The Star Malaysia

Incubating tech-based start-ups

NUS to spend S$25mil (RM76mil) over five years and use latest technologi­es to do so

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NATIONAL University of Singapore’s (NUS) newest building, innovation­4.0, boasts a smart cafe where robot baristas use facial recognitio­n and machine learning technologi­es to serve regular customers the perfect cup of coffee suited to their tastes.

Going forward, NUS hopes the state-of-the-art, six-storey building will serve up more than coffee. It will serve as the base from which the university plans to seed, incubate and launch up to 250 techbased start-ups. It will spend S$25mil (RM76mil) over five years in the process and use the latest technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and machine learning to do this.

Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat announced the scheme called the Graduate Research Innovation Programme (Grip) at the official opening of innovation­4.0 or i4.0 at the Kent Ridge campus recently.

He said NUS will tap its highly-skilled pool of graduate students, post-doctoral researcher­s and staff to establish and run the start-ups, employing cutting-edge technologi­es that will give them a sustained advantage over incumbents.

Those selected will embark on a three-month business validation and venture creation programme, and work with tech start-up veterans to learn the principles and practice of customer needs and marketing sizing.

“Grip will move research outcomes from NUS labs to the market and bring the next generation of technologi­es to the Singapore and global markets,” said Heng, who is also chairman of the National Research Foundation.

He noted that by locating researcher­s and innovators working on cutting-edge technologi­es in one building “the entire value chain to unlock innovation and create value from our digital assets can now be found at a single physical location”.

Heng said the Government had invested significan­tly to ensure that the economy can exploit the new opportunit­ies enabled by digital convergenc­e and it was prepared to invest more.

But he added that the Government “must also differenti­ate and go deep” because many large corporatio­ns and countries are also investing heavily in digital technologi­es.

“So we will invest strategica­lly and play to our strengths,” he said.

Heng also witnessed the signing of a memorandum of understand­ing between AI Singapore and Element AI, one of the world’s leading applied AI companies. Element AI will help local enterprise­s to understand and adopt AI more quickly and meaningful­ly.

The first call for start-up ideas went out last month and the selection process is ongoing. Within three to six months of being selected, and after going through the venture creation process, the selected teams will be evaluated by a panel for the first tranche of investment of S$50,000 (RM152,500).

When the start-up subsequent­ly receives a further external investment or innovation grant, the second tranche of S$50,000 (RM152,500) will then be invested by NUS.

NUS provost and senior deputy president Ho Teck Hua said the scheme will encourage the university’s graduate students and researcher­s to do translatio­nal research that will benefit people.

NUS president Tan Eng Chye said: “We hope to create a strong pipeline of research-based technology companies that will introduce innovative applicatio­ns and technologi­es to Singapore and the global markets. Each of these tech-based start-ups would create innovation-based jobs, benefiting the economy in the long run.”

 ?? — The Straits Times/Asia News Network ?? At the smart cafe, robot baristas use facial recognitio­n technology to serve regular customers coffee suited to their tastes.
— The Straits Times/Asia News Network At the smart cafe, robot baristas use facial recognitio­n technology to serve regular customers coffee suited to their tastes.

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