
Abu Dhabi's Technology Innovation Institute launches two new AI models
ABU DHABI (ALETIHAD)The UAE's Technology Innovation Institute (TII), the applied research arm of Abu Dhabi's Advanced Technology Research Council (ATRC), has unveiled two major AI advancements: Falcon Arabic, the first-ever Arabic language model in the Falcon series - now the best-performing Arabic AI model in the region - and Falcon H1, a new model that redefines performance and portability through a new architectural design.In the small-to-medium size category of AI models (30 to 70 billion parameters), Falcon H1 outperforms comparable offerings from Meta's LLaMA and Alibaba's Qwen, enabling real-world AI on everyday devices and in resource-limited settings.The announcement was made during a keynote address by Faisal Al Bannai, Advisor to the UAE President and Secretary General of ATRC, at the recently concluded Make it in the Emirates event in Abu Dhabi.Built on top of Falcon 3-7B (7-billion-parameter), Falcon Arabic is one of the most advanced Arabic AI models developed to date. Trained on a high-quality native, non-translated Arabic dataset spanning Modern Standard Arabic and regional dialects, it captures the full linguistic diversity of the Arab world.According to the Open Arabic LLM Leaderboard benchmarks, Falcon Arabic outperforms all other regionally available Arabic language models, reinforcing its leadership in sovereign, multilingual AI. It ranks as the best-performing Arabic model in its class, matching the performance of models up to 10 times its size, proving that smart architecture can outperform scale.Separately, the newly launched Falcon H1 model is designed to dramatically expand access to high-performance AI by reducing the computing power and technical expertise traditionally required to run advanced systems. The announcement builds on the success of TII's Falcon 3 series, which ranked among the top global AI models capable of operating on a single graphics processing unit (GPU), a major breakthrough that enabled developers, startups, and institutions without high-end infrastructure to deploy cutting-edge AI, affordably."We're proud to finally bring Arabic to Falcon, and prouder still that the best-performing large language model in the Arab world was built in the UAE," Faisal Al Bannai said.Commenting on Falcon H1, he said, "Today, AI leadership is not about scale for the sake of scale. It is about making powerful tools useful, usable, and universal. Falcon-H1 reflects our commitment to delivering AI that works for everyone – not just the few."Falcon-H1 continues to support European-origin languages, and for the first time, has scalable capability to support over 100 languages, thanks to a multilingual tokenizer trained on diverse datasets.
Smarter, Simpler, and More InclusiveFalcon-H1 was developed to meet the growing global demand for efficient, flexible, and easy-to-use AI systems. Named 'H' for its hybrid architecture combining the strengths of Transformers and Mamba, it enables significantly faster inference speeds and lower memory consumption, while maintaining high performance across a range of benchmarks
"We approached Falcon-H1 not just as a research milestone but as an engineering challenge: how to deliver exceptional efficiency without compromise," said Dr. Najwa Aaraj, CEO of TII.'This model reflects our commitment to building technically rigorous systems with real-world utility. Falcon isn't just a model; it's a foundation that empowers researchers, developers, and innovators, especially in environments where resources are limited but ambitions are not," she added.The Falcon-H1 family includes models of various sizes: 34B, 7B, 3B, 1.5B, 1.5B-deep, and 500M. These models offer users a wide range of performance-to-efficiency ratios, allowing developers to choose the most appropriate model for their deployment scenarios. While the smaller models enable deployment on constrained edge devices, the flagship 34B model outperforms like-models from Meta's LlaMa and Alibaba's Qwen on complex tasks."The Falcon-H1 series demonstrates how new architectures can unlock new opportunities in AI training while showcasing the potential of ultra-compact models," explained Dr. Hakim Hacid, Chief Researcher at the AI and Digital Science Research Center at TII."This fundamentally shifts what's possible at the smallest scale, enabling powerful AI on edge devices where privacy, efficiency, and low latency are critical. Our focus has been on reducing complexity without compromising capability," he added.Each model in the Falcon-H1 family surpasses other models that are twice its size, setting a new standard for performance-to-efficiency ratios. The models additionally excel in mathematics, reasoning, coding, long-context understanding, and multilingual tasks.
International ImpactFalcon models are already powering real-world applications. In partnership with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Falcon has supported the development of AgriLLM, a solution that helps farmers make smarter decisions under challenging climate conditions. TII's Falcon ecosystem has been downloaded over 55 million times globally, and is widely regarded as the most powerful and consistently high-performing family of open AI models to emerge from the Middle East region.While many AI models focus on narrow consumer use cases, TII has prioritised building foundational models that can be adapted to meet the demanding needs of industry, research, and public good, without compromising on accessibility. These models are designed to be applied across a variety of real-world scenarios, remaining accessible, resource-efficient, and adaptable to different environments.
All Falcon models are open source and available on Hugging Face and FalconLLM.TII.ae under the TII Falcon License, an Apache 2.0-based license, which promotes responsible and ethical AI development.
Source: Aletihad - Abu Dhabi

