Gulf News

AI to help manage data boom in Gulf

INNOVATION DRIVING DISRUPTION FASTER, ORACLE SAYS

- BY NAUSHAD K. CHERRAYIL Staff Reporter

More data will be collected this year in the Middle East than has been collected in the last 5,000 years, according to Abdul Rahman Al Thehaiban, Oracle’s senior vice-president for the Middle East, Africa and Central Eastern Europe.

“Earlier, organisati­ons used to have one source of informatio­n such as a business applicatio­n or core banking, etc, but now they have varied sources of applicatio­ns and those data need to be utilised. [Artificial Intelligen­ce] is the right technology to enable entities to optimise and maximise the efficiency of the business processes they have and make the most out of it,” he said, speaking at a two-day Oracle Open-World event in Dubai.

However, Al Thehaiban said the challenge will be how to make use of the data.

Quoting a research report by IDC, Al Thehaiban said that spending on digital transforma­tion in the Middle East and Africa will cross the $25 billion (Dh91.83 billion) mark this year as more organisati­ons experiment with emerging technologi­es such as robotics, AI and the Internet of Things (IoT).

Moreover, he said that this $25 billion is coming out of the total ICT spending of $213 billion this year, compared to $208 billion in 2018.

“We are in an era of major transforma­tion. We face challenges in every life cycle of the IT industry; we are now in the Fourth Industrial Revolution that [we are] witnessing now,” Al Thehaiban said.

Andrew Sutherland, senior vice-president for Technology and Systems at Oracle Europe, Middle East and Africa, said that AI is a foreveryou­ng technology and it has been an emerging technology for decades.

“When embedded into business applicatio­ns and data management, it can truly drive business benefits,” he said.

Sutherland said that IoT is now really proving its value in the world of predictive maintenanc­e and logistics management while blockchain is starting to emerge, proving its value in the complex global supply chains.

“These emerging technologi­es are driving change faster for various reasons for a while. [They are] reshaping the way we interact with one another such as consumers, citizens, trading partners and [they are] disrupting business in entire industries.

“We are living in a world that is being disrupted by technology. Perhaps the real question is how do we harness that disruption and turn it to our advantage so that we can progress. Why is this disruption coming now of all times and what is driving it... it is innovation,” he said.

However, he said that innovation is currently growing at a greater pace than ever before.

$ 25b spending on digital transforma­tion in Middle East & Africa

We are in an era of major transforma­tion. We face challenges in every life cycle of the IT industry; we are now in the Fourth Industrial Revolution that [we are] witnessing now.” Abdul Rahman Al Thehaiban | Oracle’s senior vicepresid­ent for the Middle East, Africa and Central Eastern Europe

 ?? Clint Egbert/Gulf News ?? Oracle executive Abdul Rahman Al Thehaiban told delegates at the Oracle Openworld Middle East event yesterday that AI helps firms maximise business process efficiency.
Clint Egbert/Gulf News Oracle executive Abdul Rahman Al Thehaiban told delegates at the Oracle Openworld Middle East event yesterday that AI helps firms maximise business process efficiency.

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