Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
Browsing: Community
Indian Cultural Centre (ICC) in association with Telugu Kala Samiti presented ‘Wednesday Fiesta’, on December 3, showcasing an array of colourful cultural performances, reflecting the rich diversity and heritage of the Indian community in Qatar. Embassy counsellor Dr Vaibhav A Tandale was the chief guest. ICC president A P Manikantan presided. The event saw Jayapal Madhavan and Praveena Lakshmi Ganta, presidents of ICC-affiliated organisations TRAQ and Telangana Jagruthi Qatar, respectively, being honoured for their significant contributions to the community. Source link
Podar Pearl School celebrated its 12th Annual Day with remarkable pride and grandeur under the inspiring theme 'One World, Many Dreams'. The event, held across all campuses, reflected the school’s commitment to nurturing creativity, confidence, and global-mindedness among its students, a statement said. Indian ambassador Vipul was the chief guest. School president C Muhamed Nizar, vice-presidents Pranav Pradeep and Dr Steffy Rachel Sam along with Dr Mohamed Althaf, and other board of directors, principal Dr Maneesh Mangal, and the senior leadership team also graced the ceremony. At Al Meshaf Campus, students of Grades I and II captivated the audience with performances themed 'Echoes of the Past, Voices of the Future,' showcasing the evolution from traditional ways of life to the modern digital era. A creative highlight was the contemporary retelling of classic fairy tales through the innovative production 'Cyberella -A Cyber Smart Fairy Tale'. The Primary Section further inspired audiences with its uplifting theme 'Horizons of Hope.' The event at Al Dafna Campus had the theme 'Shades of Celebration,' emphasising academic excellence, creativity, and holistic development. Indian embassy second-secretary Bindu N Nair was the chief guest. At Al Thumama Campus, students delivered an impressive showcase titled 'Aeternum – A Voyage Through Time,' taking the audience on an artistic journey across eras. The guest of honour was Hisham Aljundi, translation specialist at the Office of the Assistant Undersecretary for Private Education. Source link
Noble International School hosted its grand 19th Annual Day at Al Wukair South Campus, themed ‘The Resilient Verses – Chronicle of a Burning Planet’. The two-day event highlighted global environmental concerns and showcased the role of students in fostering peace, resilience, and sustainability.The chief guests were Indian embassy first-secretary Eish Singhal and the Ministry of Public Health’s Department of Non-Communicable Diseases Prevention Programmes’ director Sheikh Dr Mohammed al-Thani. The guests of honour were Ministry of Interior’s Awareness and Education Section head Capt Khalid Husain al-Shammari, and the school’s chief patron engineer Ali Jassim Khaleefa Jassim al-Malki. NIS chairman Hussain Mohammed U, general secretary Basheer K P, finance director Shoukath Ali T A J, vice-chairman Abdul Rahim Kunnumal, and other committee members were also present.Principal Dr Shibu Abdul Rasheed presented the annual report, highlighting the school’s achievements in academics and co-curricular activities. Grade XII and X CBSE high achievers were felicitated, and awards presented to students excelling in inter-school and international competitions. The celebrations were supported by vice-principals Shibudheen Maruthat, Jayamon Joy, Smitha N, and Robin K Jose. The cultural feast staged by the students offered an enriching experience, blending entertainment with education. The performances combined music, dance, and rhythm, capturing attention and acclaim throughout. Related Story Source link
DPS-Modern Indian School’s team comprising Syed Sohbaan Raza, Mokshith Basineni and Kabir Khanna clinched three remarkable wins and secured the top team score among 60 teams in the QPSDL Boys Debate League. Raza also won the best speaker award in the first league and Kabir the fourth best speaker award. Principal Asna Nafees congratulated the debaters. Source link
OpenAI turns 10 years: A decade that reshaped artificial intelligence, from chatbots to global infrastructure
Ten years that transformed AI from research to everyday reality In December 2025, OpenAI marks ten years since its founding, closing a decade that fundamentally reshaped artificial intelligence and its role in society. What began in 2015 as a research-driven initiative focused on building safe and beneficial artificial general intelligence (AGI) has evolved into one of the world’s most influential technology platforms and a catalyst for a global AI race. Today, artificial intelligence is no longer experimental. It is embedded in everyday work, education, media, software development and government services, while competition between global technology giants has intensified. For much of its early existence, OpenAI operated largely within academic and developer communities. That changed decisively in late 2022 with the launch of ChatGPT, which introduced large language models to a global audience. Adoption was unprecedented. Within months, generative AI became a daily tool for writing, learning, research and coding. By 2025, OpenAI’s ecosystem, led by ChatGPT and its API platform is ,estimated to serve around 600 million monthly active users worldwide, making it the most widely used standalone AI service globally.OpenAI’s success, however, also ignited a broader transformation. Google rapidly scaled its Gemini platform by embedding AI across Search, Android and Gmail. Microsoft positioned Copilot as an enterprise standard by integrating AI directly into Office, Windows and cloud workflows. At the same time, specialised players such as Anthropic and Perplexity AI carved out strong positions in professional and research-oriented use cases. One way to make sense of today’s AI landscape is to view it in four broad layers:1. At the consumer level, AI has become part of daily life. Tools are commonly used for writing, learning, translation and search, with platforms such as ChatGPT and Gemini driving mass adoption and introducing hundreds of millions of people to AI-powered services. 