Cover Story
Nothing launches the Phone (4a) and Headphone (a) in UAE and Saudi

Nothing, has launched the Phone (4a) in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, marking a major leap forward for its smartphone lineup. Nothing has also announced the launch of the Headphone (a), a playful addition to its over-ear audio lineup, designed for a generation that requires tech products that look, sound and feel different.
The new Phone (4a) redefines the mid-range segment, blending refined premium design, bold colour options, flagship-grade cameras with an advanced periscope telephoto lens, and powerful Snapdragon performance. Built on the latest Nothing OS, it reflects the technical warmth of Nothing’s hardware design while delivering a fast, fluid, and highly personal user experience.
The Middle East smartphone market grew 13% in 2025, with the UAE recording 13% year-on-year growth, driven by strong consumer demand for capable mid-tier devices and a wave of high-profile product launches supported by the region’s leading retail partners. With upgrade cycles accelerating and consumers increasingly seeking flagship-grade features at accessible price points, the Phone (4a) makes for the perfect choice.
The launch of Nothing’s Phone (4a) builds on the momentum of the Nothing Headphone (a) available across the UAE now and in Saudi Arabia from 18 March 2026, priced at AED 599/SAR 699. The Headphone (a) comes in four bold colour options; Pink, Yellow, White and Black and is packed with new features including an industry-leading five day battery life on a single charge.
“We’ve been incredibly encouraged by the global response to the Phone (4a) and the positive feedback,” said Rishi Kishor Gupta, Regional Director for Middle East and Africa at Nothing. “Following record-breaking Day-1 sales in India we’re very excited to continue that momentum in the Middle East. With Eid approaching, the Phone (4a), especially when paired with the new Headphone (a), makes for a thoughtful gift at an accessible price.”
The Phone (4a) is available in black, white, blue, and pink in three configurations across the UAE via key retail partners including Amazon, noon, Jumbo Electronics, and Sharaf DG.
- 8+128 GB – AED 1,199 / SAR 1,399
- 8+256 GB – AED 1,499 / SAR 1,599
- 12+256 GB – AED 1,599 / SAR 1,899.
The Phone (4a) will be available in black, white, blue and pink from 18 March 2026 in Saudi Arabia through leading retailers including noon, Amazon, Jarir Bookstore, Al Haddad Telecom, and STC, among others.
Product Specifications:
A Standout Design
The Phone (4a) evolves Nothing’s signature design, fusing human warmth with elite engineering.
Phone (4a)’s upper section of its transparent design highlights a central camera, red Recording Light, and the brand-new Glyph Bar, emphasising functionality, while the lower section reveals internal structures beneath transparent glass. Enhanced metal buttons, a reinforced camera bump, and a strengthened frame deliver greater durability, with IP64 protection and custom submersion support up to 25 cm for 20 minutes. Colour options reach new heights: transparent blue and a soft pink introduce warmth, subtlety, and individuality without compromising sophistication.
Masterful Photography
The Nothing Phone (4a) delivers a best-in-class camera system, featuring a 50MP 3.5x OIS periscope lens, a 50MP OIS main sensor, a versatile Sony ultra-wide, and a 32MP wide-angle selfie camera. Capture every detail from 0.6x to 70x zoom, from expansive landscapes to true-to-life portraits. Powered by the flagship TrueLens Engine 4, Phone (4a) brings cutting-edge computational photography with AI, including Ultra XDR photos co-developed with Google, enhancing highlights and shadows for natural contrast, now also supported in motion photos and directly shareable on Instagram. A fully reimagined camera experience includes expert-designed presets, finely adjustable professional settings, AI Photo Eraser to remove unwanted objects, and seven new Nothing watermarks for creative expression.
The Latest Snapdragon® 7 Series Platform
Powered by the latest Snapdragon® 7s Gen 4, the Phone (4a) offers 7% faster CPU and graphics, and 10% better power efficiency than its predecessor. Combined with LPDDR4x and UFS 3.1, it delivers significantly faster data speeds. Its AI performance is up to 92.5% faster than the Phone (2a), utilising the Snapdragon Neural Intellect and 6th-gen Qualcomm® AI Engine. Gamers benefit from smooth performance, with BGMI running at 120 Hz and PUBG at 90 Hz.
