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Samsung Announces Pre-Order Availability for the Galaxy S25 Edge in UAE

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Galaxy S25 Edge

Samsung Gulf Electronics has announced that the new Galaxy S25 Edge is now available for pre-order for customers across the UAE until May 29th, 2025.  Crafted with style and strength in mind, Galaxy S25 Edge strikes a new balance of premium, pro-level performance in a resilient titanium body that’s only 5.8mm thick. S25 Edge delivers on the S Series legacy, integrating an iconic Galaxy AI-enabled camera and unleashing a new realm of creativity in an effortlessly portable device.

Fadi Abu Shamat, Head of the Mobile eXperience Division at Samsung Gulf Electronics, said: “We are excited to launch the S25 Edge in the UAE, where technological innovation and premium lifestyle experiences are highly valued. The Galaxy S25 Edge is more than a slim smartphone, as it not only marks a breakthrough for its category but also accelerates important innovation across the mobile industry. Its sleek design and outstanding AI-powered features will particularly resonate with UAE consumers who demand both sophistication and performance in their digital lifestyle, reinforcing Samsung’s position as a leader in the premium smartphone segment.”

With a thin 5.8mm chassis, Galaxy S25 Edge is a remarkable feat of engineering that weighs just 163 gm. The optimally curved edges and sturdy titanium frame offer enduring protection for everyday use. The latest Corning Gorilla Glass Ceramic 2, a new glass ceramic offering that delivers engineered resilience, is used for the front display to yield both vibrancy and strength on Galaxy S25 Edge.

Galaxy S25 Edge has a 200MP wide lens, upholding the Galaxy S series’ iconic camera experience while taking Nightography to a new level. Thanks to its ultra-high resolution, users get sharper photos while maintaining clearer shots with large pixel size in low-light environments. The 12MP ultra-wide sensor features autofocus for crisp, detailed macro photography and more creative flexibility.

Galaxy S25 Edge features the same ProVisual Engine optimized for Galaxy S25 with pro-grade enhancements, like ensuring sharp details for clothes or plants and natural, true-to-life skin tone in portraits. Galaxy AI-powered editing features, including fan-favorites like Audio Eraser and Drawing Assist pair advanced creative and editing tools with a never-before-seen slim form factor.

Galaxy S25 Edge is built to deliver premium performance, starting with the Snapdragon 8  Elite Mobile Platform for Galaxy, customized by Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. Advanced, efficient AI image processing is enabled by ProScaler, which delivers a 40% improvement in display image scaling quality, while incorporating Samsung’s customized mobile Digital Natural Image engine (mDNIe).

Galaxy S25 Edge integrates AI agents that work seamlessly across multiple apps, helping as a true AI companion to get things done more easily. Now Brief and Now Bar include third-party app integrations for greater convenience and helpful reminders during everyday commuting, dining and more.

Thanks to Galaxy’s deep integration with Google, Galaxy S25 Edge brings Gemini’s latest advancements to more users. Users can show Gemini Live what they see on their screen or in the world around them while simultaneously interacting with it in a live conversation.

Experiences powered by Galaxy AI on Galaxy S25 Edge are designed with privacy at the core. On-device AI processing ensures data is kept secure by Samsung Knox Vault, ensuring hyper-personalized mobile experiences that never sacrifice privacy.

Tech Features

ASUS Techsphere Forum: Empowering Business Leaders Through Next-Gen Hardware Innovation

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A wide-angle shot of the ASUS Techsphere Forum


The line on the opening slide— “Every company will be an AI company”—wasn’t tossed out as a provocation. At the ASUS Techsphere Forum 2025 in Dubai, it landed as an operating instruction. The message across keynotes, the Intel segment, and two candid panels was strikingly consistent: AI stops being theatre the moment you standardize three things—the workspace (where people actually work), the runtime (so models are portable), and the portfolio (so you manage dozens of use cases like a product backlog, not a parade of proofs-of-concept).

Analysed By:
Subrato Basu, Managing Partner
, Executive Board

A quick reality check on market size so we’re not drinking our own Kool-Aid: the global AI market in 2025 is roughly $300–$400B, depending on scope (software vs. software + services + hardware). Reasonable consensus ranges put 2030 at ~$0.8–$1.6T. In other words, still early—but already too big to treat as a side project.