2. At the professional level, AI supports more specialised knowledge work. Services such as Claude and Perplexity AI are built to handle long documents, structured analysis and source-based research, making them popular among journalists, analysts, researchers and legal professionals. 3. At the enterprise level, AI is embedded directly into organisational workflows. Microsoft Copilot and GitHub Copilot automate office tasks and software development, delivering measurable productivity gains across businesses, governments and public institutions. 4. Beneath all of these sits AI infrastructure — cloud platforms, large-scale computing capacity, data centres, application interfaces and national AI systems. Operated by companies such as OpenAI, Google and Microsoft, and increasingly backed by sovereign investment, this foundational layer enables everything built on top of it. Across these layers, a relatively small number of platforms now account for the majority of global AI usage. ChatGPT and Gemini lead at the consumer scale, Copilot dominates enterprise environments, and specialised tools serve professional niches. Together, they shape how artificial intelligence is used in practice today. The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region has emerged as one of the fastest-growing AI adoption markets globally. High smartphone penetration, young populations and government-led digital strategies have accelerated uptake across the region. By 2025, MENA is estimated to account for 30-40 million monthly AI users, representing roughly 3-4% of global generative AI usage. While this is modest in absolute terms, growth rates exceed global averages, particularly in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries. Within the region, Qatar stands out for its high level of adoption relative to population size. With an estimated 700,000 to 1 million monthly AI users, approximately 25-30% of Qatar’s population actively uses AI tools. This places the country among the top AI adopters per capita in the Middle East, alongside the UAE and ahead of several larger economies. AI usage in Qatar is strongest in education and research, government and smart city initiatives, media and bilingual content production, and finance and fintech. Beyond adoption, Qatar has also invested heavily in AI infrastructure, data centres and cloud capacity, positioning itself not only as a consumer of AI but as a regional enabler. As OpenAI enters its second decade, CEO Sam Altman has outlined a clear strategic shift for the industry: from chatbots to autonomous AI agents, from content generation to task execution, and from standalone tools to platforms that do real work. This transition signals the next phase of AI development, where trust, regulation, integration and economic value will define success. Ten years after its founding, OpenAI represents more than a single company’s journey. It reflects how rapidly AI has moved from research to mass adoption and now toward becoming core infrastructure for economies and societies. For Qatar and the wider MENA region, the opportunity ahead lies not only in using AI, but in shaping how it is governed, scaled and integrated into national development strategies. As OpenAI turns ten, the global AI race is no longer centred on Silicon Valley alone. It is global, multi-layered and increasingly strategic. Related Story Source link
Athwif Abdulla (Grade XI G) of MES Indian School represented the Central Board of Secondary Education in the 69th National School Games in athletics under-19 category, from November 26 to 30, in Haryana, under the aegis of the School Games Federation of India. Competing in 100m, he was awarded the ‘High Priority Certificate’, an honour officially endorsed by the Government of India, reserved for athletes demonstrating excellence and sportsmanship at the national level. He was coached by Steeson K Mathew. Related Story Source link
