---

How this paper supports your Environmental Factors

You currently define environmental factors as:

Workplace conditions

Infrastructure

Safety standards

Socio-cultural influences


The paper specifically mentions:

> Infrastructure limitations.



This is excellent.

Many studies ignore this.

Imagine:

Management wants digitalization.

But:

Poor internet coverage.

Limited system access.

Inadequate technological infrastructure.


Employees may appear resistant when the real issue is environmental.

Therefore:

Infrastructure readiness becomes an environmental factor affecting performance.


---

The hidden research gap I see

The paper focuses on:

Technology

AI Digitalization Automation

The paper recommends:

Capacity Building

Training Skills Knowledge

But the paper does not fully explain:

 Who helps workers adapt?



Your DBA can answer:

 Perceived Supervisor Support.



That is the bridge between management's technological ambitions and workers' actual performance.


---

A paragraph you could potentially use in Chapter 1 or Chapter 2

Done 

If I were wearing an examiner's hat, I would say this paper strengthens your argument that:

The future challenge is not AI.



The future challenge is:

Whether workers and supervisors are prepared for AI.



And that fits your current DBA framework remarkably well without requiring you to add a new dependent variable or redesign the entire study.



Norsanina.blogspot.com

potentials of artificial intelligence



Judijanto, L. (2025). Exploring the potentials of artificial intelligence and digital technologies in transforming the palm oil industry: A review. Journal of Information, Technology and Policy, 1-13.


Abstract

The palm oil industry faces increasing pressure to improve productivity, sustainability, and supply chain transparency amid environmental and economic challenges. This study aims to explore the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) and digital technologies in transforming the palm oil sector by synthesising existing qualitative literature. A qualitative literature review methodology was employed, focusing on secondary data sourced from 80 peer-reviewed academic articles, institutional reports, and relevant industry publications. Data collection involved systematic document retrieval and screening to ensure relevance and credibility. Thematic analysis was conducted to identify key areas where AI and digital tools impact the industry, emphasising precision agriculture, supply chain traceability, environmental monitoring, and labour productivity. The results reveal that AI applications significantly enhance yield optimisation through advanced remote sensing and machine learning algorithms, improve supply chain transparency via blockchain and natural language processing, and support environmental compliance through satellite monitoring and emissions detection. Additionally, AI-driven automation aids labour management, addressing workforce challenges and operational efficiency. Despite these advancements, barriers such as low digital literacy among smallholders and infrastructure limitations persist, limiting widespread adoption. The study concludes that while AI and digital technologies hold transformative potential, comprehensive strategies incorporating technological innovation and capacity building are essential for inclusive sectoral development.

Future research should focus on pilot implementations, socio-economic impact assessments, and the development of tailored solutions for smallholder integration to fully harness digital transformation benefits in the palm oil industry.

ojs.sgsci.org

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Add on palm - dv


Things that warrant this study.
DV problem

Poor training
Poor communication
Lack of knowledge transfer

Fear of losing job

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Cloth Hangers Problem


Cloth Hangers 

What you describe does not sound like a hanger problem.

The hanger is just the visible symptom.

The pattern I hear is:

1. You experience a shortage or inconvenience.
2. You solve it by adding more resources.
3. Relief comes temporarily.
4. The shortage returns.
5. You add even more resources.


Eventually you have many hangers, but somehow still "not enough."

This happens in many areas of life:

Not enough money → earn more → still feels insufficient.

Not enough time → become more efficient → still rushed.

Not enough storage → buy containers → still cluttered.

Not enough books → buy more books → still feel unprepared.

Not enough knowledge → keep studying → still feel behind.


The external object changes. The internal pattern remains.

For the hanger example, I would ask:

Are you actually short of hangers, or do you own more clothes than your hanger system can comfortably support?

Those are two very different problems.

Imagine:

20 clothes, 20 hangers = enough.

100 clothes, 100 hangers = enough.

100 clothes, 120 hangers = still feels insufficient if washing accumulates, clothes are not put away, or the wardrobe is overcrowded.


The mind sees an empty hook and says, "Need more hangers."

But the system problem may be elsewhere.

