We will see many more products at IDEX and Dubai Airshow 2023 brother.
Not only military systems.. Just answering
@Solidify ( to have him rest his case and relax HaHa!)..
The UAE has made:
Aircrafts: Calidus B-250 and B-350
Cars
EVs
Microprocessors
A new company owned by the Abu Dhabi Government will become the world's second-largest maker of microprocessors after the announcement of a venture in which as much as US$8 billion (Dh29.3bn) will be invested. In strengthening its ties with AMD, Mubadala Development Company sealed its reputation as a long-term investor in growth industries such as technology, energy, aerospace and health care. The deal "significantly reshapes the global semiconductor industry", said Waleed al Mokarrab, the chief operating officer of Mubadala, who will assume a leading role in the venture. He said the tie-up could even see Abu Dhabi become home to some of the most advanced industrial infrastructure and technology on the planet.
https://www.thenationalnews.com/bus...lead-role-in-microchip-manufacturing-1.527731
Quantum computer
The emirate is building its own quantum computer, the first in the UAE, in collaboration with Barcelona-based Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech
In partnership with Barcelona-based startup
Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech, Abu Dhabi’s
Technology Innovation Institute (TII) formed the
Quantum Research Centre (QRC), an international centre of excellence for research into quantum technologies. The centre’s chief researcher is
José Ignacio Latorre, who took a leave of absence from his full professorship in theoretical physics at the University of Barcelona to work on a series of projects involving particle physics.
TII is the dedicated “applied research” pillar of Abu Dhabi’s newly established
Advanced Technology Research Council (ATRC). “We are at the cusp of a new era with the advent of quantum computing,” said
Faisal Al Bannai, secretary general of ATRC, in an official statement. “We are proud to embark on building one of these wonderful machines which will help us in various fields, from discovering new medicines, to making new materials, to designing better batteries, to various artificial intelligence applications.”
Although quantum computers will never be able to perform the vast majority of the algorithms that supercomputers perform today, there is a small set of problems that quantum computers will be able to solve much more quickly than supercomputers. In fact, in some cases – decryption of RSA keys, for example – supercomputers are so slow that they could not find a solution in a billion years.
...
“The first step in the process is to build a laboratory, equip it and complete installation of the cleanroom equipment, all of which is on track,” said Latorre in a
QRC press release on 21 April 2021. “Once done, the first qubits will be prepared, characterised and benchmarked. We expect the first simple quantum chips ‘made in Abu Dhabi’ should come by the end of the summer.”
Like most organisations that build quantum computers, the QRC overran its stated schedule. But it might be forgiven, because its plan to start out small seems sound in a field where hyperbole is the norm.
The Abu Dhabi team’s reasonable ambition is to first experiment with one qubit, then two and three to learn to manage the inherent instability of qubits and the ways they are measured. Eventually, the centre expects to produce a usable quantum computer based on a relatively small number of high-quality qubits.
https://www.computerweekly.com/news...the-race-to-produce-a-usable-quantum-computer
https://www.thenationalnews.com/uae...er-could-help-solve-the-mysteries-of-science/