MODON completes SIRI evaluation of 58 factories for 4IR readiness

The SIRI index, owned by the International Centre for Industrial Transformation, is the only index approved by the World Economic Forum to measure the adoption rates of industrial facilities for the applications of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
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Updated 28 August 2022
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MODON completes SIRI evaluation of 58 factories for 4IR readiness

RIYADH: The Saudi Authority for Industrial Cities and Technology Zones, known as MODON, revealed that it has successfully evaluated 58 factories using the international Smart Industry Readiness Index.

The SIRI index, owned by the International Centre for Industrial Transformation, is the only index approved by the World Economic Forum to measure the adoption rates of industrial facilities for the applications of the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR). 4IR largely involves four specific technologies: High-speed mobile internet, artificial intelligence and automation, the use of big data analytics, and cloud technology.

INCIT is an independent, nongovernment institute founded to spearhead the transformation of global manufacturing. It directs the 4IR journeys of manufacturers, and supports the global rise of smart manufacturing. 

Qusai Al-Abdul Karim, MODON’s director of marketing and corporate communications, confirmed that this success comes as a culmination of the authority’s efforts to keep pace with developments in the global industrial sector.

Abdullah Alghamdi, president of Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority, said at a Saudi 4IR conference held last year, that the impact of the 4IR is expected to be massive, with non-oil gross domestic product anticipated to increase by more than 4 percent from 2017 to 2030, generating SR1 trillion ($266 billion) in new revenues.


Amazon’s AWS reports outage after UAE data center struck by ‘objects’

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Amazon’s AWS reports outage after UAE data center struck by ‘objects’

DUBAI: Amazon cloud-computing unit’s facilities in the Middle East were facing power and connectivity issues on Monday, the company said, after its UAE data center was struck by “objects,” triggering a fire.
Amazon Web Services’ UAE and Bahrain regions were affected by outages, it said, citing localized power issues for both regions.
Two of Amazon cloud unit’s zones, which are clusters of data centers, in the UAE were without power on Monday, the company said on its status page.
AWS said on Sunday that one zone in the UAE was affected after “objects” struck the data center and created sparks and fire, following which power was shut off.

“We can confirm that a localized power issue has affected another availability zone” in the UAE region, AWS said.

AWS did not confirm or deny, when asked earlier, whether the UAE incident was connected to the Iranian strikes on neighbouring Gulf states, including the UAE and Bahrain, in response to US and Israeli attacks on Iran.

The cloud firm had reported some recovery in the UAE region earlier on Monday, but is now asking customers to rely on its services in other regions, adding that it was working to restore power and connectivity.

The cloud division expected full recovery to “be many hours away” for both the UAE and Bahrain.

Separately, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank said on Monday that technical issues were affecting some of its platforms and mobile app users. It was unclear if the outage at the lender was related to AWS.