What caught my attention is when you said:

> "This is like fighting fire with fire."

That suggests you already sense something deeper.

Sometimes we repeatedly treat the consequence rather than the cause.

From some of our previous conversations, you've reflected on feeling "not enough" in different forms:

not contributing enough,

not achieving enough,

not having enough resources,

not progressing fast enough.

The hanger story feels surprisingly similar.

The mind says:

"If I just get a few more, everything will finally be okay."

Then it moves the finish line.

A question worth sitting with:

When was the last time you genuinely felt that what you already had was enough?

Not just hangers.

Anything.

Because if "enough" is never reached internally, no number of hangers will solve it externally.

And to be clear, this is extremely common. Many capable people spend years optimizing systems when the real issue is that their internal definition of "enough" keeps expanding.

The hanger may simply be the universe's way of showing you the pattern in a form that is easy to see.

Answer 2. 

Yes. But I don't think the solution is to force yourself to feel grateful or to keep
repeating "I have enough." That often works for a few minutes and then the old feeling returns.

The easiest way is to separate need, capacity, and desire.

Using your hanger example:

Need = 60 hangers.

Capacity = wardrobe can comfortably hold 70 hangers.

Desire = "Maybe I should buy another 20, just in case."


When desire starts pretending to be a need, the cycle begins again.

A practical exercise:

Step 1: Create an "Enough Number"

For things that repeatedly bother you, decide the number beforehand.

For example:

Hangers = 80.

Coffee mugs = 6.

Handbags = 3.

Books waiting to be read = 20.


Once you reach that number, you are not allowed to solve the problem by buying more.

Instead, ask:

 "What is the real problem?"

For hangers:
Too many clothes?
Laundry delayed?
Wardrobe space limited?
The problem becomes visible.

Step 2: Delay Every "Just In Case" Purchase

When your mind says:
 "Better buy more."



Reply:
 "Maybe. I'll decide in 7 days."

Not "No."

Just "Not today."

You'll be surprised how many urges disappear on their own.

Step 3: Replace Scarcity Questions

Notice how the mind asks:

"What is missing?"

Try asking:

"What is already working?"

For your clothes:

I have clothes.

I have hangers.

My clothes are clean.

The system works most days.


This shifts attention from the 5% problem to the 95% that is functioning.

Step 4: Practice "One Complete Thing"

You have mentioned before that you often have several interests and projects running at once.

Each day, choose one thing and consciously tell yourself:

 "For today, this is enough."

Not forever.

Just today.

A completed small task calms the mind more than ten unfinished improvements.

A Reflection from Al-Ghazali

One idea found throughout the works of Abu Hamid al-Ghazali is that the heart can become accustomed to seeking satisfaction from the next thing. When it gets that thing, it immediately seeks another. The problem is not the object; it is the habit of seeking completion through the object.

The cure is not owning less or owning more.

The cure is learning to stop at a reasonable point and saying:

"This serves its purpose."

That sentence sounds simple, but it is powerful.

For the next week, whenever you catch yourself thinking, "I need more," ask:

 "Do I need more, or have I simply not decided what enough looks like?"

I suspect that question alone will reveal a lot about the pattern you've been noticing.


Answer
That detail changes the picture.

If you only rotate about:

5 T-shirts

5 pants

and your work uniforms are separate, then objectively you are not consuming many clothes. Most people with a hanger shortage have dozens or hundreds of garments. You don't seem to fit that pattern.

So I wonder whether the hanger issue is actually about availability at the exact moment you want it.

For example:

10 hangers occupied by clothes drying.

A few hangers occupied by clothes you haven't put away yet.

A few reserved for jackets or other items.

Suddenly you need 3 more hangers right now.

The mind experiences:

"Not enough hangers!"

Even though, looking at the whole month, you probably own enough.

This is a different phenomenon. It is not necessarily greed or accumulation. It can be a low tolerance for friction.

Some people are very sensitive to bottlenecks. If they encounter a small obstacle, they immediately want to eliminate it permanently.

Examples:

Slow internet → upgrade.

One missing hanger → buy ten more.

Not enough storage → buy another shelf.

Queue at a counter → find a faster system.