The Evolution of the Glyph Interface
The Nothing Glyph Interface is more than just lights; it’s a functional and playful visual language that is designed to reduce distraction and avoid you having to turn your phone over:
The Nothing Phone (4a) introduces a refined Glyph Bar with 63 mini-LEDs in 7 square light zones, each square precisely controlled for pure, uniform illumination up to 3500 nits, 40% brighter than theGlyph Interface on Phone (3a). Leveraging three patented technologies, including dual-colour injection-moulded lampshades, the design ensures zero light leakage, no yellow edges, and smooth diffusion, keeping notifications clear even in bright sunlight. The Glyph Bar can also double as a gentle fill light for photos or videos. Smarter notifications come to life with progress-based cues for calls, messages, charging, timers, and more. Custom light sequences for contacts and notifications, paired with Nothing’s signature sounds, turn essential alerts into expressive, playful patterns—all while reducing screen distractions.
Nothing OS
Nothing OS is calm, intentional and genuinely helpful. It looks beautiful without being loud, moves fast without feeling rushed, and adapts to you without adding effort.
Nothing OS 4.1, based on Android 16, delivers a cleaner, more intuitive interface with redesigned icons, a refreshed lock screen, and a deeper dark mode. Multitasking is easier with floating apps and resizable Quick Settings, while widgets are more flexible than ever. The AI Dashboard gives precise control over AI features, under-the-hood optimisations make the system smoother and faster, and camera and gallery apps are enhanced. Customisation now includes hiding apps and creating lightweight widgets via the Playground, helping you stay productive, creative, and in control every day.
NOS 4.1 introduces a more vibrant, customisable lock screen, two relaxation-focused widgets, upgraded Live Notifications across the screens and Glyph Interface. Polished animations, and faster app launches make every swipe and interaction effortless and highly intuitive. NOS 4.1 builds on Nothing OS 4.0 with a smarter, smoother, and more personal experience that keeps you informed, relaxed, and fully in control.
3 years of Android updates and 6 years of security patches.
Nothing AI makes life simple, organised, and inspired.
Nothing’s Essential AI tools streamline daily life: Essential Search provides instant, multi-app access to information with a keyword. Essential Memory personalises results based on your activity and saved Memories. Furthermore, the Playground allows users to build and share their own no-code Essential Apps on the home screen, using AI to bring ideas to life. Nothing AI makes your phone smarter, more personal, and infinitely intuitive.
For the first time on the Phone (4a), Essential Space supports cloud access, enabling seamless cross-platform use across phones, desktops, laptops, and more.
A Flagship Display
The Nothing Phone (4a) features a 6.78″ AMOLED display with 1.5K resolution (1224 × 2720) and 440 PPI, delivering exceptional detail across every inch. With peak brightness of 4500 nits (HDR) and 1600 nits (HMB), content remains clear even under direct sunlight, while Ultra HDR photos and videos shine with brilliant highlights and deep AMOLED blacks. A 120 Hz adaptive refresh rate and 2500 Hz touch sampling ensure smooth interactions and instant responsiveness, while 2160 Hz PWM dimming reduces eye strain. The screen is protected by Corning Gorilla Glass 7i, twice as scratch-resistant as previous-generation cover glass, and survives a 1-meter drop, letting users place the phone face down without worry and fully enjoy the transparent design and Glyph Bar.
Listen, Watch, Create, and Play
The Nothing Phone (4a) is powered by a 5080 mAh battery, supporting up to 17 hours of mixed use for music, video, gaming, and messaging. Rapid 50W Fast Charging refills the battery to 60% in just 30 minutes—nearly 10% faster than the previous Phone (2a) Series. Advanced battery health management ensures over 90% capacity retention after 1,200 charge cycles, equivalent to more than three years of daily charging.
Lowest Carbon Footprint Yet
The Nothing Phone (4a) sets a new benchmark for sustainable manufacturing, with a carbon footprint of 51.13 kg CO₂e, the lowest ever for a Nothing device. 30 components use recycled materials, including 30% recycled plastic, 100% recycled aluminium and tin, and 80% recycled steel. Over 99% of the packaging is plastic-free, and the final assembly process uses 100% renewable energy.