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Khaleej Times
13 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
GCC countries' gross national income hits $2.143 trillion
The latest data released by the Statistical Centre for the Cooperation Council for the Arab Countries of the Gulf (GCC-Stat) showed that the value of gross national income (the total income earned by citizens and companies) of the GCC countries at current prices in 2023 amounted to $2.143 trillion, a decrease of 2.7 per cent compared to $2.202.7 trillion at the end of 2022. The value of disposable national income (available for consumption and savings after deducting taxes and other transfers) amounted to $1.989 trillion, compared to $2.515 trillion in 2022, marking a decrease of 3 per cent. The total value added of the non-oil sector in GCC countries at current prices reached about US $.513 trillion by the end of 2023, while the value added of the oil sector amounted to $ 603.5 billion. The data indicate that the contribution of the non-oil sector to the GCC's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) at current prices rose to 71.5 per cent by the end of 2023, compared to 65 per cent at the end of 2022, with an annual growth rate of 6.4 per cent. Mining and quarrying activities were the largest contributors to the GCC economy over the past five years, with an average share of 28.3 per cent. Meanwhile, manufacturing activities were the top contributors to the Gross Domestic Product within the non-oil sector, with an average share of 11.7 per cent. Most economic activities recorded positive growth rates in 2023, with financial and insurance activities leading at 11.7 per cent, followed by transportation and storage at 11.6 per cent, real estate activities at 8.1 per cent, public administration and defense at 7.9 per cent, wholesale and retail trade at 7.6 per cent, and education at 5.5 per cent. Meanwhile, mining and quarrying, along with manufacturing activities, witnessed a decline of 18.8 per cent and 0.7 per cent respectively. With regard to the components of expenditure on the GCC's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) at current prices, data issued by the GCC-Stat indicate that the value of exports of goods and services reached about $1.2587 trillion by the end of 2023, accounting for 59.5 per cent of GDP at current prices, with a decline of 7.1 per cent. Final consumption expenditure (the total amount spent by households, non-profit organisations, and the government on purchasing goods and services to directly satisfy their needs and wants, without using them to produce other goods or services) reached $1.245 trillion, with an annual growth rate of 7.5 per cent. The total capital formation (the total formation of fixed capital and assets) also amounted to $601.8 billion, with an annual growth rate of 5.5 per cent.


Filipino Times
16 hours ago
- Filipino Times
Dubai Court Orders Man to Repay Dh118,000 in Failed Currency Exchange Deal
A Dubai civil court has ordered an Arab man to return nearly Dh118,000 to an African trader after failing to deliver on a promised five-minute currency exchange. The defendant was also directed to pay Dh5,000 in compensation for financial and emotional harm. Court documents show that the trader, who needed U.S. dollars to pay Canadian suppliers, entrusted Dh117,913 to the defendant. The man had assured that the funds would be instantly converted through his local bank accounts. Instead of transferring the money, the defendant allegedly stalled and tried to reassure the trader with a photo of himself depositing cash at an ATM. However, the promised transfer never came through, leaving the trader unable to meet supplier deadlines. To maintain his business relationship, the trader paid his supplier again out of his own pocket and later pursued legal action in Dubai. Despite WhatsApp messages, invoices, and other evidence submitted, the defendant failed to appear in court or prove repayment. The court applied the UAE Civil Transactions Law, which requires anyone who unlawfully takes money to return it, ruling in favor of the trader and ordering repayment plus damages. The trader's larger claim of Dh100,000 in psychological and material harm was denied.


Al Etihad
17 hours ago
- Al Etihad
Emirates College for Advanced Education summer camp promotes Emirati heritage and digital innovation
17 Aug 2025 13:12 ABU DHABI (ALETIHAD)The Emirates College for Advanced Education (ECAE) has hosted its 2025 summer camp, themed Bridging Generations: Honoring the Past, Innovating the Future, at the ECAE FabLab in Abu by the college's Continuing Education Centre and aligned with the UAE's Year of Community initiative, the camp offered students aged 12-17 a unique hands-on experience that blended traditional Emirati crafts with cutting-edge digital fabrication two weeks, participants engaged in a variety of interactive activities that deepened their understanding of the nation's rich cultural heritage while equipping them with practical skills for the camp ran in two cohorts; the first from July 14-25, and the second from July 28 to August 8, ensuring flexibility for families and wider had the opportunity to work with advanced tools such as laser cutters, computer-aided design (CAD) software, and artificial intelligence applications, learning how to transform heritage patterns into innovative modern the programme, students collaborated in small teams, engaging in group projects that encouraged creativity, teamwork, and problem-solving. The daily schedule featured expert-led workshops on traditional crafts and digital fabrication, as well as cultural storytelling sessions where the participants interacted with community elders and shared personal experiences. The storytelling breaks aimed to nurture a deeper connection to local traditions and inspire students to reflect on their own cultural May Laith Al Taee, Vice Chancellor of ECAE, said: 'Bridging generations through education is essential for building a cohesive and forward-thinking society. By integrating heritage with innovation, this summer camp provides students with the skills and experiences they need to contribute meaningfully to their communities and honour the UAE's rich cultural legacy. This initiative assumes particular significance this year, as it is designated as the Year of Community.'The Abu Dhabi Heritage Authority was the official partner for the cultural workshop. A highlight of the camp was the final showcase event, where students presented their completed projects to peers, parents, and special guests, underscoring the importance of community, innovation, and cultural pride. Since its establishment in 2014, the Continuing Education Centre at ECAE has offered approximately 344 programmes, benefiting more than 7,000 children and supporting lifelong learning. The summer camp is part of this ongoing commitment, providing students with opportunities to explore science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields while staying connected to their cultural roots. Source: Aletihad - Abu Dhabi