The cornerstone has been laid on the
King
Abdulla University of Science and Technology (Kaust) a new $10bn university
in Saudi Arabia devoted to pure research and applied sciences.
The facility will open physically in September 2009 on the Red Sea coast near
Rabigh, but the first students will start courses next year using e-learning
from around the world.
The Saudi government has pledged $10bn in support over the next decade.
"IT is a cornerstone of our country's development," said Nadhmi Al-Nasr,
Kaust's interim president.
"Kaust is a long journey that the nation will be going through in its
transition to a knowledge-based economy. This is the start of a long-term
relationship between academic institutions around the world and Kaust."
The university will have schools of applied mathematics and computational
science, biosciences and engineering, resources, energy and environment and
materials science.
The design of the university is being assisted by a high-level board of
academics from around the world, including representatives from
Microsoft,
Carnegie
Mellon University,
Yahoo and
Amazon.
"Building a new research university, especially one with such resources, is
very exciting," said Professor Peter Lee, professor of computer science at
Carnegie Mellon.
"The opportunity is to design the perfect site. For all of us there is the
chance to free ourselves from the legacy of existing systems, which is very
exciting."
The courses will be open to men and women around the world, with places
awarded solely on merit.
The campus will be built from the ground up to integrate wireless and wired
connectivity throughout.
"Kaust will be built as a smart city," said Majid Al-Ghaslan, interim chief
information officer at the university.
"There will be wireless throughout the whole complex and an abundance of
computing power for students and teachers."
Kaust is just one step in a national Saudi IT strategy which hopes to reverse
the trend of students being sent overseas to the US, UK, China and India to
learn computer programming and languages.
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