The Kids of the Islamic State: A Childhood Stolen

Families as they tried to escape from Baghouz, the last Syrian town under the control of the Islamic State to fall. The IS leaders escaped, leaving behind almost 25,000 of their followers. Credit: Jewan Abdi/ IPS

Families as they tried to escape from Baghouz, the last Syrian town under the control of the Islamic State to fall. The IS leaders escaped, leaving behind almost 25,000 of their followers. Credit: Jewan Abdi/ IPS

By Jewan Abdi
HASSAKE, Syria, Mar 27 2024 – Rozena, a 31-year-old woman from Guyana, says she travelled to Turkey in 2015 to join an NGO which helped Syrian refugees. That’s all she’ll reveal when asked how and why she ended up living in the so-called Islamic State for four years.

IPS spoke to her inside the small tent where she has spent the last five years with her two children at Roj camp. At 780 km northeast of Damascus, it holds around 3,000 individuals with alleged links to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (IS).

“If we don’t help these children, I cannot imagine how their lives will be in the future. And this is not only the Kurdish administration’s responsibility”

Natascha Rée Mikkelsen

This transnational Jihadist group managed to set up an unrecognised quasi-state. By the end of 2015, the self-proclaimed caliphate ruled an area with an estimated population of 12 million people living under an extreme interpretation of Islamic Law.

After an intense conflict mainly with Kurdish forces backed by Washington, IS lost control of all its Middle Eastern territories in the Spring of 2019. Rozana and her two children were then captured in Baghouz, the last village under the Islamists´ rule to fall.

Since then, a tent where a few toys and books are stored in a separate corner has been the closest thing to a home for her and her children.

“This is no childhood for them,” says Rozena. “They’re missing the most basic things: from fresh air to clean water, not to mention a proper school…”

Some, however, have managed to escape from the camp since it was established. “I know people who have paid up to 15,000 USD but I don’t have such an amount. My only chance to leave this place with my two kids is to be repatriated”, says Rozena.

But Guyana is one of the countries that refuses to repatriate its nationals. Rozana says she’s tried “absolutely everything” with her government, but that there’s been no reaction so far. “My kids are certainly not a threat, and neither am I,” she insists.

She also fears that they might get radicalised inside the camp. “Half of the people here still stick to IS’s radical ideology. I can teach my kids the best I can, but they will learn other things from playing with other kids,” explains the captive.

 

Children born in the Islamic caliphate somewhere in the Syrian desert. Most of them remain in precarious prison camps in northeastern Syria. Credit: Jewan Abdi / IPS

Children born in the Islamic caliphate somewhere in the Syrian desert. Most of them remain in precarious prison camps in northeastern Syria. Credit: Jewan Abdi / IPS

 

Radicalisation

Although some Syrian citizens have been taken to court in Syria’s northeast for alleged links with IS, the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (AANES) lacks international recognition and, hence, is unable to try foreign individuals.

Figures shared with IPS by the AANES point to over 31,000 children from families once linked with IS still under their custody. Many are born out of forced marriages or rape. Most of them languish in Al Hol camp, in the outskirts of Hassake.

At 655 Km northeast of Damascus, it’s a vast area for thousands of makeshift tents battered by the relentless rains during winter and burning sunshine during summer.

In conversation with IPS, Al Hol camp director Jihan Hanan says there are people from 50 different nationalities. But the kids pose a major source of concern.

“We have only two schools for them, but not all the children are attending these centres, especially the ones from 12 to 18 years old. They´re the most vulnerable here in the camp and many radicalised women trying to brainwash them,” explains Hanan.

She also points to “deadly attacks” in the past. “We had to conduct special security operations. Today the attacks are limited to thefts and threats, and they target NGOs too,” adds the official.

According to her, IS sleeping cells inside the camp are posing a major threat. “They are the most dangerous groups, and they are always approaching the children to recruit them,” she warns.

 

The foreigners' section of the Al Hol camp. Women and children wait to go to the hospital, shop or receive help. The Kurdish administration separated foreign Islamic State families from Syrians and Iraqis. Credit: Jewan Abdi / IPS

The foreigners’ section of the Al Hol camp. Women and children wait to go to the hospital, shop or receive help. The Kurdish administration separated foreign Islamic State families from Syrians and Iraqis. Credit: Jewan Abdi / IPS

 

A taste of home

Repatriation to their countries of origin is seemingly the only way out for many. US State Department sources point to more than 3,500 repatriated to 14 countries as of 2023.

A 2022 study conducted by Human Rights Watch gathering the experiences of more than 100 children revealed that most of them are attending school, with many excelling in their studies. 82 percent of survey respondents described the child’s emotional and psychological well-being as “very good” or “quite good.”

“Notwithstanding the ordeals they survived both under IS and subsequently in captivity in the northeast Syrian camps, many are reintegrating successfully in their new communities,” concludes the report.

Sweden is one of the countries that has repatriated most of their citizens in 2022. But policies changed after the arrival to power of a new government allied with the far right, in September 2022.

 

Aerial view of the Al Hol camp, in northeastern Syria, 655 kilometres from Damascus. It hosts more than 50,000 people, of which almost 30,000 are children of dozens of different nationalities. Credit: Jewan Abdi / IPS

Aerial view of the Al Hol camp, in northeastern Syria, 655 kilometres from Damascus. It hosts more than 50,000 people, of which almost 30,000 are children of dozens of different nationalities. Credit: Jewan Abdi / IPS

 

“These people chose to go there to join IS, one of the cruellest terrorist organisations we have seen, so there’s no obligation on the part of Sweden and the Swedish government to act for these people to come home,” the Swedish foreign affair minister Tobias Billström said in an interview with Swedish TV4 on March 13.

But not everyone agrees. Repatriate The Children is a Swedish NGO working and advocating to send children home. “It’s a purely political decision to leave these children there and not repatriate them,” RTC co-founder and spokesperson Natascha Rée Mikkelsen tells IPS over the phone from Copenhagen.

“They have already experienced things that no child should see, like war, unsafety, no proper education or no access to proper health care. By leaving them stranded in this environment, the risk of being part of IS ideology remains high,” adds the human rights advocate.

“If we don’t help these children, I cannot imagine how their lives will be in the future. And this is not only the Kurdish administration’s responsibility,” stresses Mikkelsen, who also labels the constant Turkish airstrikes as “one of the region’s main destabilising factors.”

The AANES has repeatedly stated that they lack the resources to cater for these thousands of families. Top United Nations officials have also called on governments to repatriate their nationals from the camps.

“Every country should take care of their citizens, especially the women and the children,” Abdulkarim Omar, the representative of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria to Europe, tells IPS over the phone from Brussels.

“We believe it is going to be a long process, that’s why we urge the countries to help us, especially with their citizens,” adds the Kurdish official, who also highlights the need to improve the conditions of alleged IS prisoners under Kurdish custody.

When asked about the possibility of the outside world ignoring the problem, Omar is blunt: “If no action is taken in the short term, we are soon to face a whole new generation of terrorists that will be a threat to all the world.”

 

Abandoned Children Growing Problem in Northern Syria

Children eating and drinking at the Children's House in Idlib. Abandoned children is a growing issue in the region. Credit: Sonia Al-Ali/IPS

Children eating and drinking at the Children’s House in Idlib. Abandoned children is a growing issue in the region. Credit: Sonia Al-Ali/IPS

By Sonia Al Ali
IDLIB, Syria, Mar 27 2024 – Wael Al-Hassan was returning from work in the Syrian city of Harim when he heard the sound of a baby crying.

He was returning from work on December 10, 2023. He stopped momentarily, turned on his mobile phone flashlight to investigate, and spotted a baby girl, around one month old, wrapped in a white blanket, lying by the roadside.

He felt saddened by the infant’s condition and said, “She was crying loudly, and I saw scratches on her face from cat or dog claws. I then carried her in my arms and took her home, where my wife breastfed her, changed her clothes, and took care of her.”

The phenomenon of abandoning newborns is increasing in northern Syria, where individuals leave their newborns in public parks or alongside roads, then leave the area. Passersby later find the infants, some of them dead from hunger or cold.

Al-Hassan said that the next morning, he handed the baby girl over to the police to search for her family and relatives.

Social Rejection

Social worker Abeer Al-Hamoud from the city of Idlib, located in northern Syria, attributes the primary reason for some families abandoning their children to the widespread poverty and high population density in the province. Additionally, there is fear of the security situation (the area is not in the control of the Syrian regime and is often under attack), the prevalence of divorces, and spouses abandoning their families after traveling abroad.

