KAUST startup Sadeem, which provides solar-powered smart city solutions for flood, traffic and environmental monitoring, won the Best Global Startup award in Dubai in 2017. Since then, Sadeem has focused on building its business model and infrastructure to accommodate expansion. Sadeem recently installed its smart city sensors, including the Aura air quality monitor, in Madinah, Saudi Arabia. Why it matters: This expansion demonstrates the potential for Saudi-based startups to provide innovative solutions to local challenges and scale their impact internationally.
Sadeem, a startup founded by KAUST Ph.D. graduates, develops flood and traffic sensors powered by solar batteries and transceivers. The company's technology originated as a Ph.D. project and has been supported by the KAUST Entrepreneurship Center, including participation in the KAUST Hikma IP-based Startup Accelerator program. Sadeem's sensors are designed to mitigate damage and save lives from floods, with ten nodes currently operating on the KAUST campus. Why it matters: The development and deployment of such sensor technologies in Saudi Arabia could improve urban resilience and disaster response in flood-prone areas across the GCC region.
KAUST spinout Sadeem, which develops wireless environmental sensing systems, has secured $2.6 million in co-investment from the KAUST Innovation Fund and Saudi Aramco's Wa'ed Ventures. The funding will support product updates, development of new monitoring technologies, and business development. Sadeem's technology is used in cities including Mexico City and Texas for flood, traffic, weather, and air quality monitoring. Why it matters: The investment highlights the growing venture capital ecosystem in Saudi Arabia and will allow Sadeem to further develop its sensor technology for environmental monitoring and disaster prevention.
KAUST startups, including Sadeem (a wireless sensor system for flood monitoring), have won top prizes in entrepreneurship competitions such as GITEX Future Stars, ArabNet Riyadh, and the Oqal Best Entrepreneur Award. Sadeem won Best Global Startup at GITEX and took home $100,000. KAUST supports early-stage startups through accelerator programs like TAQADAM and 9/10ths, as well as the KAUST Research & Technology Park. Why it matters: This success highlights KAUST's role in fostering innovation and entrepreneurship in Saudi Arabia, contributing to the Kingdom's growing startup ecosystem and economic diversification efforts.
The paper introduces Sadeed, a fine-tuned decoder-only language model based on the Kuwain 1.5B Hennara model, for improved Arabic text diacritization. Sadeed is fine-tuned on high-quality diacritized datasets and achieves competitive results compared to larger proprietary models. The authors also introduce SadeedDiac-25, a new benchmark for fairer evaluation of Arabic diacritization across diverse text genres. Why it matters: This work advances Arabic NLP by providing both a competitive diacritization model and a more robust evaluation benchmark, facilitating further research and development in the field.
KAUST hosted the Arabian Venture Forum in November 2016 to support venture capital in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf region. KAUST Ph.D. graduate Edward Canepa presented Sadeem, a startup he founded with other KAUST students and a professor. The forum aimed to bolster the VC ecosystem in the region. Why it matters: Such university-hosted events can play an important role in fostering entrepreneurship and investment in Saudi technology ventures.
Muhammed Sameed, a 2012 KAUST alumnus, co-authored a paper published in Nature about antimatter. Sameed currently works at CERN in Switzerland. The research was featured on the KAUST website. Why it matters: The publication highlights KAUST's role in fostering scientific talent who contribute to high-impact research globally, even if the specific research is not focused on the GCC region.
Muhammed Sameed, a KAUST alumnus with a master's degree in material science and engineering, is working as a research scientist at CERN. He specializes in creating and studying antimatter particles as part of CERN's ALPHA experiment, with publications in Nature. Sameed advises students to be fearless and create new paths to maximize opportunities. Why it matters: This highlights KAUST's role in training scientists who contribute to cutting-edge international research, potentially inspiring further collaboration between KAUST and CERN.