Building Africa's AI initiative
- Cirrus Initiative
Considerations behind the largest and most complex undertaking of its kind in Africa’s history.
In collaboration with academia, Cirrus is a private sector led initiative bringing together academia and industry for the establishment of a world class artificial intelligence (AI) research and application capability for Africa. Although launched in 2019, work on Cirrus started several years earlier which included laying the ground work for Wits University to host the Cirrus infrastructure.
History
Cirrus was conceived over a decade ago but work on the first formal proposal started in 2017. At the time, Dr Dean Barrett, who works at the Brazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory (LNLS), was seeking a way to apply machine learning to the vast amount of data they were producing.
Working with his fellow collaborator at Wits University, Dr Roy Forbes, it soon became apparent that Wits had similar needs and should be incorporated into the requirement. This was detailed in a proposal document and in early 2018 presented to Wits.
Following meetings with stakeholders from across the university, Professor Dean Brady, Head of the School of Chemistry and Director of the Molecular Science Institute, with the support of Professor Zeblon Vilakazi, Wits Vice-Chancellor and Principal, took the lead on pushing Cirrus forward within Wits with the intention that this should benefit not only Wits University but all academic and research institutions in Africa.
Read more about the history of Cirrus.
What Cirrus is all about
Cirrus has three major components:
1) Cirrus itself houses the cooperation programs, the state-of-the-art computing infrastructure and the open learning programs.
2) The Cirrus FOUNDRY is equipped with everything needed to bridge what is called the “Valley of Death”, an