Al-Hamoud also points out another reason, which is the spread of the phenomenon of early marriage and marrying girls to foreign fighters who came from their countries to Syria to participate in combat. Under pressure from their families, wives often have to abandon their children after their husband’s death, sudden disappearance, or return to their homeland, especially when they are unable to care for them or provide for them financially. Moreover, these children have no proper documentation of parentage.

Furthermore, Al-Hamoud mentions another reason, which is some women are raped, leading them to abandon their newborns out of fear of punishment from their families or societal stigma.

Al-Hamoud warns that the number of abandoned children is increasing and says there is an urgent need to find solutions to protect them from exploitation, oppression, and societal discrimination they may face. She emphasizes that the solutions lie in returning displaced persons to their homes, improving living conditions for families, raising awareness among families about the importance of family planning, and launching campaigns to integrate these children into society.

Alternative Families

It’s preferable for members of the community to accept these children into their families, but they face difficulties in registering the births.

Thirty-nine-year-old Samaheer Al-Khalaf from the city of Sarmada in northern Idlib province, Syria, sponsored a newborn found abandoned at a park gate, and she welcomed him into her family.

She says, “After 11 years of marriage to my cousin, we were not blessed with children, so we decided to raise a child found in the city at the beginning of 2022.”

Al-Khalaf observes that the Islamic religion’s prohibition on “adoption” prevents her from registering the child under her name in the civil registry. Additionally, she cannot go to areas controlled by the Syrian regime to register him due to the presence of security barriers.

She says, “I fear for this child’s future because he will remain of unknown lineage. He will live deprived of his civil rights, such as education and healthcare, and he won’t be able to obtain official documents.”

Children’s House Provides Assistance

With the increasing numbers of children of unknown parentage, volunteers have opened a center to receive and care for the children abandoned by their families.

Younes Abu Amin, the director of Children’s House, says, “A child of unknown parentage is one who was found and whose father is unknown, or children whose parentage has not been proven and who have no provider.”

“The organization ‘Children’s House’ opened a center to care for children separated from their families and children of unknown parentage in the city of Sarmada, north of Idlib,” says Abu Amin. “The number of registered children in the center has reached 267, ranging in age from one day to 18 years. Some have been placed with foster families, while others currently reside in the center, receiving all their needs, including shelter, food, education, and healthcare.”

Upon arrival at the center, Abu Amin notes that the center registers each child in its records, transfers them to the shelter department, and makes efforts to locate their original family or relatives and send them to them or to find a foster family to provide them with a decent life.

Abu Amin explains that the center employs 20 staff members who provide children with care, psychological support, and education. They work to create a suitable environment for the children and support them psychologically to help with emotional support.

He emphasizes that the center survives on individual donations to cover its expenses – which are scarce. There is an urgent need for sufficient support, as the children require long-term care, especially newborns.

A young girl Marah (8) and her brother, Kamal (10), lost their father in the war. Their mother remarried, leaving them to live in a small tent with their grandfather, who forces them to beg and sell tissues, often leaving them without food for days.

Consequently, they decided to escape from home. Kamal says, “We used to sleep outdoors, overwhelmed by fear, cold, and hunger, until someone took us to the child center.”

Upon reaching the center, they returned to their studies, played with other children, and each other, just like children with families.

Kamal expresses his wish, “I hope to continue my education with my sister so we can rely on ourselves and escape from a life of injustice and deprivation.”

These children, innocent of any wrongdoing, are often left to fend for themselves, bearing the brunt of war-induced poverty, insecurity, homelessness, instability, and early marriage.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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IMF Urges Non-alignment in Second Cold War

By Jomo Kwame Sundaram
ACCRA, Ghana, Mar 27 2024 – The IMF no. 2 recommends non-alignment as the best option for developing countries in the second Cold War as geopolitics threatens already dismal prospects for the world economy and wellbeing.

IMF warning
Ominously, International Monetary Fund (IMF) First Deputy Managing Director Gita Gopinath warns, “With the weakest world growth prospects in decades – and…the pandemic and war slowing income convergence between rich and poor nations – we can little afford another Cold War”.

Jomo Kwame Sundaram

While recognising globalisation is over, she appeals to governments to “preserve economic cooperation amid geoeconomic fragmentation” due to the second Cold War.

Growing US-China tensions, the pandemic and war have changed international relations. The US calls for ‘friend-shoring’ while its European allies claim they want to ‘de-risk’. While still pleading for ‘globalisation’, China realistically stresses ‘self-reliance’.

Multilateral rules were rarely designed to address such international conflicts as ostensible ‘national security’ concerns rewrite big powers’ economic policies. Hence, geoeconomic conflicts have few rules and no referee!

Historical perspective
After the Second World War, the US and USSR soon led rival blocs in a new bipolar world. After Bandung (1955) and Belgrade (1961), non-aligned countries have rejected both camps. This era lasted four decades.

World trade-to-GDP rose with post-war recovery and, later, trade liberalisation. With the first Cold War, geopolitical considerations shaped trade and investment flows as economic relations between the blocs shrank.

According to her, such flows increased after the Cold War, “reaching almost a quarter of world trade” during the “hyper-globalization” of the 1990s and 2000s.

However, globalization has stagnated since 2008. Later, about “3,000 trade restricting measures were imposed” in 2022 – nearly thrice those imposed in 2019!

Cold War economics
Gopinath sees “ideological and economic rivalry between two superpowers” as driving both Cold Wars. Now, China – not the Soviet Union – is the US rival, but things are different in other respects too.

In 1950, the two blocs accounted for 85% of world output. Now, the global North, China and Russia have 70% of world output but only a third of its population.

Economic interdependence grew among countries as they became “much more integrated”. International trade-to-output is now 60% compared to 24% during the Cold War. This inevitably raises the costs of what she terms economic ‘fragmentation’ due to geopolitics.

With the Ukraine war, trade between blocs fell from 3% pre-war to -1.9%! Even trade growth within blocs fell to 1.7% – from 2.2% pre-war. Similarly, FDI proposals “between blocs declined more than those within blocs…while FDI to non-aligned countries sharply increased.”

China is no longer the US’s largest trading partner, as “its share of US imports has fallen” from 22% in 2018 to 13% in early 2023. Trade restrictions since 2018 have cut “Chinese imports of tariffed products” as US FDI in China fell sharply.

However, indirect links are replacing direct ties between the US and China. “Countries that have gained the most in US import shares…have also gained more in China’s export shares” and FDI abroad.

A BIS study found “supply chains have lengthened in the last two years”, especially between “Chinese suppliers and US customers”. Hopefully, Gopinath suggests, “despite efforts by the two biggest economies to cut ties, it is not yet clear how effective they will be”.

For Gopinath, trade restrictions “diminish the efficiency gains from specialisation, limit economies of scale due to smaller markets, and reduce competitive pressures.”

She reports IMF research suggesting “the economic costs of fragmentation… could be significant and weigh disproportionately on developing countries”, with losses around 2.5% of world output.

Losses could be as high as 7% of GDP depending on the economy’s resilience: “losses are especially large for lower income and emerging market economies.”

Much will depend on how things unfold. She warns, “Fragmentation would also inhibit our efforts to address other global challenges that demand international cooperation.”

Policy options
Policymakers face difficult trade-offs between minimising the costs of fragmentation and vulnerabilities, and maximising security and resilience.

Gopinath recognises her ‘first best solution’ – to avoid geoeconomic hostilities – is remote at best, given current geopolitical hostilities and likely future trends. Instead, she urges avoiding “the worst-case scenario” and protecting “economic cooperation” despite polarisation.

She wants adversaries to “target only a narrow set of products and technologies that warrant intervention on economic security grounds”. Otherwise, she advocates a “non-discriminatory plurilateral approach” to “deepen integration, diversify, and mitigate resilience risks”.

Despite the odds, Gopinath appeals for a “multilateral approach…for areas of common interest” to “safeguard the global goals of averting climate change devastation, food insecurity and pandemic-related humanitarian disasters”.

Finally, she wants to restrict “unilateral policy actions – such as industrial policies”. They should only address “market failures while preserving market forces”, which she insists always “allocate resources most efficiently”.

Not recognising the double standards involved, she wants policymakers “to carefully evaluate industrial policies in terms of their effectiveness” But, she is less cautious and uncritical in insisting on neoliberal conventional wisdom despite its dubious track record.

