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Saudi Arabia Demonstrates Capacity to Shift Away from Oil, Become Tech Hub

By Yange Ikyaa

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has demonstrated its resolve to use mass technological adoption as the principal strategic economic resource to shift away from oil and become a regional hub for both traditional and emerging technologies.

This is because the oil and gas power house is putting itself at the forefront of emerging technologies through large-scale adoption and ambitious pilot projects, and its ambition is being showcased on a global stage as it looks towards becoming a hub that connects three continents.

LEAP, a seismic event that accelerates the adoption of technology and transforms Saudi Arabia’s economy, is a manifestation of this ambition.

This is even as the Kingdom recently enhanced its game-changer status in the global data and artificial intelligence (AI) sectors with the opening instalment of DeepFest- a new co-located event held in partnership with the Saudi Data & Artificial Intelligence Authority (SDAIA) on the side-lines of LEAP23, the world’s most visionary tech event.

The inaugural DeepFest has gathered drivers of the global AI ecosystem to unveil multi-sector initiatives in a three-day thought-leadership conference, with sector-specific tracks, trainings, live-demos, and startup pitches.

Complemented by a dedicated exhibition featuring companies that are transforming the world we live and work in, the DeepFest conference program– themed AI Beyond Imagination– homes in on AI implementation in areas such as clean tech, the Metaverse, women in technology, and much more– including robotics.

Robots and avatars take centre-stage in the future vision of human-robot symbiotic society. Amid the assembled pool of change-makers, big tech pioneers, data scientists, innovators, enterprises, academia, startups, and innovative business entrepreneurs, famed roboticist, Hiroshi Ishiguro, delivered an inspired session titled “Avatar and the Future Society.”

Ishiguro, who is The Director of the Intelligent Robotics Laboratory– part of the Department of Systems Innovation in the Graduate School of Engineering Science at Japan’s Osaka University– has been pioneering advancements in humanlike robotics since 1997.

The 59-year-old has also been creating eerily realistic androids for over 15 years, including Geminoid HI-1- the roboticist’s own virtual twin, who joined him on stage at DeepFest.

Having spent his career dissecting the nature of what it means to be human, Ishiguro outlined how advances in robotics and avatars are narrowing the separation between human and humanoid.

His words: “By 2050, we want to realise a society in which people are free from the constraints of the body, brain, space, and time. The technology is being developed already; with our automated robotic tech, we can create avatars that anyone can use easily.

“I believe we can create avatars that will allow anyone– from children to the elderly, and everyone in between – to play an active role in society. With avatars, I believe we can change the world. We can choose to work, study, and socialise with real-life robotic or computer graphic (CG) avatars.

“Many companies in Japan are already using CG avatars for customer service – not in place of humans, but with humans controlling their own avatars. In Japan, we have an aging population problem, and we need to find solutions that allow people to work – this can be solved by using avatars and advanced robotic technology.”

Other sessions in the day one DeepFest agenda included Neural-Symbolic AI Driving Progress Toward Artificial General Intelligence with Dr. Benjamin Goertzel, CEO of the SingulaityNET Foundation; Generative AI Revolution with Leonid Zhukov, Director of Boston Consulting Group’s Global AI Institute; and How Technology is Inspiring the Future Workforce with Beverly Rider, CCO of Tonomous and CEO Tonomous VentureStudio.

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