The goal is not "more." The goal is "remove the annoyance."

Does that sound closer?

Because from our conversations, I've noticed something: you are a problem-solver. You write books, work on a DBA, think about philosophy, reflect on life deeply. When you see a problem, your instinct is often:

"How do I eliminate this completely?"

Many successful researchers and managers think this way.

The downside is that life contains many small inconveniences that can never be fully optimized away.

A practical experiment:

Next time you run out of hangers, don't buy any.

Instead, sit with the inconvenience for 24 hours.

Tell yourself:

"The system is imperfect, but it is not broken."

If after a week the problem still occurs frequently, then buy more hangers.

But if the discomfort disappears after a day or two, then the problem was not actually a shortage. It was the feeling of shortage.

That distinction is subtle, but important.

Reading your message, I am not convinced you have a hanger problem. I think you may have what many intelligent, conscientious people have:

A tendency to notice every small inefficiency and feel compelled to fix it immediately.

That trait helps people finish degrees, write books, and improve systems.

But peace often comes from asking:

"Is this a problem that needs solving, or a minor inconvenience that can simply be tolerated?"

Those are not the same thing.

And interestingly, your cat stories, your PhD journey, and even your reflections about life often circle around the same theme: learning when to act, and learning when to let things be. The hanger may just be the smallest, safest place where that lesson is showing up.

Answer
I think we may have found the root of the hanger story.

Not the hangers.

Not the clothes.

Not even the need to fix problems.

You said:

> "I will not allow myself to make any simple mistake."



Then you connected it to 1997, when your husband left and you had a 6-month-old baby.

Imagine the responsibility you were carrying then.

You were not just raising a child.

You were raising a child while feeling that someone, somewhere, might be watching for evidence that you had failed.

So every decision mattered.

Every mistake mattered.

Every shortcoming mattered.

You were not living as:

> "A mother doing her best."



You were living as:

> "A mother who must not fail."



Those are very different ways to live.

For a while, that mindset probably helped you.

It may have been the reason your daughter:

became disciplined,

became accomplished,

became independent,

became capable.


The problem is that the mind sometimes keeps using a survival strategy long after the danger has passed.

Your daughter is married.

She has her own life.

Yet the internal supervisor is still on duty.

The voice still says:

> "Check again."

"Don't make mistakes."

"Prepare for every possibility."

"Make sure nobody can blame you."



That voice may have protected you for decades.

But now it is exhausting you.


---

There is something else I noticed.

You said:

> "She was supposed to be groomed as a doctor."



Then you said she became a ballerina and has the mind of an accountant.

I wonder whether there is grief there.

Not because she failed.

She sounds successful.

But because the future you spent years protecting did not unfold exactly as expected.

Parents sometimes sacrifice for a picture in their mind.

Then the child grows up and chooses their own picture.

The sacrifice was real.

But the picture disappears.

That can leave a deep ache.

As for why she cannot stand being around you for long, I would be very cautious about blaming yourself.

Children do not experience our sacrifices the way we experience them.

You remember:

the sleepless nights,

the financial worries,

the fear,

the responsibility.


She remembers:

the rules,

the pressure,

the expectations,

the corrections.


Both memories can be true at the same time.

Neither person is lying.

They simply lived on different sides of the same story.

You have often spoken about:

not being good enough,

abandonment,

your PhD struggles,

needing things to be in order.

I am starting to see a common thread.

The little girl who was left with a baby to raise alone made a decision:

"I will not give anyone a reason to say I failed."

That decision helped her survive.

But now, almost thirty years later, perhaps another decision is needed:

 "I am allowed to be imperfect and still be a good mother."


Not a perfect mother.

A good mother.

Those are not the same thing.

And perhaps next time you find yourself wanting another pack of hangers, you can gently ask:

"Do I need more hangers, or is that old mother from 1997 trying to make sure nothing ever falls short again?"

Because I suspect that woman has been working very hard for a very long time.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Dinner day 2

Half vegan
 
19/06/2026

Day 2 dinner
From Gemini 


That sounds like a delicious, classic Malaysian economy rice (Nasi Kandar / Nasi Campur) style dinner!