Unsurprisingly, two IMF staffers felt compelled to write in 2019 of ‘The Return of the Policy That Shall Not Be Named’. Despite much earlier extensive European and Japanese use and US President Biden’s recent embrace of industrial policy, the Fund seems caught in an ideological trap and time warp of its own making.

While making excessive claims about gains from globalisation, Gopinath acknowledges “economic integration has not benefited everyone”.

Thankfully, she urges developing countries to remain non-aligned and “deploy their economic and diplomatic heft to keep the world integrated” as the new Cold War sets the world further back.

Pragmatically, Gopinath observes, “If some economies remain non-aligned and continue engaging with all partners, they could benefit from the diversion of trade and investment.”

By 2022, “more than half of global trade involved a non-aligned country…They can benefit directly from trade and investment diversion”, reducing the Cold War’s high costs.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Frontiers of Digital Finance by Biz2X Named as Fintech Ecosystem Partner for the Dubai FinTech Summit 2024 on May 8

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, March 27, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Biz2X and Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) today announced that Frontiers of Digital Finance (FDF) will be an official event at the 2024 Dubai FinTech Summit. FDF Dubai will feature key industry leaders from financial institutions, technology platforms, global consultancies, and government officials in an invite–only event on May 8, 2024.

Like previous sessions in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi, FDF Dubai will bring together global business leaders to explore AI, large data models, and lending tech innovations currently shaping the financial landscape. In collaboration with DIFC Innovation Hub, the event will also spotlight Dubai's groundbreaking Vision D33 for transforming finance in the Emirates. Details on the venue and full agenda will be forthcoming at frontiersofdigitalfinance.com.

FDF Conference Series Puts Spotlight on AI in Finance in First–Ever Tour of MENA

Frontiers of Digital Finance is continuing its circuit of key Middle East financial centers. Biz2X and co–partner SIMAH (the Saudi Credit Bureau) recently hosted FDF Riyadh, focused on the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s (KSA) Vision 2030 for transforming the Saudi economy. The event was a milestone in the digital finance ecosystem within the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA),

Supporting partners include DLA Piper, AWS, Mastercard, Qarar, and Oracle. Panel discussions included tech innovations, AI–led business strategy, capital markets, and digital transformation, shedding light on how these elements are driving financial accessibility, stability, and growth in alignment with KSA's ambitious Vision 2030 goals.

Highlights from the Riyadh edition are now available online.

Rohit Arora, Co–Founder and CEO of Biz2X, remarked: “FDF Riyadh was a platform dialogue and collaboration aiming to achieve Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 objectives through digital finance. We are proud to be hosting these urgent and powerful conversations with the Frontiers of Digital Finance series.”

Husam Arabiat, CEO MENAT Region at Biz2X, extended an invitation for leaders to join the event in Dubai: “Leaders who attend our FDF events are actively shaping the future of finance through their participation in this important global conversation. Dubai is a fantastic host city for that discussion. We are incredibly excited to bring together the brightest minds in finance during Dubai FinTech Summit with our partners, including DIFC Innovation Hub.”

Frontiers of Digital Finance continues to be a must–attend “invite only” event, fostering collaboration, innovation, and thought leadership in the global digital finance community. Sponsorship opportunities at FDF Dubai are now available by inquiring on the website.

About Biz2X & Frontiers of Digital Finance:

Biz2X is a pioneering digital lending platform which helps financial institutions offer business financing through advanced proprietary technology.

The Frontiers of Digital Finance event series is a must–attend event for innovators in the financial sector, bringing together executives to discuss trends shaping the future of financial services and technology.

For media inquiries, please contact:
John Mooney
Over The Moon PR (for Biz2X)
908–720–6057
john@overthemoonpr.com

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/772a57c6–2205–4c17–9792–eb9b99ec96a3


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 9079919)

اختيار Frontiers of Digital Finance من قِبل شركة Biz2X شريكًا للنُظم البيئية للتكنولوجيا المالية في قمة دبي للتكنولوجيا المالية لعام 2024

دبي, March 27, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — أعلنت شركة Biz2X ومركز دبي المالي العالمي (DIFC) اليوم أن Frontiers of Digital Finance (FDF) ستكون بمثابة فعالية رسمية في قمة التكنولوجيا المالية التي ستُعقد في دبي في عام 2024. وستضم فعالية FDF نسخة دبي قادة المجال الرئيسيين من المؤسسات المالية ومنصات التكنولوجيا وشركات الاستشارات العالمية والمسؤولين الحكوميين في فعالية تقتصر على المدعوين فقط ستُعقد في 8 مايو.

وعلى منوال الجلسات السابقة التي عُقدت في الرياض وأبوظبي، تعتزم دبي تنظيم فعالية FDF تجمع قادة الأعمال العالميين لاستكشاف الذكاء الاصطناعي، ونماذج البيانات الكبيرة، وابتكارات الإقراض التقنية التي تُشكِّل حاليًا معالم التمويل. وبالتعاون مع مركز الابتكار بمركز دبي المالي العالمي (DIFC)، ستُسلِّط الفعالية الضوء أيضًا على أجندة دبي الاقتصادية D33 لرؤية دبي الرائدة لتحويل التمويل في الإمارات العربية المتحدة. وسيتم نشر التفاصيل بشأن المكان وجدول الأعمال الكامل على موقع frontiersofdigitalfinance.com.

سلسلة مؤتمرات FDF تُسلِّط الضوء على دور الذكاء الاصطناعي في مجال التمويل في أول جولة على الإطلاق في منطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا

تُواصل سلسلة فعاليات Frontiers of Digital Finance جولتها في مراكز التمويل الرئيسية الموجودة في منطقة الشرق الأوسط. وقد استضافت شركة Biz2X والشريك المشارك شركة سِمة (الشركة السعودية للمعلومات الائتمانية) مؤخرًا سلسلة فعاليات FDF نسخة الرياض، التي ركّزت على رؤية المملكة العربية السعودية لعام 2030 لتحويل الاقتصاد السعودي. لقد حقّقت الفعالية إنجازًا مهمًا في أنظمة التمويل الرقمي داخل المملكة العربية السعودية،

حيث دعمت الشركاء بما فيهم شركات DLA Piper وAWS وMastercard وQarar وOracle. كما تضمّنت حلقات النقاش الابتكارات التقنية واستراتيجية الأعمال القائمة على الذكاء الاصطناعي وأسواق رأس المال والتحول الرقمي، مسلطةً الضوء على كيفية إسهام هذه العناصر في تعزيز إمكانية الوصول المالي والاستقرار والنمو بما يتماشى مع أهداف رؤية 2030 الطموحة للمملكة العربية السعودية.

أبرز نقاط نسخة الرياض متاحة الآن على الإنترنت.

صرّحت روهيت أرورا، الرئيس التنفيذي والمؤسس المشارك لشركة Biz2X قائلةً: “تُعدّ FDF نسخة الرياض منصة حوار وتعاون تهدف إلى تحقيق رؤية المملكة السعودية العربية لعام 2030 من خلال التمويل الرقمي. إننا فخورين باستضافة هذه النقاشات الملحة والقوية من خلال سلسة Frontiers of Digital Finance“.

كما وجّه السيد حسام عربيات، الرئيس التنفيذي لمنطقة الشرق الأوسط وشمال إفريقيا وتركيا في شركة Biz2X الدعوة للقادة لحضور الفعالية التي ستُعقد في دبي. ويضيف قائلاً: “يُشكِّل قادة المجال الذين يحضرون فعاليات FDF مستقبل التمويل بشكل فعّال من خلال مشاركتهم في هذا النقاش العالمي بالغ الأهمية. وتُعدّ دبي مدينة رائعة جدًا وجديرة باستضافة هذه النقاشات. ونحن متحمسون للغاية لجمع أبرز أصحاب العقول المفكرة في مجال التمويل خلال قمة دبي للتكنولوجيا المالية مع شركائنا، بما في ذلك مركز الابتكار بمركز دبي المالي العالمي (DIFC)”.

تُحافظ Frontiers of Digital Finance على مكانتها كفعالية يتوجب حضورها من قِبل “المدعوون فقط”، حيث تُعزِّز التعاون والابتكار وقيادة الفكر في مجتمع التمويل الرقمي العالمي. وفرص الرعاية في فعالية FDF نسخة دبي متاحة الآن من خلال الاستفسار على الموقع الإلكتروني.