Crafted By:
Srijith KN,
Senior Editor
,
Integrator Media

ASUS: PUT AI ON THE ENDPOINT—AND MAKE IT GOVERNABLE

ASUS’s enterprise stance is disarmingly practical. As Mohit Bector, Commercial Head (UAE & GCC) at ASUS Business, framed it, the fastest way to make AI useful is to put it where the work happens (the endpoint) and to make it governable. Concretely, that means:

  • NPUs for on-device inference (privacy, latency, battery life).
  • Manageability (fleet policy, remote control, security posture you can actually audit).
  • Longevity (multi-year BIOS/driver support) so IT can set an AI-ready baseline and keep it stable.

ASUS thinks about the modern workplace as an Enter → Analyse → Decide loop, this is where the workday actually speeds up—quietly, relentlessly, at the endpoint:

  • Enter: the device captures signals—voice, docs, screens, forms, sensors.
  • Analyse: retrieval-augmented reasoning + analytics produce options, risks, and rationales.
  • Decide: humans choose; agents act—raise tickets, update ERP/CRM—with audit trails.

It isn’t about one blockbuster use case. It’s about standardizing the canvas, so small wins compound every week.

ASUS Techsphere Forum 2025 - Panel 1
Panel 1 – From Data to Decisions: Leveraging AI Across Industries

INTEL: FROM SLOGAN TO STACK (AND WHY THE AI PC MATTERS)

Intel’s deck made the “every company will be an AI company” claim implementable. Four slide-level words—Open, Innovative, Efficient, Secure—double as a buyer checklist:

  • Open: less cost, no lock-in. The same models should move across CPU/GPU/NPU and PC → Edge → Datacentre/Cloud without rewrites.
  • Innovation: treat AI PCs with NPUs, edge systems, and cloud clusters as one continuum.
  • Efficient: lead on performance per dollar and per watt; energy and cost are first-class design goals.
  • Secure: your data and your models are IP; run locally when you should, govern tightly when you don’t.

A “Power of Intel Inside” platform slide stitched this together:

  • AI software & services: OpenVINO as the portability layer to convert/optimize/run models across heterogeneous silicon.
  • AI PC: always-on, private inference for day-to-day assistants.
  • Edge AI: near-machine intelligence for vision and time-series use cases.
  • Datacentre & cloud AI: scale-out training/heavy inference (fraud graphs, multimodal analytics, enterprise RAG).
  • AI networking: the fabric that keeps it all moving—securely.

Why the fuss about the AI PC? Because it’s the next enterprise inflection after Windows and Wi-Fi. Slides mapped tangible outcomes:

  • Productivity: faster info-find, auto-drafts, note-taking.
  • Communication: translation, live captioning, dictation, transcription.
  • Collaboration: smart framing, background removal, eye tracking, noise suppression—without pegging the CPU.
  • IT operations: endpoint anomaly detection, VDI super-resolution, remote screen/data removal.
  • Security: client-side deepfake detection, anti-phishing, ransomware flags.

Under the hood, Intel’s definition is a division of labour: CPU for responsiveness and orchestration, GPU for high-throughput math/creation, NPU for low-power sustained inference—the always-on stuff that makes assistants truly useful. Add vPro + Core Ultra and you get the fleet controls and long-term stability IT actually needs.

One more practical bit I liked: Intel AI Assistant Builder—a portal to stand up local assistants/agents (with RAG) that can run on the PC fleet first, shrinking time-to-value from months to days/weeks and letting you prove the full E-A-D loop before you scale heavier jobs to edge/cloud.

When the “100M AI PCs by 2026” slide hit the screen, heads tilted from curiosity to calculation. The figures—bullish vendor projections (~100M by 2026; ~80% AI-capable by 2028)—invite a haircut, but the signal is unmistakable: endpoint AI is becoming the default.

ASUS Techsphere Forum 2025 - Panel 2
Panel 2 – AI-Powered Workspaces and the Future of Work

WHAT THE PANELLISTS REALLY TAUGHT US

RAKEZ (Free Trade Zone)

Posture: Execution-first. Make AI practical on the shop floor and trustworthy in the back office—governed from day one.