Cover Story
AI Moves from Experiment to Essential in UAE’s Advertising Landscape

From content creation to media buying, artificial intelligence is quietly reshaping how campaigns are built, delivered, and optimised across the GCC.
In the UAE and across the GCC, artificial intelligence has moved well beyond the stage of experimentation. What was once a buzzword discussed in boardrooms is now deeply embedded in the day-to-day execution of advertising. Brands are no longer testing AI—they are relying on it to run campaigns, generate content, and make increasingly precise decisions about audience targeting and timing.
On the creative front, the shift is particularly visible. AI-powered tools are now capable of producing ad copy, visuals, and even short-form video content at a pace that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago. For marketers operating in a market like the UAE—where campaigns often need to speak to audiences in both English and Arabic, while also resonating across a diverse mix of nationalities, this level of speed and adaptability is more than a convenience. It is becoming a necessity.
Behind the scenes, machine learning has also transformed how media buying is approached. Traditional methods that relied heavily on instinct or retrospective performance reports are steadily being replaced by systems that analyse audience behaviour in real time. These platforms continuously optimise campaign performance, adjusting budgets and placements based on how users interact with content.
In the UAE’s PR ecosystem, brands are already leveraging platforms such as Meltwater, Brandwatch, and Sprout Social to better understand media performance, audience sentiment, and the broader buying landscape.

A practical example of this shift can be seen in platforms like Skyscanner, where advertising systems respond dynamically to user intent. Instead of targeting broad demographic groups, campaigns are triggered by actual search behaviour and travel patterns, allowing for more relevant and timely engagement.
AI is also influencing emerging advertising formats. Digital billboards, for instance, are becoming more responsive, using live data inputs to tailor content based on factors such as time of day, location, and audience movement. Similarly, augmented reality experiences are beginning to incorporate behavioural insights, offering more contextual and interactive brand engagements.
Looking ahead, the trajectory appears clear. Advertising is moving towards deeper automation, more intelligent recommendations, and tighter integration between creative tools and analytics platforms. The industry is shifting from a model centred on broadcasting messages to one that focuses on responding to audiences in real time, with context and precision.
In this evolving landscape, AI is no longer just an enabler, it is becoming the foundation on which modern advertising is built.
Cover Story
SHAPING THE SKYLINE: HOW GCC MARKETS ARE REDEFINING ARCHITECTURE IN 2026
Mohamed Fiaz Khazi, Entrepreneur & Managing Director, Euro Systems
Architecture across the GCC is entering a more demanding phase, shaped by the realities of day-to-day operation. For much of the past decade, design ambition was defined by scale, visibility, and speed. Towers rose quickly, façades grew lighter, and skylines transformed almost overnight. In 2026, the focus has shifted to how buildings perform over time and the quality of experience they deliver to occupants.
This evolution reflects a more mature, performance-driven market while maintaining bold design. Questions around energy use, occupant comfort, maintenance, and durability are now central to architectural decision-making. In a region shaped by heat, dust, and intense solar exposure, design intent carries weight only when it is supported by systems capable of delivering consistent performance over time.
A changing regional approach
Façades illustrate this shift particularly clearly. Glass-heavy architecture remains integral to the region’s visual language, yet it is now approached with greater technical intent. Solar control, shading, acoustic performance, and automation are increasingly considered as parts of a unified strategy rather than isolated design features.
Industry studies consistently show that external shading devices, such as louvers and overhangs, can significantly reduce solar heat gain before it enters the building envelope, lowering cooling demand in the process. Fully shaded glazed areas further reduce thermal loads, easing pressure on mechanical systems while improving internal comfort.
While this performance-led direction is shared across the GCC, each market is responding in its own way.
In the UAE, architectural expression continues to take center stage. Landmark developments, hospitality projects, and mixed-use districts place strong emphasis on experience and identity. What has changed is the level of coordination behind the scenes. Façades are now expected to deliver daylight and transparency without introducing glare or thermal instability. Shading and glazing strategies are increasingly developed together, allowing design ambition to be preserved while meeting operational requirements.