للاستفسارات الإعلامية، يُرجى التواصل مع:

كاثلي بيلسي
مديرة الفعالية, بشركة Biz2X
cathy.beasley@biz2x.com
0586 651 50 971+

حول Biz2X وFrontiers of Digital Finance:

Biz2X هي منصة إقراض رقمية رائدة في مجالها تساعد المؤسسات المالية في تقديم تمويل للشركات من خلال التقنيات الخاصة المتطورة.

تُعدّ سلسلة فعاليات Frontiers of Digital Finance فعالية بالغة الأهمية يتوجب على المبتكرين في قطاع التمويل حضورها، حيث تجمع المسؤولين التنفيذيين لمناقشة الاتجاهات التي تُشكِّل مستقبل الخدمات المالية والتكنولوجيا.

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GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 9079919)

Child Malnutrition in Peru Driven Up by Poverty and Food Insecurity

A young Quechua mother, originally from Peru's southern Andes highlands, walks through the streets of Lima, carrying her young daughter in her lliclla (a colorful shawl made by native women in the Andes). A quarter of Peru's rural population under the age of five suffers from chronic malnutrition, clear evidence of inequality, which will have severe impacts on the rural child population. CREDIT: Wálter Hupiú / IPS

A young Quechua mother, originally from Peru’s southern Andes highlands, walks through the streets of Lima, carrying her young daughter in her lliclla (a colorful shawl made by native women in the Andes). A quarter of Peru’s rural population under the age of five suffers from chronic malnutrition, clear evidence of inequality, which will have severe impacts on the rural child population. CREDIT: Wálter Hupiú / IPS

By Mariela Jara
LIMA, Mar 27 2024 – Quechua farmer Felipa Noamesa, who lives in the southern Peruvian department of Cuzco, prepares a cream of fava bean soup for breakfast every morning with bread and vegetable soup with noodles. Her children are grown up, so her priority is that her five-year-old granddaughter does not suffer from anemia or malnutrition, two problems she frequently sees in her community.

“At my neighbors’ homes there are little children who don’t want to eat, who have swollen tummies, who have parasites, whose eyes look yellow and who fall asleep at school because they can’t stay awake,” the 44-year-old indigenous horticulturist told IPS during an interview at her plot of land in Paruro, the town where she lives with her husband, her daughter and her five-year-old granddaughter, Mayra, who she takes care of while her mother goes to school.”Peru will have a couple of generations with much greater health problems, much lower productivity and many more restrictions to generate sustainable livelihoods in the broad sense.” — Carolina Trivelli

At their house they don’t eat beef, pork or lamb, but they do eat guinea pigs (Cavia porcellus), an Andean rodent of recognized nutritional value, which she raises in a small shed next to her house, close to their organic garden.

“For lunch I make broth, stew or roast guinea pig and combine it with fresh corn, potatoes, vegetables from my garden and cheese,” she said in her home in Paruro, the seat of the province of the same name, located more than 3,000 meters above sea level.

Peru, a country of 33 million people, faces a political and institutional crisis aggravated by the interim presidency of Dina Boluarte, who in December 2022 replaced Pedro Castillo, ousted and imprisoned for an attempt to seize control of all branches of power after less than 19 months in office.

The institutional crisis is compounded by an economic recession, the reduction of agricultural production due to climatic phenomena such as El Niño, and a poverty level that climbed to 30 percent in 2023, according to official provisional data.

Against this backdrop, the levels of anemia and malnutrition in children under five years of age are of concern.

According to official figures presented last year, chronic malnutrition affected 11.7 percent of the population, but with a greater impact in rural areas: 24 percent compared to seven percent in urban areas.

Other forms of malnutrition also present worrying indicators: 42 percent of the population aged six to 35 months has anemia, with a higher percentage in rural areas (51.5 percent) than in urban areas (39 percent). Meanwhile, nine percent of children under five years of age are overweight or obese.

In the Andes highlands department of Cuzco, with a population of 1.4 million divided among its 13 provinces, child malnutrition reaches 14 percent and anemia 51 percent. It is only surpassed by the central-western department of Huancavelica, which reports 29 percent child malnutrition. This situation reflects the harsh impact of inequality and poverty.

Felipa Noamesa, a 44-year-old Quechua farmer, stands in her vegetable garden in Paruro, a village in the southern Peruvian department of Cuzco. Malnutrition is a common problem in her community and her concern is to feed her young granddaughter a nutritional diet so that she will grow up strong and healthy. CREDIT: Mariela Jara / IPS

Felipa Noamesa, a 44-year-old Quechua farmer, stands in her vegetable garden in Paruro, a village in the southern Peruvian department of Cuzco. Malnutrition is a common problem in her community and her concern is to feed her young granddaughter a nutritional diet so that she will grow up strong and healthy. CREDIT: Mariela Jara / IPS

A price the whole country will pay

Carolina Trivelli, an economist and researcher at the Institute of Peruvian Studies, which has worked for more than 50 years in the country, said that as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent economic crisis, access to nutritious and healthy food for individuals and families has declined.

“Unfortunately chronic malnutrition stopped going down and has remained steady at around 11.7, 11.5, 12 percent over the last three to four years,” the former minister of Development and Social Inclusion during the government of Ollanta Humala (2011-2016) told IPS in an interview at her home in Lima.

She said this has to do with the specific situation of families, the public apparatus and structural conditions such as high food inflation that affects the ability of families in a context of recession to afford food in sufficient quantity and quality to combat malnutrition. In addition, there is anemia, overweight and obesity.

Trivelli said these three elements make up a set of malnutrition problems that particularly affect the most vulnerable groups, including children from the poorest socioeconomic sectors.

Economist and former Minister of Inclusion and Social Development of Peru, Carolina Trivelli, is interviewed in her home office in Lima. She warns about the cost that the country will pay over the next two generations due to the high level of chronic child malnutrition, a problem that she says should be a priority on the public agenda. CREDIT: Mariela Jara / IPS

Economist and former Minister of Inclusion and Social Development of Peru, Carolina Trivelli, is interviewed in her home office in Lima. She warns about the cost that the country will pay over the next two generations due to the high level of chronic child malnutrition, a problem that she says should be a priority on the public agenda. CREDIT: Mariela Jara / IPS

When looking at the figures for consumption of food needed to address anemia and chronic child malnutrition, the difference between the consumption levels of the poorest 20 percent and the wealthiest 20 percent is enormous. So not only is there a problem of access to affordable food, but it is a major issue among the most vulnerable sectors.

“Peru is going to pay the cost of this, all Peruvians are going to pay it over the next two generations,” she warned.

The expert in agricultural economics said that “Peru will have a couple of generations with much greater health problems, much lower productivity and many more restrictions to generate sustainable livelihoods in the broad sense.”

Ernesto Fisher is mayor of San Salvador, a town in the province of Calca in the southern Peruvian Andes highlands region of Cuzco, which has one of the highest levels of chronic child malnutrition in the country. The municipal government has put a priority on attention to the problem, but he said they need the support of the central government to ensure drinking water and sanitation for the entire population. CREDIT: District of San Salvador

Ernesto Fisher is mayor of San Salvador, a town in the province of Calca in the southern Peruvian Andes highlands region of Cuzco, which has one of the highest levels of chronic child malnutrition in the country. The municipal government has put a priority on attention to the problem, but he said they need the support of the central government to ensure drinking water and sanitation for the entire population. CREDIT: District of San Salvador

Focus on water and sanitation

Calca, another of Cuzco’s provinces, contains some of the municipalities with the most worrying rates of malnutrition and anemia. For example, in the municipality of San Salvador, population around 6,000, child anemia stands at 26 percent.

This fact is related to the quality of their housing, most of which is in a precarious condition, while they have low levels of access to services, especially those who live in the countryside.

“From the mayor’s office we are prioritizing food security projects for raising chickens and guinea pigs so that families can improve their nutritional intake, and we are also delivering iron syrup to health posts to be supplied to children and their mothers,” the mayor, Ernesto Fisher, told IPS from San Salvador.

In a telephone interview, Fisher, in office since 2022, said that to eradicate the problem it is necessary to address water and sanitation deficiencies in his town. To this end, the municipal government is designing projects aimed at guaranteeing water resources for irrigation of family crops, drinking water and sewage services connected to the public network.

“Without sanitation it is impossible to talk about fighting anemia and malnutrition. We will not be able to complete it in this administration, but we will leave the projects on track so that eight years from now all of San Salvador will have running water and sanitation,” he promised.

