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Title: National University of Sciences


1
National University of Sciences Technology

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
2
Pakistan
CHINA
AFGHANISTAN
Abdus Salam
INDIA
IRAN
ARABIAN SEA
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
3
Overview
  • Developed Developing countries
  • Essentials for national development
  • National University of Sciences Technology
    (NUST)
  • Research at NUST
  • Research Performance Analysis
  • Conclusion
  • Recommendation

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
4
Developed Countries
  • A Developed Country (not necessarily a rich
    one) has gone, sometime in its past history,
    through the cycle
  • improvements to its populations level of
    education
  • progress in (and application of) science
    technology
  • deployment of its own (and others) natural
    resources
  • wealth generation through manufacture or
    services
  • improvement to infrastructure (of education,
    industry, energy supply, services,
    communications)
  • leading to competitivity and productivity, better
    social conditions and higher standard of living

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
5
Developing Countries
Developing Countries
  • A Developing Country (not necessarily a poor
    country) is in the process of deploying
  • - its human resources (educated people)
  • - its natural resources (prospecting, exploiting
    and transforming into higher-value items), and
  • - its infrastructure (of education, health,
    industry, transport communications, water
    energy supply, environmental, etc) in order to
    make its economy more efficient and competitive

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
6
Human Resources Talented and Educated People
  • Talented people are born anywhere in the world
    they are not a privilege of developed countries!
  • Talented people without education, however, will
    remain talented but uneducated people!
  • Talented, but uneducated people
  • will not contribute much to their countrys
    development
  • some of them will even use their talents in a
    detrimental way

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
7
Educated, not just Talented People
Maxwell, Thomson, Rutherford, Curie, Fermi,
Dirac, Einstein (physics), Watson, Crick
(biology), Mendeleev, Pauling (chemistry),
Fleming, Pasteur (medicine).have dramatically
changed our world through their research followed
by its technological applications
All these scientists were not just talented, they
were found to be talented as they were
educated!Therefore, without education their
talents would have been lost for the progress of
mankind!
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
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Natural Resources Infrastructure
Educated people are a necessary, but not a
sufficient condition for the development of a
country
It is only with educated people that a country
can develop its natural resources and
infrastructure, hence its industry
A countrys wealth thus depends on its educated
people producing items or a providing service -
commerce or just selling natural resources does
not produce wealth
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
9
Best Capital Investment Country Talented and
Educated People
Japan is a striking example it was a poor island
nation with few natural resources and bad
infrastructure (as well as closed ports until the
late 19th century) - but Japan always had a
strong tradition for good education.
When Japan opened up in about 1880, it began
to complement the education of its most talented
people by sending them to study in developed
countries.
Some 30 years after its opening to the World
Japans navy destroyed the Russian fleet at
Tsushima. One generation later later, and (like
Germany) following its total destruction, Japan
(with less inhabitants than Pakistan) succeeded
to rebuild its country to become the second most
powerful economy on the globe
Arshad Ali NUST Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
10
Need of a Modern Infrastructure
Next to the need for educated people, a country
needs modern and competitive infrastructure and
proper tools as the working environment
An obsolete or decrepit infrastructure in
universities, institutes or hospitals, inadequate
equipment, poor communication networks, and to a
certain degree also low salaries etc. cause the
best scientists to migrate to better equipped
countries whilst the other scientists stay at
home
--gt A very negative Darwinistic process lt--
Arshad Ali NUST Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
11
The Negative Development Aid
A Developing Country with a poor infrastructure
(in particular in the area of science, research
and education) is often providing, free of
charge, its most talented people (whos
education it paid from its scarce resources) to
Developed Countries Therefore, investments in
education are wasted if no investments are also
made in the science, research and education
infrastructure ( salaries)
Arshad Ali NUST Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
12
Science cannot progress in Isolation
However, science has become rather complex, and
only very few scientists can make any progress in
isolation to limit the community of scientists
to a small group leads to common spiritual
poverty (A. Einstein) Most scientists in
isolation will soon cease to be scientists - as
such they will no longer be able to educate
younger talents, and their knowledge will
eventually have become obsolete. This was
recognized by Abdus Salam, and others when they
promoted institutions like the ICTP, .
Arshad Ali NUST Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
13
Help scientists from Developing Countries to work
at home
Governments should therefore make their best
effort to provide opportunities to its scientists
to work in their home country, and make it also
attractive for them work there. Governments
should also provide good communications with the
rest of the world In developing countries this
action is required by governments, as industry in
developing countries is usually not so much
interested to make large investments in science
unless the outcome promises substantial financial
returns
Arshad Ali NUST Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
14
International Basic Science Collaborations
At the same time, scientists must be also able to
collaborate with their colleagues from other
countries - as otherwise they would soon be out
of touch, i.e. they would become much less
useful (or quite useless) for the development of
their own country and there are plenty of
opportunities for international basic science
collaborations (CERN, FNAL, ICTP, GENOME etc
which are a good training ground - or an
opportunity to make a major contribution to
mankind
Arshad Ali NUST Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
15
SDH/PDH (525/622 Mb/s) backbone being upgraded to
DWDM 10 Gb/s