Saudi Arabia presents a different dynamic. Here, scale and speed dominate, with large-scale developments and giga-projects compressing timelines and increasing complexity. In such an environment, fragmented decisions quickly translate into operational challenges. Architecture in the Kingdom is therefore being shaped by early integration, industrialized delivery, and lifecycle planning, where performance and repeatability become essential to building at scale. Research from McKinsey reinforces this approach, showing that large capital projects perform more reliably when coordination replaces siloed decision-making.
Qatar occupies a distinct position between these two models. Following a period of rapid delivery, focus has shifted toward longevity, sustainability, and adaptability. Buildings are expected to operate efficiently over decades and align closely with national sustainability frameworks. Façade performance, shading strategies, and acoustic control are increasingly specified for their contribution to long-term asset value and occupant well-being.
Technology integration
Technology underpins much of this evolution. Smart shading, responsive glazing, and integrated control systems are now practical tools for managing daylight, reducing glare, and stabilizing interior conditions. By reducing solar radiation before it reaches the glazing, external shading delivers measurable performance benefits in high-sun environments.
When façade strategies are developed early and embedded into the design process, materials, structure, and systems align more naturally. The result is architecture that feels deliberate in appearance and dependable in operation.
An operational view
The next wave of GCC projects will approach architecture as a dynamic system, ensuring long-term efficiency and reliability. Design ambition will remain high, but it will be matched by discipline in execution. Integration will increasingly define the process, particularly on complex and large-scale developments, with performance considered alongside form from the outset.
This shift represents meaningful progress. It reflects a region learning from experience and raising its own standards. The skyline will continue to evolve, but its true measure will lie in buildings that remain comfortable, efficient, and resilient long after the initial excitement has passed.
Cover Story
BUILDING WITH DATA: A DEEP DIVE INTO CONSTRUCTION INTELLIGENCE WITH PLANRADAR

Dubai’s construction pipeline is moving at a pace that demands absolute execution discipline. We sit down with Ibrahim Imam, CEO and Co-founder of PlanRadar, to discuss how real-time tracking, digital templates, and AI are eliminating site ambiguity and setting a new benchmark for project delivery certainty in the region.
Dubai’s construction sector continues to grow despite evolving regional dynamics. From your perspective, how is digital transformation reshaping project execution and operational efficiency across construction sites in the region?
Dubai’s construction and real estate pipeline continues to move at pace, and that pace puts a spotlight on execution discipline. In practice, many performance issues don’t start as major failures—they start small: an unclear detail in the plans, an inspection requested too late, a change implemented before approval, or a delivery accepted without proper checks. These gaps often surface later as rework, delays, audit findings, or disputes—when time and cost impacts are already locked in.
Digital transformation is reshaping execution in two very practical ways: speed of decisions and quality of evidence. When inspections, approvals, and corrective actions are managed through consistent workflows—linked to the right location and supported by photos, markups, or test results—teams stop relying on individual habits and start relying on a system. That is why the Construction Site Templates Playbook frames templates as operational control points, not paperwork. When these controls are digitised and embedded into daily routines, operational efficiency improves because coordination becomes faster and issues are closed with verified evidence.
Platforms like PlanRadar are enabling teams to digitise on-site workflows. What role does real-time tracking of inspections, tasks, and approvals play in improving transparency and accountability across project teams?

Real-time tracking changes daily site management from “What do we think happened?” to “What can we verify right now?” That shift is a major driver of transparency and accountability.
First, it makes ownership and deadlines explicit. When an inspection request, an RFI response, a non-conformance closure action, or an approval task is assigned to a named person or role with a due date, follow-up becomes structured. Leadership can see what is overdue without chasing updates across emails and messaging threads.
Second, it links records to the right location and supporting evidence.Construction is location-based. A record without a clear location (area/level/grid) and objective evidence can create ambiguity and slow decisions. Real-time workflows make it easier to capture evidence at the point of work—photos, markups, documents, test results—and link it directly to the site location and the relevant record.
Finally, it strengthens audit readiness and handover quality. Time-stamped, traceable records reduce reliance on reconstructed evidence during audits, handover, or dispute resolution. In regulated environments and high-value developments, this traceability increasingly matters.
Developers today are under pressure to deliver projects on time while maintaining quality standards. How are digital tools helping teams maintain delivery certainty despite increasing project complexity?