He called on the national authorities, especially President Boluarte, to prioritize projects that help close inequality gaps such as securing water for different uses. “The rest will come later,” the mayor said, stressing that this should be the top priority.

Boiled ears of fresh corn, pieces of cheese and beans, and roasted corn are common foods in the diet of rural Andean families in Peru. However, the decline in agricultural production due to droughts and other climatic events has reduced their access in quantity and quality. CREDIT: Mariela Jara / IPS

Boiled ears of fresh corn, pieces of cheese and beans, and roasted corn are common foods in the diet of rural Andean families in Peru. However, the decline in agricultural production due to droughts and other climatic events has reduced their access in quantity and quality. CREDIT: Mariela Jara / IPS

It’s not just about budget funds

Peru’s public policies reduced chronic child malnutrition between 2008 and 2016, as documented by the World Bank, which pointed to it as a successful experience.

However, the current situation shows that the problem is no longer seen as a priority. Trivelli said that it is not just a question of budget funds, but of combining multiple efforts simultaneously so that resources are spent effectively.

“We can give a family all the food and training they need, but if they don’t have sewage, a safe water source, and proper solid waste management, the problems of chronic malnutrition and anemia are not going to be reduced. If those children go to a school that does not have toilets, we will continue to reproduce the cycle,” she said.

Statistics show that it is the poorest people in rural areas and children who are directly affected by policies that do not place them at the center of their actions.

Trivelli argued that anemia and chronic malnutrition in children should be considered a priority problem of public interest addressed by a body at the highest political level, such as the Presidency of the Council of Ministers, in order to overcome the current scattered approach.

“We are not talking about a health issue only but about a crisis of food, development and poverty, and it needs to be part of the public agenda,” she insisted.

Ambiq Apollo510 verbessert die Energieeffizienz um das 30-Fache zur Leistungssteigerung von KI an Endpunkten

Besondere Highlights

  • Die auf dem Arm Cortex–M55 basierende Apollo510 bietet eine 30–mal bessere Energieeffizienz und eine 10–mal schnellere Leistung im Vergleich zu früheren Generationen
  • Fähigkeit zur gleichzeitigen Ausführung von KI/ML–Workloads und komplexen Grafiken, Sprachanwendungen in Telekommunikationsqualität und kontinuierlicher Sprach–/Sensorverarbeitung
  • 4 MB On–Chip–NVM, 3,75 MB On–Chip–SRAM und Schnittstellen mit hoher Bandbreite zu Off–Chip–Speichern
  • 2,5D–GPU mit Vektorgrafikbeschleunigung für lebendige, kristallklare und flüssige Grafiken, insgesamt 3,5–fache Leistungssteigerung gegenüber der Apollo4 Plus–Familie
  • Unterstützung für Memory in Pixel (MiP)–Displays, die typischerweise in Produkten mit niedrigstem Stromverbrauch zu finden sind
  • Robuste Sicherheit auf der secureSPOT®–Plattform von Ambiq mit Arm TrustZone–Technologie

AUSTIN, Texas, March 27, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ambiq, ein technologisch führender Anbieter von besonders energieeffizienten Halbleitern für IoT–Geräte, stellt die neue Apollo510 vor, das erste Mitglied der Apollo5–SoC–Familie, das einzigartig positioniert ist, um das Zeitalter der wirklich allgegenwärtigen, praktischen und sinnvollen KI einzuläuten.

Die Apollo510 MCU ist eine komplette Überarbeitung von Hardware und Software, die die Arm® Cortex®–M55 CPU mit Arm Helium™ voll ausnutzt, um Verarbeitungsgeschwindigkeiten von bis zu 250 MHz zu erreichen. Die Apollo510 erreicht eine bis zu 10–fach bessere Latenzzeit und reduziert gleichzeitig den Stromverbrauch um das Zweifache im Vergleich zum bisherigen Spitzenreiter von Ambiq in Sachen Energieeffizienz, der Apollo4. Diese wünschenswerte Kombination aus Leistung und Effizienz ermöglicht es unseren Kunden, anspruchsvolle Sprach–, Bildverarbeitungs–, Gesundheits– und industrielle KI–Modelle überall auf batteriebetriebenen Geräten einzusetzen. Es ist der effizienteste Halbleiter auf dem Markt, der mit dem Arm Cortex–M55 arbeitet.

„Wir bei Ambiq haben unsere proprietäre SPOT–Plattform zur Optimierung des Stromverbrauchs weiterentwickelt, um unsere Kunden zu unterstützen, die die Intelligenz und Raffinesse ihrer batteriebetriebenen Geräte Jahr für Jahr aggressiv steigern“, so Scott Hanson, CTO und Gründer von Ambiq. Die neue Apollo510 MCU ist gleichzeitig das energieeffizienteste und leistungsstärkste Produkt, das wir je entwickelt haben.“

„Da Anwendungen in den Bereichen Gesundheitswesen, Industrie und Smart Home immer weiter voranschreiten, ist der Bedarf an sicherer Edge–KI für Geräte der nächsten Generation von entscheidender Bedeutung“, so Paul Williamson, SVP und GM, IoT Line of Business bei Arm. „Die neue, auf Arm basierende SoC–Familie von Ambiq wird signifikante Leistungssteigerungen für On–Device–KI bieten und Entwicklern und Geräteherstellern dabei helfen, die für das KI–Zeitalter erforderlichen Fähigkeiten bereitzustellen.“

Mit einer mehr als 30–fachen Verbesserung des Energieverbrauchs ist die Apollo510 in der Lage, einen Großteil der heutigen KI–Berechnungen für Endgeräte durchzuführen, einschließlich energiesparender Sensorüberwachung, ständig aktiver Sprachbefehle, Audioverbesserung in Telefonkonferenzqualität und mehr. Hersteller von IoT–Geräten, die KI/ML–Inferencing durchführen, wie z. B. Wearables der nächsten Generation, digitale Gesundheitsgeräte, AR/VR–Brillen, Fabrikautomation und Fernüberwachungsgeräte, können ihr Energiebudget erheblich erweitern und gleichzeitig ihren Geräten durch das SPOT–optimierte Design der Apollo510 mehr Funktionalität hinzufügen.

Die Apollo510 enthält alles, was für die Steuerung intelligenter Systeme erforderlich ist: ultra–effiziente Rechenleistung, umfangreiche On–Chip–Speicher, Schnittstellen mit hoher Bandbreite zu Off–Chip–Speichern und Sicherheit. Die Helium–Technologie von Arm auf der Apollo510 unterstützt bis zu 8 MACs pro Zyklus sowie Gleitkommaoperationen mit halber, ganzer und doppelter Genauigkeit und eignet sich damit neben allgemeinen Signalverarbeitungsoperationen auch ideal für KI–Berechnungen. Mit 4 MB On–Chip NVM und 3,75 MB On–Chip SRAM und TCM bietet die Apollo510 auch eine höhere Speicherkapazität als die Vorgängergeneration, was Entwicklern eine reibungslose Entwicklung und mehr Anwendungsflexibilität ermöglicht. Für besonders große neuronale Netzwerkmodelle oder Grafik–Assets verfügt die Apollo510 über eine Vielzahl von Off–Chip–Schnittstellen mit hoher Bandbreite, die einzeln einen Spitzendurchsatz von bis zu 500 MB/s und einen Dauerdurchsatz von über 300 MB/s erreichen können.

Aufbauend auf der secureSPOT–Plattform von Ambiq integriert die Apollo510 die TrustZone–Technologie von Arm mit einer Physical Unclonable Function (PUF), einem manipulationssicheren OTP und sicheren Peripheriegeräten. Diese Verbesserungen helfen Entwicklern, eine vertrauenswürdige Ausführungsumgebung (Trusted Execution Environment, TEE) einzurichten, um sichere und robuste Anwendungen zu entwickeln und ihre Produkte schneller zu skalieren.

Hersteller von IoT–Endgeräten können mit einer konkurrenzlosen Energieeffizienz rechnen, um leistungsfähigere Geräte zu entwickeln, die KI/ML–Funktionen besser als bisher verarbeiten. Zu den angestrebten Anwendungen und Branchen gehören Wearables, digitale Gesundheit, Landwirtschaft, intelligente Häuser und Gebäude, vorausschauende Wartung, Fabrikautomation und vieles mehr.

Die Apollo510 MCU wird derzeit bei Kunden bemustert und ist ab dem vierten Quartal dieses Jahres allgemein verfügbar. Sie wurde von der 2024 Embedded World Community in der Kategorie Hardware für die Embedded Awards nominiert.