What they drive:

  • Diagnostics (OEE baselines, defect maps) + data-readiness scans (MES/ERP) so pilots don’t stall.
  • Reference lines/sandboxes where vendors prove accuracy, safety, throughput before purchase.
  • Template playbooks: CV-QC, predictive maintenance, warehouse vision, invoice extraction/3-way match—each with SOPs, KPIs, integration steps.
  • Curated vendors + shared services (labelling, model hosting/monitoring, SOC for AI) to reduce MSME cost/complexity.

MSMEs: “Bookkeeping-in-a-box” to clean ledgers and free cash; pre-negotiated PoC packs (fixed price/timeline, acceptance metrics); compliance starter kit (consent, retention, safety, escalation).

Enterprises: Multi-site rollout playbooks, edge + cloud reference architectures (identity-aware RAG, policy-constrained agents), and assurance artifacts (model cards, change control, audit trails).

Outcome lens: OEE ↑, FPY ↑/DPMO ↓, MTBF ↑/MTTR ↓, faster close cycles, fewer incidents—AI that moves the P&L and passes audit.

Note – FPY — First Pass Yield; OEE — Overall Equipment Effectiveness; DPMO — Defects Per Million Opportunities; MTBF — Mean Time Between Failures (repairable systems); MTTR — Mean Time To Repair

Oracle (Consulting / Applications cloud)

Posture: AI belongs inside the workflows where finance, HR, supply chain, and service teams live. Expect talk tracks like: ground answers in your own records (RAG with policy), instrument before/after outcomes, and treat AI features as part of ERP/HCM/CX—not a sidecar chatbot. The ask from buyers: prove the Enter → Analyse → Decide gains in real workflows (FP&A forecasting lift, supplier risk scoring, HR talent match quality).

Zurich Insurance (BFSI)
Posture: AI as a force for good, scaled with governance. Think hundreds of use cases: claims triage, fraud/anomaly detection, internal knowledge bots—human-in-the-loop where stakes are high, and IoT-style prevention to reward good behaviour. The key is measurement: fewer false positives, shorter cycle times, clearer audit trails—and elevated roles, not replaced ones.

Group-IB (Cyber / Threat Intel)

Posture: AI to defend—and defend against AI. SOC copilots that summarize and enrich alerts, deepfake/phishing detection, behaviour analytics across identities and endpoints, and the emerging discipline of security of AI (prompt-injection defences, LLM gatewaying, data loss controls for AI apps). If you’re rolling out agents, involve your security team early.

Dhruva Consultants (Tax Tech Transformation)

Posture: RegTech + AI to reduce compliance cost and risk. Document AI to normalize invoices/contracts, anomaly detection for mismatches and fraud flags, and a pragmatic “bookkeeping-in-a-box” on-ramp for MSMEs. Non-negotiables: auditability, versioning, segregation of duties for anything that touches filings.

Prime Group (Labs/Certification)

Posture: Risk-scored processes—every lab step tagged with expected outputs, data access, and fallbacks. Near-term wins: smarter scheduling and test selection; long-term horizon: a Mars-ready lab by 2050 aligned with the UAE’s space ambitions. It’s operational excellence today, exploration mindset tomorrow.

Education (Heriot-Watt University, Dubai)

Posture: candid and useful: human-led pedagogy; AI-assisted admin and decision support. HWU brings talent pipelines (AI/Data Science programs), translational research, and applied robotics capacity (think Robotarium-style ecosystems). This is the repeatable talent + research engine enterprises can plug into—capstones, CPD, joint R&D—that shortens the path from idea to pilot.

WHY UAE HAS A STRUCTURAL ADVANTAGE: RAKEZ × HWU

Local context matters. RAKEZ (Ras Al Khaimah Economic Zone) is more than a location; it’s an adoption on-ramp aligned with MoIAT’s Industry 4.0 programs (ITTI/Transform 4.0). Translation: factories—especially MSMEs—get real help to deploy vision-led quality, OEE analytics, and worker-safety use cases, with policy scaffolding and incentives attached.

Pair that with Heriot-Watt University as a talent/research flywheel and you have a short, well-lit path from concept to production: execution zone + skills engine. That’s a genuine regional edge.