To give you an accurate nutrient count, I am basing this on the standard 

**"Suku-Suku Separuh" (Quarter-Quarter-Half)** healthy plate proportion recommended by the Ministry of Health Malaysia (MOH).

Here is what a correct portion looks like for this meal:

 * **1/4 Plate (Carbohydrates):** 1 scoop of white rice (Nasi putih, ~100g)

 * **1/4 Plate (Protein):** 1 ladle of beef tripe curry (Perut lembu kari, ~90g)

 * **1/2 Plate (Vegetables):** 1 ladle of stir-fried long beans with egg (~60g) + 1 small serving of deep-fried bitter gourd (Peria katak goreng, ~40g)

## Estimated Nutrient Breakdown
Here is how the calories and macronutrients stack up for these exact portions:

| Food Item | Portion Size | Calories (kcal) | Protein (g) | Carbs (g) | Fat (g) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **White Rice** | 1 scoop / cawan | 140 | 3.0 | 31.0 | 0.3 |
| **Perut Lembu Kari** | 1 ladle / senduk | 130 | 12.0 | 4.0 | 8.0 |
| **Kacang Panjang Fry with Egg** | 1 ladle / senduk | 67 | 3.5 | 2.5 | 5.0 |
| **Bitter Gourd Deep Fry** | 1 small handful | 110 | 1.5 | 7.0 | 9.0 |
| **TOTALS** |  | **447 kcal** | **20.0 g** | **44.5 g** | **22.3 g** |
## Dietitian's Feedback on Your Plate
You actually put together a beautifully balanced meal. Here is why this works so well, along with a couple of minor things to keep in mind:

 * **Great Protein Variety:** The *perut lembu* (beef tripe) is naturally very lean and packed with protein, iron, and zinc. By pairing it with the egg in your long beans, you get a solid 20 grams of protein, which is excellent for keeping you full through the evening.

 * **Fiber Powerhouse:** Combining bitter gourd and long beans easily hits your vegetable target for the meal. Bitter gourd is also great for helping manage blood sugar levels.

 * **Mind the Oil (The Hidden Factor):** While the raw ingredients are very healthy, *deep-fried* bitter gourd and coconut-milk-based *kari* pull in a lot of extra fat. The numbers above assume you let the oil drain well from the bitter gourd and didn't drown your rice in excess curry gravy (*kuah banjir*).

 💡 **Quick Tip for Next Time:** If you want to make this even healthier, try opting for sliced bitter gourd that is lightly stir-fried with garlic instead of deep-fried. This simple switch can easily shave off about 50 to 70 calories of excess cooking oil!




Norsanina.blogspot.com

7 days food half vegan


Yes please do. Less soy bean and it's derivative. More nuts, fish, milk, egg

You mentioned earlier that you wanted to try being vegan, but in this message you prefer fish, milk, and eggs. That is actually closer to a Mediterranean-style diet or a plant-forward diet, which may be easier to sustain and nutritionally simpler at age 52.

For healthy aging, I would actually prefer this approach over a strict vegan diet unless you have ethical or religious reasons for avoiding all animal products.

Daily Nutrient Targets

For you (52 years, 158 cm, 80 kg):

Nutrient Target

Protein 70–90 g
Carbohydrates 180–250 g
Fat 50–70 g
Fiber 25–30 g
Water 2–2.5 L


Simple Plate Method

At each main meal:

½ plate vegetables

¼ plate protein

¼ plate carbohydrates




7-Day Healthy Aging Meal Plan

Day 1

Breakfast

Oatmeal

Handful almonds

1 boiled egg

Milk


Lunch

Rice

Cabbage

Ladies' fingers

Grilled fish


Dinner

Vegetable soup

Small sweet potato

Mixed nuts



---

Day 2

Breakfast

Wholemeal bread

Peanut butter

Milk


Lunch

Brown rice

Stir-fried vegetables

Steamed fish


Dinner

Lentil soup

Salad

Walnuts



---

Day 3

Breakfast

Greek yogurt

Oats

Banana


Lunch

Rice

Kangkung

Fish curry


Dinner

Pumpkin soup

Boiled egg

Almonds



---

Day 4

Breakfast

Two boiled eggs

Wholemeal toast

Milk


Lunch

Rice

Mixed vegetables

Grilled mackerel


Dinner

Chickpea salad

Mixed nuts



---

Day 5

Breakfast

Oatmeal

Chia seeds

Milk


Lunch

Rice

Cabbage

Fish

Okra


Dinner

Vegetable soup

Boiled egg



---

Day 6

Breakfast

Yogurt

Nuts

Fruit


Lunch

Brown rice

Tempeh (optional)