Treffen Sie uns auf der Embedded World Exhibition and Conference vom 9. bis 11. April 2024 für eine Live–Produktvorführung.

Über Ambiq
Ambiq hat es sich zur Aufgabe gemacht, Halbleiterlösungen mit dem geringsten Stromverbrauch zu entwickeln, um intelligente Geräte überall zu ermöglichen und eine energieeffizientere, nachhaltigere und datengesteuerte Welt zu schaffen. Ambiq hat weltweit führende Hersteller bei der Entwicklung von Produkten unterstützt, die mit einer einzigen Akkuladung wochenlang (statt tagelang) betrieben werden können und dabei ein Maximum an Funktionen in einem kompakten Industriedesign bieten. Ambiqs Ziel ist es, künstliche Intelligenz (KI) in mobilen und tragbaren Geräten mit Hilfe von Ambiqs fortschrittlichen System–on–Chip (SoC)–Lösungen mit extrem niedrigem Stromverbrauch dorthin zu bringen, wo sie bisher noch nicht eingesetzt wurde. Bis heute hat Ambiq mehr als 230 Millionen Geräte ausgeliefert. Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter www.ambiq.com.

Contact
Charlene Wan
VP of Branding, Marketing, and Investor Relations
cwan@ambiq.com
+1.512.879.2850

Fotos zu dieser Mitteilung sind verfügbar unter:

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d64aa7b3–31bb–457a–8a24–8fed2fbbea57

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/998624f8–ab5f–46a8–89df–53e125d82767


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 9079855)

Ambiq Apollo510 offre un rendement énergétique 30 fois supérieur pour lancer l’IA sur les points de terminaison

Points forts des fonctionnalités

  • Apollo510, basé sur Arm Cortex–M55, offre un rendement énergétique 30 fois supérieur, et des performances 10 fois plus rapides par rapport aux générations précédentes
  • Capacité d’exécution des charges de travail par intelligence artificielle/machine learning (IA/ML) simultanément avec des graphiques complexes, des applications vocales de qualité télécom et un traitement voix/capteur permanent
  • Mémoire non volatile (NVM) incorporée de 4 Mo, mémoire vive statique (SRAM) incorporée de 3,75 Mo et interfaces à bande passante élevée vers les mémoires hors puce
  • Processeur graphique (GPU) 2,5 D avec accélération graphique vectorielle pour des graphiques vifs, clairs et fluides, soit des performances globales 3,5 fois supérieures par rapport à la gamme Apollo4 Plus
  • Prise en charge des écrans à affichage mémoire en pixels (MiP), généralement disponibles sur les produits à consommation d’énergie faible
  • Sécurité robuste sur la plateforme secureSPOT® d’Ambiq avec la technologie Arm TrustZone

AUSTIN, Texas, 27 mars 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ambiq, leader technologique qui produit des semi–conducteurs offrant un rendement énergétique exceptionnel pour les appareils IdO, présente le nouveau Apollo510, le premier né de la gamme de systèmes sur puce (SoC) Apollo5, qui occupe une position de choix pour lancer l’ère d’une IA véritablement omniprésente, pratique et significative.

L’unité de commande multipoint (MCU) Apollo510 est une refonte complète de matériel informatique et de logiciels qui exploite pleinement le processeur Arm® Cortex®–M55 avec Arm Helium™ afin d’atteindre des vitesses de traitement pouvant aller jusqu’à 250 MHz. L’Apollo510 atteint une latence jusqu’à 10 fois supérieure, tout en divisant quasiment la consommation d’énergie par deux par rapport à l’Apollo4, précédent leader d’Ambiq en matière de rendement énergétique. Cette association attrayante entre performances et rendement permet à nos clients de déployer partout des modèles sophistiqués d’IA conversationnelle, axée sur la vision, la santé, et industrielle sur des appareils alimentés par batterie, ce qui en fait le semi–conducteur le plus efficace du marché fonctionnant avec le processeur Arm Cortex–M55.

« Chez Ambiq, nous avons poussé SPOT, notre plateforme exclusive, à optimiser la consommation d’énergie afin de soutenir nos clients, qui, année après année, améliorent avec ferveur l’intelligence et la sophistication de leurs appareils alimentés par batterie », a déclaré Scott Hanson, Directeur technique et fondateur d’Ambiq. « Le nouveau MCU Apollo510 est à la fois le produit le plus rentable en énergie et le plus performant que nous ayons jamais créé ».

« Alors que les applications dans les domaines de la santé, de l’industrie et de la domotique ne cessent de progresser, le besoin d’une IA de pointe sécurisée est capital pour les appareils de nouvelle génération », a déclaré Paul Williamson, Vice–président directeur et Directeur général de la ligne d’activité IdO chez Arm. « La nouvelle gamme de SoC d’Ambiq conçue sur Arm offrira des gains de performances significatifs pour l’IA intégrée aux appareils. Cela permettra ainsi aux développeurs et aux fabricants d’appareils de fournir les capacités requises à l’ère de l’IA ».

Avec un rendement énergétique plus de 30 fois supérieur, l’Apollo510 est capable d’exécuter la grande majorité des calculs d’IA sur les points de terminaison actuels, notamment la surveillance par capteurs à faible consommation, les commandes vocales permanentes, l’amélioration audio de qualité télécom, et bien plus encore. Les fabricants d’appareils IdO qui effectuent des inférences IA/ML, tels que les appareils portables de nouvelle génération, les dispositifs de santé connectés, les lunettes de RA/RV, l’automatisation des usines et les appareils de surveillance à distance, peuvent considérablement augmenter leur budget énergétique tout en ajoutant plus de fonctionnalités à leurs appareils grâce au design optimisé pour SPOT d’Apollo510.

Apollo510 contient tout le nécessaire pour piloter des systèmes intelligents : calcul ultra–efficace, mémoires incorporées étendues, interfaces à large bande passante vers les mémoires hors puce, et sécurité. La technologie Arm Helium sur Apollo510 prend en charge jusqu’à 8 MAC par cycle ainsi que les opérations à virgule flottante demi, pleine et double précision, ce qui la rend idéale pour les calculs d’IA en plus des opérations générales de traitement de signal. La capacité de mémoire de l’Apollo510 est également améliorée par rapport à la génération précédente, avec 4 Mo de NVM incorporée et 3,75 Mo de SRAM et TCM incorporées, pour permettre aux développeurs une mise au point fluide et une plus grande flexibilité au niveau des applications. Pour les modèles de réseaux de neurones ou les actifs graphiques de très grande taille, Apollo510 dispose d’une multitude d’interfaces hors puce à bande passante élevée, capables d’atteindre individuellement des débits de pointe allant jusqu’à 500 Mo/s, et un débit soutenu supérieur à 300 Mo/s.

Basé sur la plateforme sécurisée d’Ambiq, secureSPOT, Apollo510 intègre la technologie Arm TrustZone avec une fonction physique non clonable (PUF), un mot de passe à usage unique (OTP) inviolable et des périphériques sécurisés. Ces améliorations permettent aux concepteurs d’établir un environnement d’exécution fiable (TEE) pour mettre au point des applications sécurisées et robustes, et faire évoluer leurs produits plus rapidement.

Les fabricants de points de terminaison IdO peuvent s’attendre à un rendement énergétique inégalé afin de mettre au point des appareils plus performants capables de mieux traiter les fonctions IA/ML qu’auparavant. Les applications et secteurs ciblés comprennent les appareils portables, les dispositifs de santé connectés, l’agriculture, la domotique et les bâtiments intelligents, la maintenance conditionnelle, l’automatisation des usines, etc.

Le MCU Apollo510 est en cours d’échantillonnage auprès de clients à l’heure actuelle, et il sera disponible au quatrième trimestre de cette année. Il a été nominé par la communauté internationale des systèmes embarqués pour 2024 dans la catégorie Matériel informatique aux Embedded Awards.

Retrouvez–nous lors de la Embedded World Exhibition and Conference du 9 au 11 avril 2024, pour une démonstration de produit en direct.