Developers today are under pressure to deliver projects on time while maintaining quality standards. Digital tools are helping teams maintain delivery certainty despite increasing project complexity by making issues visible earlier, improving coordination, and creating clearer control across execution.
Many delays begin as small blockers such as missing approvals, late materials, access constraints, sequencing clashes, or outstanding clarifications. If these constraints live only in meeting notes, they are easy to lose. Digital tools such as look-ahead planning and constraint logs make blockers visible, assigned, and tracked until closure so that intervention happens earlier.
A structured Change Order / Variation workflow also helps bring control to project changes. It captures what is changing and why, which areas and plans/specifications are impacted, the time and cost impact, the approval authority, and the final decision. Digitally, this creates a clear history from request to review to approval to implementation, reducing confusion and protecting commercial position.
Late approvals, incomplete documentation, and weak delivery checks often become downstream defects and replacement delays. Digitising material approvals and delivery inspection records helps ensure only compliant materials enter the works, and issues are identified before they affect installation.
Rework remains one of the biggest threats in construction. Structured QA/QC inspection checklists, defect and snag tracking with verified closure, and commissioning readiness checks help reduce late-stage quality surprises. Instead of quality becoming a handover fire drill, it becomes part of daily execution.
Construction has traditionally been slow to adopt new technologies. As a technology leader working closely with developers and contractors across the region, how do you see leadership mindsets evolving when it comes to embracing digital transformation on construction sites?
Construction has traditionally been slow to adopt new technologies. As a technology leader working closely with developers and contractors across the region, we see leadership mindsets becoming more practical and more execution-focused. The shift is from “Which tool should we buy?” to “What discipline do we need to enforce on site?”
Historically, adoption has been slowed by the fear of slowing site teams down, the difficulty of aligning subcontractors, and the belief that projects are too unique to standardise. What is changing now is the recognition that inconsistent execution controls create higher costs than standardisation, especially when leaders are managing multiple projects with tighter governance and higher scrutiny.
Projects can no longer depend on a few experienced people to hold everything together. Leadership increasingly wants consistent execution across teams and subcontractors, even when site resources change. As a result, there is growing demand for processes that are repeatable, with clear ownership, structured approvals, evidence captured at the point of work, and verified closure.
It is therefore becoming less about “going digital” and more about enforcing reliable workflows. Adoption succeeds when workflows are simple, mobile-friendly, and aligned with daily routines. If tools add effort without clear value, teams will bypass them. That is why template design, including triggers, required fields, and evidence capture, matters as much as the platform itself.
Looking ahead, how do you see technologies like AI, predictive analytics, and automation further transforming construction project management?
Looking ahead, technologies such as AI, predictive analytics, and automation are likely to have the biggest impact when they reduce manual follow-up and help teams act earlier. Their value, however, depends on having structured, consistent project data, which is another reason execution discipline and standardised templates are so foundational. This is becoming even more relevant in the UAE, where the national UAE Strategy for Artificial Intelligence 2031 is aimed at boosting government performance and embedding AI across priority sectors, while Dubai’s Economic Agenda D33 seeks to raise productivity by 50% through digital transformation and innovation.
If inspections, defects, non-conformances, constraints, and approvals are recorded consistently, analytics can identify patterns such as recurring defects by trade, bottlenecks in approval cycles, or increasing safety observations in specific zones. These predictive insights allow teams to intervene earlier, before delays or rework begin to escalate.
Automation can further improve project management by routing approvals to the right roles, escalating overdue inspections, generating reports from structured records, and triggering corrective actions based on inspection outcomes. This reduces administrative overhead and improves consistency without asking teams to do more.
The ability to quickly find the right record when it is needed is a common challenge. AI can help teams locate RFIs, approvals, and inspection records for a specific location, summarise change history, and highlight what is open versus closed. This supports faster decision-making and reduces ambiguity across stakeholders.
The key point is that AI accelerates teams that already have disciplined workflows and reliable data. Without that foundation, its value remains limited.
In this sense, digital transformation is reshaping construction execution in Dubai by strengthening clear approvals, verified inspections, controlled change, and traceable records linked to objective evidence. The Construction Site Templates Playbook was developed to help teams standardise these control points and apply them consistently, so projects can reduce ambiguity, improve compliance confidence, and deliver with greater predictability across construction and real estate portfolios.
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