SUMMARY

Techsphere’s most important contribution wasn’t a prediction; it was a design pattern. ASUS gives you the enterprise substrate (AI-ready endpoints you can actually govern). Intel gives you the principles and plumbing (OpenVINO portability; CPU/GPU/NPU continuum; PC → Edge → Cloud). The panellists supplied proof patterns across industries. And the UAE context—RAKEZ for execution, HWU for talent/research—shortens the distance from idea to impact.

If “every company will be an AI company,” the winners won’t be the first to demo—they’ll be the first to standardize. Start at the endpoint, insist on portability, manage a portfolio, and make the Enter → Analyse → Decide loop measurable. That’s how the slide turns into the balance sheet.

_________________________________________________________

  • Glossary of Technical Acronyms
  • OEE — Overall Equipment Effectiveness (measures manufacturing productivity: availability × performance × quality).
  • FPY — First Pass Yield (percentage of units passing production without rework).
  • DPMO — Defects Per Million Opportunities (defect rate in Six Sigma terms).
  • MTBF — Mean Time Between Failures (average time between breakdowns of a repairable system).
  • MTTR — Mean Time To Repair (average time to repair a failed component/system).
  • AI / IT Terms
  • NPU — Neural Processing Unit (specialized chip for AI inference, optimized for low-power sustained workloads).
  • CPU — Central Processing Unit (general-purpose processor for orchestration, responsiveness).
  • GPU — Graphics Processing Unit (parallel processor for high-throughput math and AI training/inference).
  • RAG — Retrieval-Augmented Generation (technique where AI models query external knowledge bases before generating answers).
  • ERP — Enterprise Resource Planning (integrated system for core business processes like finance, supply chain, manufacturing).
  • MES — Manufacturing Execution System (software for monitoring and controlling production).
  • VDI — Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (running desktop environments on centralized servers).
  • SOC — Security Operations Center (hub for cybersecurity monitoring and response).
  • IP — Intellectual Property (protected data, models, or designs).
  • Industry & Enterprise Acronyms
  • BFSI — Banking, Financial Services, and Insurance (industry vertical).
  • FP&A — Financial Planning & Analysis (finance function for budgeting, forecasting, performance analysis).
  • HCM — Human Capital Management (HR technology and processes).
  • CX — Customer Experience (customer-facing processes and software).
  • ITTI — Industrial Technology Transformation Index (UAE Ministry of Industry and Advanced Technology initiative under Industry 4.0).

The ASUS Techsphere Forum, organized by Integrator Media, brought together C-suite leaders from diverse industry verticals to explore how evolving hardware standards are shaping the future of work. The event highlighted the growing role of AI-enabled PCs, showing how advancements in endpoint hardware can directly support business needs. By balancing industry-specific requirements with insights on hardware innovation, the forum offered executives a clear view of how these technologies can enhance productivity and deliver measurable value across the wider business community.

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Tech Features

From Display to Destination: How LED Tech Is Rewriting Outdoor Retail in the GCC

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An LED screen located in an urban setting

In the Gulf’s fast-evolving retail landscape, one thing is clear: attention is everything. With consumers moving between screens, stores, and digital channels in seconds, capturing that attention outdoors is becoming a high-stakes game. That’s why LED display technology is rapidly becoming the new storefront essential, especially when paired with interactivity.

A portrait of Zac Liang, General Manager - Gulf Area, Unilumin's Group
Zac Liang, General Manager – Gulf Area, Unilumin’s Group

Retailers across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar are investing in large-format LED displays that do more than just promote products; they invite shoppers in. Whether it’s a vivid display on a flagship store’s exterior or an interactive screen at a luxury mall, brands are embracing motion, light, and tech to cut through the noise. Across malls in Dubai, Doha, and Riyadh, it’s no longer uncommon to see storefronts come alive with animations, responsive visuals, or even gesture-based content.

“Retailers today are competing not just for sales, but for attention, and in this region, that means making a bold visual impact,” said Zac Liang, General Manager – Gulf Area, Unilumin Group. “That’s why more brands are investing in outdoor LED displays that don’t just advertise, they engage.”