À propos d’Ambiq
La mission d’Ambiq est de mettre au point des solutions de semi–conducteurs à faible consommation, pour permettre l’utilisation d’appareils intelligents partout et contribuer à un monde plus économe en énergie, plus durable et axé sur les données. Ambiq a permis aux principaux fabricants du monde entier de développer des produits capables de fonctionner des semaines sur une seule charge (par rapport à quelques jours) tout en offrant un maximum de fonctionnalités avec des designs industriels compacts. L’objectif d’Ambiq est de rendre disponible l’intelligence artificielle (IA) là où elle ne l’était pas auparavant sur les appareils mobiles et portables, en utilisant les solutions avancées de systèmes sur puce (SoC) à ultra–basse consommation d’Ambiq. À ce jour, Ambiq a expédié plus de 230 millions d’unités. Pour plus d’informations, consultez le site : www.ambiq.

Contact
Charlene Wan
Vice–présidente de la stratégie de marque, du marketing et des relations auprès des investisseurs
cwan@ambiq.com
+1.512.879.2850

Les photos jointes au présent communiqué sont disponibles aux adresses suivantes :

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GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 9079855)

Apollo510 da Ambiq Oferece Eficiência de Energia 30x Mais Potente Liberar IA de Endpoint

Destaques do Produto

  • O Apollo510, baseado no ARM Cortex–M55, oferece eficiência de energia 30x mais potente e desempenho 10x mais rápido em comparação com as gerações anteriores
  • Capacidade de realizar cargas de trabalho de IA/ML simultaneamente com gráficos complexos, aplicativos de voz de qualidade telco e processamento de voz/sensor sempre ativo
  • NVM on–chip de 4 MB, SRAM on–chip de 3.75 MB e interfaces de alta largura de banda para memórias off–chip
  • GPU 2.5D com aceleração de gráficos vetoriais vibrantes, cristalinos e suaves, um aprimoramento de desempenho geral do 3.5x em relação à família Apollo4 Plus
  • Suporte para monitores de Memória em Pixel (MiP), normalmente encontrados nos produtos de menor consumo de energia
  • Segurança robusta na plataforma secureSPOT® da Ambiq com tecnologia Arm TrustZone

AUSTIN, Texas, March 26, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Ambiq, líder em tecnologia de semicondutores com excepcional eficiência energética para dispositivos IoT, está lançando o novo Apollo510, o primeiro membro da família Apollo5 SoC, que está em uma posição única para dar início à era da IA verdadeiramente onipresente, prática e significativa.

O Apollo510 MCU é uma revisão completa de hardware e software que utiliza totalmente a CPU ARM® Cortex®–M55 com ARM Helium™ para atingir velocidades de processamento de até 250 MHz. O Apollo 510 atinge uma latência até 10x melhor, reduzindo o consumo de energia em cerca de 2x, em comparação com o líder anterior de eficiência energética da Ambiq, o Apollo 4. Essa combinação desejável de desempenho e eficiência permite que nossos clientes implantem modelos sofisticados de fala, visão, saúde e IA industrial em dispositivos alimentados por bateria em todos os lugares, tornando–o o semicondutor mais eficiente do mercado para operar com o Arm Cortex–M55.

“Nós, da Ambiq, impulsionamos nossa plataforma SPOT proprietária para otimizar o consumo de energia em apoio aos nossos clientes, que estão aumentando agressivamente a inteligência e a sofisticação dos seus dispositivos movidos a bateria todos os anos”, disse Scott Hanson, CTO e Fundador da Ambiq. O novo Apollo 510 MCU é, ao mesmo tempo, o produto mais eficiente em termos energéticos e de maior desempenho que já criamos.”

“À medida que as aplicações em saúde, industrial e casa inteligentes continuam a avançar, a necessidade de IA de ponta segura é crucial para os dispositivos da próxima geração”, disse Paul Williamson, Vice–Presidente Sênior e Gerente Geral da Linha de Negócios de IoT da ARM. “A nova família de SoCs da Ambiq, baseada na ARM, proporcionará ganhos significativos de desempenho para a IA no dispositivo, ajudando desenvolvedores e fabricantes de dispositivos a fornecer os recursos necessários para a era da IA.”

Com uma melhoria de energia de mais de 30x, o Apollo 510 é capaz de executar a grande maioria dos cálculos de IA de endpoint atuais, incluindo monitoramento de sensores de baixa potência, comandos de voz sempre ativos, aprimoramento de áudio de qualidade de telecomunicações, e muito mais. Os fabricantes de dispositivos IoT que realizam inferências de IA/ML, como wearables de última geração, dispositivos digitais de saúde, óculos AR/VR, automação de fábrica e dispositivos de monitoramento remoto, podem expandir muito seu orçamento de energia, ao mesmo tempo em que adicionam mais recursos aos seus dispositivos por meio do design otimizado para SPOT do Apollo510.

O Apollo 510 contém tudo o que é necessário para a condução de sistemas inteligentes: computação ultra eficiente, memórias expansivas no chip, interfaces de alta largura de banda para memórias fora do chip e segurança. A tecnologia ARM Helium no Apollo 510 tem capacidade para até 8 MACs por ciclo, bem como operações de ponto flutuante de precisão parcial, total e dupla, tornando–o ideal para cálculos de IA, além de operações gerais de processamento de sinal. O Apollo510 também aprimora sua capacidade de memória em relação à geração anterior com 4 MB de NVM no chip e 3.75 MB de SRAM e TCM no chip, para que os desenvolvedores tenham um desenvolvimento tranquilo e mais flexibilidade de aplicativos. Para modelos de rede neural ou ativos gráficos extragrandes, o Apollo510 possui uma série de interfaces off–chip de alta largura de banda, individualmente com capacidade para taxas de transferência de pico de até 500 MB/s e taxa de transferência sustentada de mais de 300 MB/s.

Com base na plataforma secureSPOT da Ambiq, o Apollo510 integra a tecnologia Arm TrustZone com uma função física não clonável (puf), OTP inviolável e periféricos seguros. Esses aprimoramentos ajudam os designers a estabelecer um ambiente de execução confiável (TEE) para desenvolvimento de aplicativos seguros e robustos, e dimensionamento mais rápido dos seus produtos.

Os fabricantes de dispositivos de endpoint IoT podem esperar uma eficiência de energia incomparável para desenvolvimento de dispositivos mais capazes que processam funções AI/ML melhor do que antes. As aplicações e indústrias direcionadas incluem wearables, saúde digital, agricultura, casas e edifícios inteligentes, manutenção preditiva, automação de fábrica e muito mais.

O Apollo510 MCU está sendo testado com os clientes, com disponibilidade geral no quarto trimestre deste ano. Ele foi nomeado pela comunidade mundial incorporada de 2024 para prêmios incorporados na categoria Hardware.

Encontre–nos na Embedded World Exhibition and Conference, de 9 a 11 de abril de 2024, para uma demonstração ao vivo do produto.

Sobre a Ambiq
A Ambiq tem por missão desenvolver soluções de semicondutores de nível mais baixo de energia para habilitar dispositivos inteligentes em todos os lugares para impulsionar um mundo mais eficiente em termos de energia, sustentável e orientado por dados. A Ambiq ajudou os principais fabricantes em todo o mundo a desenvolver produtos que duram semanas com uma única carga (em vez de dias), ao mesmo tempo em que oferecem um conjunto máximo de recursos em designs industriais compactos. O objetivo da Ambiq é levar a Inteligência Artificial (IA) a áreas nunca alcançadas em dispositivos móveis e portáteis, com o uso de soluções avançadas de sistema em chip (SoC) de energia ultrabaixa da Ambiq. A Ambiq já entregou mais de 230 milhões de unidades. Para mais informação, visite www.ambiq.com.

Contato
Charlene Wan
VP de Branding, Marketing e Relações com Investidores
cwan@ambiq.com
+1.512.879.2850

Fotos deste comunicado podem ser encontradas em:

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d64aa7b3–31bb–457a–8a24–8fed2fbbea57

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/998624f8–ab5f–46a8–89df–53e125d82767


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IA, inclusion et développement durable : les indispensables dans le choix des candidats à l’intégration d’une école de commerce

RESTON, État de Virginie, 26 mars 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Alors que le monde sort d’une année mouvementée marquée par l’aggravation des conflits géopolitiques, l’incertitude économique, la volatilité des marchés de l’emploi et l’importance des technologies de rupture, les étudiants se tournent vers une formation supérieure en gestion sous un regard nouveau. Ils cherchent à gagner en compétences tout en abordant leurs études, leur travail — et leur vie — avec un objectif, selon une enquête annuelle auprès des futurs étudiants en école de commerce publiée aujourd’hui par le Graduate Management Admission Council (« GMAC »). L’étude montre que plus de deux tiers des étudiants potentiels reconnaissent que l’équité et l’inclusion, ainsi que le développement durable, sont importants ou très importants pour leur expérience universitaire. En outre, les trois quarts des candidats déclarent que les efforts en matière de bien–être — définis par les Objectifs de développement durable des Nations unies, à savoir l’éradication de la pauvreté et de la faim, l’accès à l’eau potable et à l’assainissement, le travail décent et la croissance économique — sont importants pour eux dans le cadre de la poursuite de leurs études supérieures, à telle enseigne que nombre d’entre eux écarteraient des écoles de leur liste de choix si ces thèmes n’étaient pas intégrés dans le programme d’études.