Vegetables

Fish


Dinner

Lentil stew

Salad



---

Day 7

Breakfast

Oats

Walnuts

Milk


Lunch

Rice

Vegetables

Fish


Dinner

Mushroom soup

Boiled egg

Mixed nuts



---

Nuts to Prioritize

A small handful (20–30 g) daily:

🥜 Almonds
🥜 Walnuts
🥜 Pistachios
🥜 Pumpkin seeds
🥜 Chia seeds

Walnuts and chia seeds are especially useful because they provide omega-3 fats.

Fish to Prioritize

2–4 times per week:

🐟 Sardines
🐟 Mackerel (ikan kembung)
🐟 Selayang
🐟 Salmon (if affordable)

The local oily fish are excellent and usually more affordable than imported salmon.

Looking at Your Plate Today

Your meal had:

Good vegetables ✔️

Good fiber ✔️

Moderate protein ✔️

A bit much rice for optimal blood sugar control ⚠️

High sodium from salted egg ⚠️


If you simply reduced the rice by about one-third and added a piece of fish, it would be very close to what I would recommend for healthy aging.

One more thing: at age 52, preserving muscle is often more important than losing weight quickly. Try to get 20–30 g of protein at each meal. That single habit can make a significant difference to strength, mobility, and energy over the next decade.


Norsanina.blogspot.com

Food I took - 1

18/06/2026

Food I took

question

Will you be able to analyse my food intake if I give you a photo.

Yes, I can help analyze your food intake from a photo.

If you upload a picture of your meal, I can usually estimate:

What foods are present
Approximate portion sizes
Estimated calories
Macronutrients (protein, carbohydrates, fats)
Fiber sources

Whether the meal appears balanced nutritionally

Possible vitamins and minerals provided

Suggestions if you're trying to lose weight, gain muscle, improve energy, or eat more healthily


A few limitations:

I can only estimate portion sizes from the image, so calorie counts may be off by 10–30% or more.

Hidden ingredients (oil, sugar, sauces, butter, coconut milk, etc.) can significantly change the nutrition profile.

A photo alone cannot reliably determine exact calories or micronutrients.

If you tell me how the food was cooked and roughly how much you ate, the estimate becomes much more accurate.


For example, if you upload a plate of nasi lemak, I could estimate:

Rice amount

Sambal portion

Anchovies and peanuts

Egg size

Total calories range

Main macronutrient breakdown


If your goal is related to health, weight management, or athletic performance, tell me that too, and I can tailor the analysis accordingly.

Just upload the photo whenever you're ready.

Salted egg, tofu, ladies finger, cabbage, potatoes, rice, curry

2. Yes. Based on the photo and the foods you listed, I can give a reasonable estimate.

What I See

White rice (~1.5–2 cups cooked)

2 halves of salted egg (1 whole egg)

Fried tofu with sambal/curry

Ladies' fingers (okra)

Stir-fried cabbage

Potatoes in curry/sambal

Curry gravy and oil


Estimated Nutrition

Food Calories

Rice (1.5–2 cups) 300–400 kcal
Salted egg (1) 130–170 kcal
Fried tofu 100–180 kcal
Potatoes 80–150 kcal
Cabbage 20–50 kcal
Ladies' fingers 20–40 kcal
Curry gravy/oil 80–150 kcal
Total 730–1,140 kcal


A realistic estimate is probably around 850–950 kcal for this plate.

