Saudi AI startup Humain to launch new voice-controlled AI operating system
Posted On October 27, 2025
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Saudi state-owned AI startup Humain is building a full-stack AI ecosystem — from data centers and cloud infrastructure to advanced AI models and a new voice-controlled operating system called “Humain 1.”
Saudi Arabia’s ambitious push into artificial intelligence just took another bold step. Humain, the state-owned AI company chaired by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and led by former Rakuten and NEOM executive Tareq Amin, is preparing to launch its first major product — a voice-controlled computer operating system called Humain 1. The company says the new OS will allow users to talk to their computers naturally, telling them what to do instead of clicking icons.
“Rather than looking at icons where you click for discrete applications, now you (…) speak your intent,” Amin said at the Fortune Global Forum in Riyadh. The company sees Humain 1 as a glimpse of the future, where human-computer interaction is driven by conversation rather than mouse clicks or touch screens.
Backed by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund and led by CEO Tareq Amin, Humain isn’t just another software startup. Formed in May under the Public Investment Fund (PIF), the company is betting heavily on building Saudi Arabia’s entire AI backbone — from hardware and infrastructure to software and applications. It plans to construct massive AI factories with up to 500 megawatts of computing capacity powered by hundreds of thousands of NVIDIA’s latest GPUs over the next five years.
The first phase alone includes an 18,000-unit NVIDIA GB300 Grace Blackwell AI supercomputer interconnected through NVIDIA’s InfiniBand networking — one of the largest known GPU deployments in the region. This move positions Humain as a key player in the race for AI infrastructure dominance, competing in a space currently led by U.S. and Chinese tech giants.
Behind the scenes, Humain has been quietly testing its new operating system internally for payroll and HR systems. A company spokesperson said development started soon after Humain’s launch in May and that it’s now nearing public release.
The company’s vision is straightforward: build the full AI stack under one roof. “We’re building the entire AI stack — data centers, cloud, models, and applications,” its mission statement reads. “So you don’t have to piece things together. Out of the box, end-to-end, with HUMAIN as your single partner. Our belief is simple: AI isn’t an add-on, it’s the foundation of the future.”
By linking a conversational OS with large-scale GPU infrastructure, Humain is trying to do something few countries have attempted — turn national investment into a self-sustaining AI ecosystem. Whether it succeeds will depend on execution, but one thing is clear: Saudi Arabia isn’t content to be a customer in the AI race. It wants to be an architect.