While many regions are adopting this trend, the Middle East is scaling fast. According to Grand View Research, the digital signage market in the Middle East and Africa is expected to grow from USD 1.66 million in 2024 to USD 2.80 million by 2030, with the GCC leading the charge thanks to infrastructure development, smart city strategies, and a strong mall culture. This growth is being fueled by the rising demand for immersive experiences, particularly in high-traffic outdoor retail environments.

The shift isn’t just about visuals; it’s also about interactivity. LED displays equipped with touchscreens, motion sensors, and augmented reality are turning passive browsing into active engagement. Shoppers can explore digital lookbooks, scan QR codes for real-time offers, or interact with content that responds to their presence. These experiences help bridge the online-offline divide, giving brands a powerful edge in driving foot traffic and customer engagement.

“Interactivity is no longer a luxury; it’s a necessity,” Liang added. “Our clients in the Gulf are asking for displays that do more than play content. They want screens that connect, respond, and adapt in real time.”

Unilumin has been at the forefront of this transformation. The company made waves by being the first in the LED industry to introduce MIP/COB technology for outdoor displays in China; the technology is now making its way into major Middle Eastern markets. At the 19th Hangzhou Asian Games, Unilumin deployed over 4,200 square meters of LED screens across key venues. Its outdoor COB display at West Lake, the world’s first outdoor high-brightness COB screen, not only lit up the event but became part of the visual narrative of the games.

That same energy is now flowing into the Gulf, where malls, airports, and open-air retail zones are hungry for solutions that combine aesthetics, interactivity, and performance. From arch-shaped LED portals in Dubai to street-facing media walls in Doha, the region is becoming a live canvas for digital storytelling.

The future of outdoor retail in the GCC isn’t just about visibility; it’s about visibility with purpose. Interactive LED displays give brands the power to stop shoppers mid-scroll, pull them off the sidewalk, and get them through the door. In a market where first impressions are everything, those few seconds on the street could mean the difference between a passerby and a purchase.

 

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Automotive

Metadome.ai launches AI Virtual Sales Assistant with Jameel Motors Egypt

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A rear-angle shot of an AI assistant visualized by AI

Metadome.ai, in collaboration with Jameel Motors Egypt, one of the country’s most prominent automotive distributors, has launched an AI-assisted virtual sales assistant designed to support the entire customer journey — both pre-sales and post-sales.

Jameel Motors, a key player in Egypt’s automotive market, brings decades of expertise in the mobility sector and a reputation for representing some of the world’s most recognized commercial and passenger vehicle brands. Its expansive sales and after-sales network position the company as a trusted name in delivering customer-centric innovation.

As a collaboration between two leading technology innovators, Jameel Motors Egypt is stepping into the future of customer engagement by bringing the power of AI to the showroom floor and beyond. Developed by Metadome.ai, the newly launched virtual assistant provides customers with round-the-clock, real-time support across all digital touchpoints. Whether learning about car models, comparing features, booking test drives, or tracking vehicle delivery, the assistant acts as a knowledgeable and responsive digital partner throughout the pre-sales experience.

More than just a sales tool, the assistant also supports post-sales services. Customers can authenticate themselves, book maintenance appointments, access previous service records, receive live maintenance updates, activate warranties, locate service centers, and request spare parts and accessories. It also delivers automated maintenance reminders and other services that’s helping streamline after-sales support while keeping customers fully informed and connected.

“At Metadome.ai, we’re driven by one simple idea—technology should feel intuitive, human, and helpful. That’s exactly what we aimed for with this product. By combining Jameel Motors deep automotive expertise with our conversational AI capabilities and tech backbone, we’ve created an experience that feels less like a bot—and more like a knowledgeable, always-available assistant,” said Shorya Mahajan, Co-founder and COO of Metadome.ai

The assistant is already live at select Jameel Motors digital touchpoints, with early feedback indicating stronger online engagement, faster response cycles, and increased customer satisfaction.

Tarek Abdullatif, Regional Director Jameel Motors Egypt, stated: “We’ve seen firsthand how digital tools can transform industries. This assistant is more than a chatbot it’s a smart, responsive designed to meet the needs of today’s connected customer.”

He added, “In the coming months, the virtual assistant solution will roll out across Jameel Motors entire network, in Egypt as part of the company’s commitment to innovation and customer-centric service.

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