The College of Pharmacy at Qatar University (QU) participated in the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research Conference (ISPOR 2025), in Tokyo, Japan, from September 28 to 30. The college was represented by students Abdelaziz al-Khalaf and Maram Abdelsadig.This academic accomplishment reflects the college’s commitment to supporting scientific research and enhancing international academic engagement for its students, a statement said. The students’ research abstract, titled 'Interventions Promoting the Acceptance and Uptake of Generic Medicines: A Systematic Review,' was accepted for presentation as a scientific poster under the supervision of Dr Zaheer Babar, providing them with the opportunity to present their work among leading international experts in health economics and outcomes research.During the conference, the students took part in a wide range of academic activities, including attending scientific workshops, visiting the accompanying exhibition, and presenting their research poster.Maram, a fourth-year pharmacy student, highlighted the importance of the experience, noting that her participation as an undergraduate student and a representative of Qatar provided a distinguished opportunity to interact with specialists from pharmaceutical companies, academic institutions, and various health-related fields.Al-Khalaf was of the view that the conference enabled him to understand how real-world data is used beyond academic study and its significant role in guiding healthcare decisions. ‘Meeting professionals from different countries and hearing about their experiences greatly motivated me to further develop my skills in this field.”This participation reflects the importance of engaging students in global research forums and strengthening the role of experiential learning in academic and professional growth, the statement added. Source link
DPS-Modern Indian School alumnus, Talha Faiz (Batch of 2015), has been featured in the Forbes 30 Under 30–USA-2026 list for his pioneering work in artificial intelligence and the energy sector.After graduating from DPS-Modern Indian School, he pursued higher studies in the US, publishing research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and earning a fully funded Master’s degree from Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics Institute. His professional journey began in mechanical engineering, with organisations such as Qapco, Chiyoda, and Intertek, before he transitioned into computer science and contributed to cutting-edge projects at Samsung Research and Meta.Today, Faiz is the co-founder and CEO of Candid Intelligence, an AI-driven company partnering with leading energy and engineering organisations across the globe. Talha has expressed his willingness to guide DPS-Modern Indian School students and parents interested in exploring how artificial intelligence is transforming the energy industry, a statement added. Related Story Source link
Manisha Dixit won the Indian Women Association’s (IWA) 3rd Season of the Mrs IWA – Beauty and the Brain pageant recently. Dr Rupa Asolkar was the first runner-up, Dr Anjum Singhal second runner-up and Rashmi Chanda third runner-up.Category Winners: Mrs IWA Ramp Walk Queen – Sarika Nirmal, Mrs IWA Flawless Skin – Dr Rupa Asolkar, Mrs IWA Talented Diva – Suparna Ghosh / Sudha Kodakkarente, Mrs IWA Photogenic – Manisha Dixit, Mrs IWA Witty Brain – Mauly Nirav Bavisi, Mrs IWA Crowning Glory – Anjum Singal, Mrs IWA Fitness Freak – Neha Pandere, Mrs IWA Confident Diva – Neha Kaushal, Mrs IWA Beautiful Smile – Rashmi Chanda, and Mrs IWA Congeniality – Naveenapriya Ragavendran. The jury comprised Rajesh Singh, Ramesh Bulchandani, Urooj Khan, Snehal Mandgaonkar, and Zulfikar Ali. Mentors and creative team: Priya Bhedi (internal jury and pageant coach), Vidhi Thaker Shukla (fashion stylist), Bhavna Sagar Naik (choreographer), and Sony Amarnath (makeup artist).Indian embassy’s deputy chief of mission Sandeep Kumar was the chief guest. Dr Manisha Tandale was special guest and Shantanu Deshpande guest of honour.“The third season of Mrs IWA has been our most inspiring yet,” said Priya Bhedi, IWA president and director of Mrs IWA. “Every participant showcased not only beauty, but immense confidence, intelligence, and passion. We are proud to provide a platform that celebrates the strength and spirit of Indian women.” Source link
Pakistan International School Qatar (Pisq) announced the remarkable success of two charity initiatives — the Girls’ Wing Bake Sale and the Cambridge Wing Bake Sale — organised to support the mission of the Qatar Cancer Society (QCS).The events highlighted the values of empathy, compassion, leadership, and social responsibility deeply rooted within the Pisq community, a statement said.The Girls’ Wing hosted a charity bake sale, led by the students of Grades 11 and 12 under the supervision of vice principal and biology teacher Nishat Wajid.The students prepared an impressive range of homemade baked items, showcasing not only their culinary creativity but also their commitment to serving humanity. Students from Grades 5-12 participated by purchasing items and contributing generously.The proceeds collected from the event will be donated to QCS, reaffirming Pisq’s dedication to charitable causes. The Girls’ Wing thanked Pisq principal Ch Muhammad Afzal, for his constant encouragement and for providing students with the opportunity to lead impactful community service initiatives.In another inspiring act of generosity, the Cambridge Wing of Pisq organised a charity bake sale to support QCS. Spearheaded by the Cambridge Students’ Council, the event demonstrated exceptional leadership, discipline, and community spirit. Nearly 50 students took part by preparing homemade items, managing stalls, and motivating their peers to support the cause.The bake sale was held under the guidance of vice principal Aliya Ejaz. Teachers assisted the students throughout the planning and implementation stages. All collected funds were formally handed over to QCS, contributing to their vital work in cancer awareness, patient support, and community health initiatives. Source link