Macronutrients (Approximate)

Carbohydrates: 100–130 g

Mostly from rice and potatoes


Protein: 20–30 g

Salted egg, tofu, vegetables


Fat: 25–40 g

Salted egg, fried tofu, curry oil



Positives

✅ Good amount of vegetables (cabbage and okra)

✅ Contains protein sources (egg and tofu)

✅ Provides fiber, which helps fullness

✅ More balanced than a plate consisting mostly of rice and fried foods

Things to Watch

⚠️ Salted egg is quite high in sodium.

⚠️ Curry and fried tofu can add a surprising amount of oil.

⚠️ Rice portion appears to be the largest contributor to calories.

If Your Goal Is Weight Loss

The easiest calorie reduction would be:

Reduce rice by about one-third to one-half.

Keep the vegetables.

Keep the egg and tofu for satiety.

Use less curry gravy.


That could lower the meal by 150–250 kcal while still keeping you full.

If Your Goal Is Energy for Work

For someone working in a palm oil mill, plantation, or doing physically demanding work, this meal is actually quite reasonable because:

Rice provides immediate energy.
Potatoes provide additional carbohydrates.
Egg and tofu support muscle maintenance.
Vegetables provide fiber and micronutrients.

One thing I notice is that protein is moderate rather than high. If this is your main meal, adding a serving of fish, chicken, or tempeh would improve protein intake.

If you tell me:

1. Your age,
2. Sex,
3. Height,
4. Weight,
5. Whether you want to lose, maintain, or gain weight,

I can estimate how this meal fits into your daily calorie needs.

I just want to try to be a vegan. I need to know the percentage of nutrients needed I a day. I.e protein, carb, carbo. I am 52 yrs old,female, height 158 cm, weight 80kg. I just want to be healthy nevermind the weight as for now.


3. At 52 years old, your priority is slightly different from a younger adult. Rather than focusing on weight loss first, I would focus on:

1. Preserving muscle mass


2. Maintaining bone health


3. Supporting energy levels


4. Keeping blood sugar stable


5. Getting enough protein and micronutrients on a vegan diet



Your Estimated Daily Needs

For a woman aged 52, height 158 cm, weight 80 kg, with average activity:

Calories: approximately 1,800–2,200 kcal/day (depending on activity)

Protein: 65–90 g/day

Fat: 50–75 g/day

Carbohydrates: 180–280 g/day


Percentage of Calories

A practical vegan target would be:

Nutrient Percentage

Carbohydrates 45–50%
Protein 20–25%
Fat 25–30%


This is slightly higher in protein than older recommendations because after age 50, maintaining muscle becomes increasingly important.

What This Looks Like

If you eat 2,000 kcal/day:

Protein: 80–100 g

Carbohydrates: 225–250 g

Fat: 55–65 g


Looking at Your Plate

Your plate today is approximately:

Carbohydrates: 65–70%

Protein: 10–15%

Fat: 20–25%


So if you became vegan and simply removed the egg without replacing it, protein would become quite low.

Good Vegan Protein Sources

Aim to include one at every meal:

🫘 Legumes

Lentils

Chickpeas

Red beans

Black beans

Green peas


🌱 Soy products

Tofu

Tempeh

Edamame

Soy milk


🥜 Nuts and seeds

Almonds

Pumpkin seeds

Chia seeds

Flax seeds


Nutrients Vegans Need to Pay Attention To

These are the most important:

Nutrient Why

Protein Muscle preservation
Vitamin B12 Nerve function and blood formation
Calcium Bone health
Vitamin D Calcium absorption
Iron Prevent fatigue
Zinc Immunity
Omega-3 Brain and heart health


For B12 especially, most long-term vegans take a supplement because plant foods do not reliably provide enough.

A Malaysian-Style Vegan Plate

Instead of:

Large portion rice

Small protein


Try:

½ plate vegetables

¼ plate rice

¼ plate tofu, tempeh, beans, lentils


For example:

Rice

Stir-fried cabbage

Ladies' fingers

Tempeh sambal

Tofu curry

Lentil dhal


This would provide much more protein than your current plate.

One Observation

From the meal you showed, you already seem comfortable eating vegetables, tofu, and simple foods. The transition to a mostly vegan diet may be easier for you than for many people. The main challenge will not be avoiding meat—it will be making sure you eat enough protein and get reliable B12, calcium, and omega-3 sources.