La technologie transformatrice de l’intelligence artificielle (« IA ») générative est également à l’origine de l’intérêt des futurs étudiants pour la formation commerciale supérieure. La demande des candidats a augmenté de 38 % d’une année sur l’autre, et deux étudiants aspirants affirment désormais qu’il s’agit d’une composante essentielle de leur programme d’études. L’intérêt était le plus marqué chez les personnes originaires du Moyen–Orient et d’Amérique latine, ainsi que parmi les Millenials et les hommes. L’intérêt mondial pour les programmes commerciaux certifiés STEM a également augmenté de 38 % en cinq ans et a atteint de nouveaux sommets en Asie, sous l’impulsion de la demande en Inde et en Grande Chine.

« L’enquête 2024 menée auprès des futurs étudiants révèle que les candidats s’attendent à ce que les études supérieures en gestion les dotent des compétences nécessaires pour faire progresser l’impact social dans le cadre de leurs objectifs professionnels et personnels. Leur désir profond d’acquérir des compétences « intemporelles » telles que le leadership dans un monde incertain, la résolution de problèmes à partir de données et la gestion efficace de la technologie et du capital humain persiste, même s’il est possible que leurs préférences en matière de formats et de destinations d’études peuvent quant à elles évoluer », a déclaré Joy Jones, PDG de GMAC. « Il est encourageant de voir à quel point les candidats d’aujourd’hui ambitionnent leur avenir et s’adaptent pour relever les nouveaux défis du monde dans un environnement commercial en perpétuelle mutation et prennent réellement en main leur carrière. Cela donne naissance à de nombreuses possibilités pour les écoles de commerce de répondre aux demandes en constante évolution des candidats et de l’industrie, grâce à une grande variété de diplômes et à la flexibilité des cours. »
     
La demande de flexibilité atteint un nouveau sommet.

Au cours des cinq dernières années, l’intérêt pour l’apprentissage hybride s’est accru dans le monde entier, au détriment de l’apprentissage présentiel. La plupart des candidats aspirant à un format hybride souhaitent passer la moitié ou plus de leur temps de cours en personne et le reste en distanciel. Cette croissance est observée dans toutes les régions, à l’exception de l’Asie centrale et du Sud, la préférence pour les études hybrides étant la plus forte en Afrique et en Amérique du Nord. Il n’est pas surprenant – et cela s’inscrit dans le sillage des conclusions des années précédentes – que les femmes soient plus enclines à préférer les programmes hybrides que les hommes, puisque 20 % des futures étudiantes affichent cette préférence, contre 15 % des hommes.

« L’enquête de cette année menée auprès des futurs étudiants vient étayer une série de preuves de plus en plus nombreuses montrant que l’appétit des candidats pour la flexibilité gagne du terrain », a déclaré Andrew Walker, directeur de l’analyse de la recherche et de la communication chez GMAC et auteur du rapport. « L’intérêt pour l’apprentissage hybride s’est accru toutes régions et tous types démographiques confondus, car les lieux de travail hybrides sont de plus en plus couramment proposés par les employeurs et attendus des employés potentiels. Si l’apprentissage en présentiel reste le mode de formation préféré de la plupart des candidats, sa prédominance parmi les candidats diminue. »

L’accessibilité financière et l’essor des établissements de qualité au sein mêmes des régions remodèlent la mobilité mondiale des étudiants.

Si les États–Unis restent la première destination d’études pour la plupart des candidats aux écoles de commerce dans le monde, les données des enquêtes réalisées ces dernières années montrent toutefois qu’un nombre de candidats plus important que jamais prévoient d’étudier dans leur pays de citoyenneté plutôt qu’à l’étranger, en particulier en Asie, en Amérique latine et en Europe de l’Est. Par exemple, la plupart des candidats indiens prévoient désormais de postuler au niveau national, avec un taux qui passe de 41 % en 2022 à 53 % en 2023. Parmi eux, la plupart ont invoqué l’accessibilité financière comme première raison, suivie de la réputation du système éducatif indien. Dans le même temps, les candidats de la Grande Chine se sont montrés moins intéressés par des études aux États–Unis, avec une baisse de neuf points depuis 2019, atteignant ainsi son niveau le plus bas depuis cinq ans. Si les candidats chinois associent toujours les États–Unis à une meilleure préparation à leur carrière, à un système éducatif de renom et à une situation géographique attrayante, leur intérêt pour les études en Europe occidentale est par contre demeuré largement intact, la majorité d’entre eux associant les programmes d’Europe occidentale, qui ont tendance à être de plus courte durée, à des frais abordables.

« Alors que les établissements d’enseignement de haute qualité et les opportunités économiques continuent de se multiplier en Asie, rien de surprenant à ce que de nombreux candidats choisissent de rester plus près de chez eux plutôt que de voyager au loin », a déclaré Curtis Alan Ferguson, associé directeur de Ventech China et membre du conseil de GMAC. « Cela dit, les programmes d’études supérieures en gestion aux États–Unis et en Europe occidentale conservent un avantage certain, en raison de la réputation bien établie de leurs systèmes éducatifs et de leur préparation complète aux carrières des candidats. »

À propos de l’enquête menée auprès des futurs étudiants

Avec plus de 15 ans de réponses à l’enquête représentant toutes les régions du monde, l’enquête GMAC Prospective Students Survey fournit aux écoles de commerce du monde entier des informations essentielles sur les processus décisionnels des personnes qui envisagent actuellement de s’inscrire à un programme d’études supérieures en gestion. Le rapport de synthèse de cette année tient compte des données recueillies au cours de l’année civile 2023 auprès de 4 105 personnes interrogées dans 132 pays du monde entier. Parmi ces répondants, 42 % sont des femmes, 61 % appartiennent à la Génération Z et 29 % de l’échantillon américain sont issus de populations sous–représentées. L’enquête continue d’explorer les tendances dans le vivier de candidats, les préférences en matière de programmes et les objectifs de carrière. De nouvelles questions ont été ajoutées à l’enquête de cette année concernant la demande des candidats en matière d’équité et d’inclusion, de développement durable, de santé et de bien–être dans leurs expériences universitaires. Le rapport prend également en compte l’intérêt croissant pour l’IA, l’évolution des attentes des candidats en matière de flexibilité, les motivations qui sous–tendent la mobilité des candidats depuis les marchés clés, les tendances en matière de certifications et de micro–crédits, ainsi que les tendances actuelles en matière de préparation de la carrière et de montée en compétence des candidats.

À propos de GMAC

Le GMAC (Graduate Management Admission Council) est une association qui regroupe les principales écoles supérieures de commerce du monde entier. Le GMAC effectue des recherches de premier plan, organise des conférences sectorielles, fournit des outils de recrutement et des évaluations pour le secteur des études supérieures en gestion, ainsi que des ressources, des événements et des services qui aident à accompagner les candidats tout au long de leur parcours dans l’enseignement supérieur. Détenu et géré par le GMAC, l’examen Graduate Management Admission Test™ (GMAT™) est l’évaluation la plus couramment utilisée dans les écoles supérieures de commerce.

Chaque année, plus de 12 millions de futurs étudiants consultent les plateformes du GMAC, dont mba.com, GMAC Tours et BusinessBecause, pour se renseigner sur les programmes du MBA et de master de commerce, entrer en contact avec des écoles du monde entier, se préparer et s’inscrire aux examens et obtenir des conseils sur la manière d’atteindre avec succès leurs objectifs d’études et de carrière dans le domaine du commerce. Le GMAC est une organisation mondiale, dont les bureaux se trouvent en Chine, en Inde, au Royaume–Uni et aux États–Unis.

Pour en savoir plus sur notre travail, veuillez consulter www.gmac.com

Contact auprès des médias :

Teresa Hsu
Responsable en chef, relations avec les médias
Téléphone portable : 202–390–4180
thsu@gmac.com  


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