Arshad Ali NUST Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
16
Digital Divide in Pakistan
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Arshad Ali NUST Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
18
Existing Problems
  • Lack of good quality faculty
  • Lack of scientific research resources and culture
  • Poor ICT infrastructure within universities
  • Poor library infrastructure
  • Pockets of excellence in Research

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
19
Case Study
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
20
National University of Sciences Technology
Arshad Ali NUST Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
21
BACKGROUND
  • NUST Established 1991
  • NUST Awarded Charter 1993

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
22
BASED ON DECENTRALIZED MULTI-CAMPUS CONCEPT
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Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
24
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
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NIIT
An Institute with a PROGRESSIVE
Vision
29
PROGRAMS OFFERED
  • Post Graduate Programs
  • PhD
  • MIT
  • Under Graduate Programs
  • BIT
  • BICSE

Professional Courses
Contd.
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
30
NUST-CERN Collaboration
  • Dec 2000 CERN scientists visited NUST
    (Hafeez Hoorani, Ian Willers, Richard
    McClatchey)
  • Feb 2001 WISDOM II Project started at NUST with
    CERN and University of West England (UWE) UK
  • April 2001 Monalisa module development started
    with Caltech (Iosif Legrand)

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
31
GRID Research Group at NUST
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
32
Collaboration Projects
  • Little Monalisa and Development for MonaLisa
    Auto-topology Discovery Module -- Caltech,
    USA
  • IP Network Topology Discovery -- Caltech, USA
  • Grid Enabled Analysis Application for Handheld
    Devices --Caltech, USA
  • Java Based Claren Server for Physics Analysis --
    Caltech, USA
  • Data Warehousing Services for Grid -- Caltech,
    USA
  • Establishment of CMS Production Centre and LCG
    Grid deployment -- CMS CERN
  • Integration of Agents and Web Services in
    Semantic Grid --Comtec Japan
  • FIPA Compliant Multi Agent System -- Comtec Japan

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
33
Grid analysis demo by Caltech, CERN, KEK
(Japan), Sinica (Taiwan), NUST (Pakistan), UERJ
(Rio de Janeiro), PUB (Bucharest).
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
34
Performance Measures
  • Need to look at measures of research group
    success to assess potential
  • No of Research Students (MS/PhD Completed)
  • Research Funding
  • Research Papers Published

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
35
Research Team
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
36
Research Funding in USD
  • Total 1.69 Mil USD
  • Ms/PhD funding
  • Students visits
  • Lab equipment
  • CERN fellowship
  • PC-1 Govt of Pakistan

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
37
Research Papers
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
38
Current Status
Six students undergoing PhD studies (UWE, CERN,
KOREA) as continuation of their initial CERN
related research conducted at NUSTNine students
benefited from visits to CERNRich research
culture has been established at NUSTThe
knowledge gained is being applied in developing a
PTCL network monitoring application for real time
performance monitoring, fault reporting and
congestion controlA Grid enabled knowledge
management system being developed at NUST for
Medical Applications
Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
39
Conclusion
  • Knowledge is expanding at an exponential rate
  • Important to address the digital divide in an
    aggressive manner
  • Failure will threaten peace and development to
    the humanity
  • Scientific collaborations can play key role in
    bridging the digital divide

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
40
Recommendation
  • Developed countries scientists shall identify and
    form research collaboration partnership of mutual
    interest in developing countries
  • ICTP or similar organization can keep the record
    of retiring Profs from developed countries,
    willing to spend some time with academic
    institutions in developing countries
  • Help/support in building academic strength is
    much more beneficial than pledging money by
    international organizations
  • World Bank/UN shall ensure that a good percentage
    of the loan / donation is spent on education by
    the developing countries

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
41
Thanks
  • Email arshad.ali_at_niit.edu.pk
  • URL www.niit.edu.pk

Arshad Ali, NUST, Pakistan 23-24 Oct 03
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