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A t an AI research lab on the edges of Abu Dhabi last year, an international team of 25 computer scientists were putting the finishing touches on a deep learning algorithm before sending it to be trained on 4, powerful computer chips. The plan worked. By some measures it was the best open-source large language model LLM available in the world at that point, outperforming top offerings from Meta and Google.
And it really created a surprise. Around the world, computer scientists took notice. In this realm, the U. But, sandwiched between the two superpowers, the United Arab Emirates is beginning to punch above its weight.
Enough electricity—powered by oil, natural gas, and solar—not only to power that hardware, but also to make building new data centers more attractive than in Europe and other parts of Asia, where grids are battling energy bottlenecks. If they come, it would be to join an effort unhindered by internal critics, or other essentials of democracy. In fact, the UAE casts its autocratic, state-capitalist government as a plus—giving it the ability to quickly marshal its significant resources to achieve what it sees as an epochal project.
But in many places it is overdone. The country is also emerging as a player to watch in the world of difficult-to-produce computer chips used to train powerful AI systems. If successful, the efforts could catapult the UAE to a position of outsize influence in the world of AI. The country will have competition.