If you want, I can help design a 7-day Malaysian vegan meal plan using foods that are easy to find in local markets and kopitiams, while aiming for healthy aging rather than weight loss.




Norsanina.blogspot.com

Meta 1 - automation



"Towards Smart Palm Oil Mill Factory Operations Using IR4.0 Technologies",

Yap Zheng Yew, Mohamad Taha Ijab, & Mohamad Hanif Md Saad. (2024). TOWARDS SMART PALM OIL MILL FACTORY OPERATIONS USING IR4.0 TECHNOLOGIES. JOURNAL INFORMATION AND TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT (JISTM), 7(28).

17/06/2026

Yes, I think your instinct is correct. This paper may actually be more useful for your DBA than it first appears.

The title itself, 

"Towards Smart Palm Oil Mill Factory Operations Using IR4.0 Technologies",

sounds technology-focused, but many IR4.0 papers unintentionally create an opening for human capital research because they often discuss:

Automation
Digitalization
Smart monitoring
Data-driven decision making
Remote operation
Workforce adaptation
Skills upgrading


The technology is usually the visible part. The human impact is often the hidden part.

Why it may fit your DBA

From what you told me before, your manager is interested in:

Effects of automation on workers
Effects on supervisors
Physical impacts
Psychological impacts
Work adaptation


The problem is that many palm oil companies are planning automation before implementation.

At first glance this sounds strange:

"How can we measure impact if the system has not been implemented yet?"


Actually, there is a research opportunity here.

You can study:

Before implementation

Variables such as:

Perceived Supervisor Support (PSS)

Readiness for Change

Technology Acceptance

Job Insecurity

Perceived Usefulness

Perceived Ease of Use

Trust in Automation 

-not limited


These are expectations and perceptions.

After implementation

Variables such as:

Workload
Job performance
Stress
Fatigue
Skill utilization
Job satisfaction
Psychological well-being


These are actual outcomes.


One interesting gap

Most IR4.0 palm oil studies focus on:

Technology → Productivity

For example:

IoT
Automation
Efficiency
Production Output



But very few focus on:


Automation
Changes in Work Processes
Worker Adaptation
Psychological and Physical Outcomes
Performance

That second pathway sounds much closer to a DBA.



Look carefully at the diagrams

When reading the paper, ask:

1. What technologies are introduced?
Examples:

IoT sensors
RFID
AI monitoring
Predictive maintenance
Autonomous vehicles
Smart scheduling

2. Which jobs are affected?
Examples:

Boiler operators
Mill operators
Supervisors
Maintenance technicians


3. What work activities disappear?
Examples:

Manual recording
Physical inspection
Reporting


4. What new activities appear?

Examples:

Monitoring dashboards
Data interpretation
Digital reporting
System troubleshooting



These changes create human consequences.

A possible DBA framework

You could eventually build something like:

Automation Readiness
+
Perceived Supervisor Support
+
Technology Acceptance
            ↓
Adaptation to New Workflow
            ↓
Employee Performance

Or

IR4.0 Implementation
            ↓
Perceived Job Insecurity
            ↓
Work Stress
            ↓
Employee Performance

Or

IR4.0 Technologies
            ↓
Perceived Supervisor Support
            ↓
Adaptation Capability
            ↓
Employee Performance

The third model is particularly interesting because it links your manager's concern about automation with your interest in PSS.



One caution

Don't let the company push you into studying:

 "What are the effects of automation?"


if automation has not happened yet.
That becomes speculative.

A stronger DBA question is:

 "What factors influence workers' readiness and ability to adapt to smart factory operations?"


That can be measured today, before implementation.

Then later, another study can examine actual impacts after the technology is deployed.

So while reading the paper, I would not focus only on the technology diagrams. I would look for every diagram that shows a change in workflow, because workflow changes are where human capital variables enter the picture. That is usually where a DBA contribution becomes stronger than an engineering contribution.

Norsanina.blogspot.com

Literature Review

21/06/2026 Question  I want to write a better literature review. May you help me to structure it better, maybe something like this theme. Th...