A delegation from Malaysia, including His Royal Highness Hassanal Ibrahim Alam Shah Ibni Al-Sultan Abdullah Ri’ayatuddin Al-Mustafa Billah Shah, visited MBZUAI. The delegation toured the campus and discussed potential collaborations between MBZUAI and Malaysian educational institutions. Discussions also covered leveraging AI for societal and economic benefits, and how MBZUAI's curriculum will shape future AI experts. Why it matters: This visit signals growing international interest in MBZUAI and potential partnerships that could foster AI development in both the UAE and Malaysia.
Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim visited MBZUAI and was received by UAE Minister Dr. Sultan Al Jaber to strengthen technology ties between the two countries. MBZUAI faculty presented research on healthcare AI, the AIOS platform for efficient AI computing, and LLMs like Vicuna and Jais. MBZUAI also announced partnerships with G42, Cerebras, and India’s Centre for Development of Advanced Computing. Why it matters: The visit underscores the UAE's commitment to AI research and international collaboration, particularly in areas like sustainable AI and Arabic language models.
The King of Malaysia met with MBZUAI leadership, including Dr. Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber and Peng Xiao, to discuss potential cooperation in AI development. They discussed MBZUAI's vision and graduate programs, noting applications received from Malaysia and other countries. MBZUAI has received over 7,000 applications since its establishment in 2019 and will offer M.Sc. and Ph.D. programs in machine learning, computer vision, and NLP. Why it matters: This meeting signifies growing international interest in MBZUAI and Abu Dhabi's efforts to establish itself as a global AI hub, fostering potential collaborations between the UAE and Malaysia.
Three KAUST students attended the 5th International Marine Conservation Congress in Malaysia, which brought together over 650 attendees. The conference focused on translating marine conservation science into real action, with participants discussing topics like the impact of above-water marine species and sustainable fishing practices. KAUST students presented their work and shared insights from the event. Why it matters: This participation highlights KAUST's commitment to addressing critical ocean conservation challenges and fostering international collaboration in marine science.
KAUST's Discovery Week featured a gala and awards ceremony. Professor Gilles Lubineau opened the proceedings at the 2017 WEP Final Gala. A Javanese shadow puppet performance of the “Ramayana Epic” was also part of the event. Why it matters: Showcases KAUST's commitment to cultural exchange alongside its research activities.
KAUST highlights postdoctoral fellows Yi Jin Liew, Isabelle Schulz, Maren Ziegler and Neus Garcias Bonet outside the University Library. The article mentions King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (1924 – 2015). It encourages applications to KAUST's Discovery Postdoctoral program. Why it matters: This brief announcement signals KAUST's ongoing investment in attracting international research talent to Saudi Arabia.
The paper introduces a web-based expert system called RCSES for civil service regulations in Saudi Arabia. The system covers 17 regulations and utilizes XML for knowledge representation and ASP.net for rule-based inference. RCSES was validated by domain experts and technical users, and compared favorably to other web-based expert systems.