How to Win a Singapore Prize

If you want to win singapore prize, there are a number of ways to increase your chances of winning. One way is to buy a sgp ticket, which will give you a one-in-eleven chance of winning the prize. You can buy sgp tickets at Singapore Pools outlets.

The President’s Science and Technology Awards (PSTA) are the highest accolades given to outstanding scientists and engineers in Singapore. It is a sign of recognition by the President of Singapore for their contributions to the nation’s scientific excellence and growing community of talent. The PSTA has been awarded since 2009, with the objective of identifying and rewarding outstanding researchers and science innovators.

Several winners of the 2019 President’s Science and Technology Awards have been lauded for their ground-breaking work in diverse fields, from developing new cancer therapies to building smart cities. Some of the winners will also share their breakthrough discoveries with the global audience at the upcoming World Economic Forum on Asia-Pacific Innovation Summit, which takes place from Nov 2-4 in Singapore.

SINGAPORE — An Indian maker of solar-powered dryers, a soil carbon marketplace and groups that make electric car batteries cleaner and help restore Andean forests were among the five finalists for this year’s Earthshot Prize, an international competition to find solutions to environmental problems. Britain’s Prince William, who launched the 10-year award program in 2020, said Tuesday at a ceremony in Singapore that the innovative solutions demonstrated by the finalists showed “hope does remain” even as climate change worsens.

Khir Johari’s mammoth tome The Food of the Singapore Malays, which took 14 years to publish and weighs 3.2kg, has won this year’s triennial NUS Singapore History Prize. The judges, who were academics and eminent literary luminaries, said the book captivated them with its sweeping narrative of Singapore’s past and its ties to the rest of Southeast Asia.

AI Singapore, the national agency for research and development for the information technology sector, has partnered with the Harvard Prize Book Fund to launch the Online Safety Prize Challenge. The competition aims to advance AI research into multimodal, multilingual and zero-shot models that can better discern between benign and harmful memes, especially in regions with limited data on the latter.

The 2024 NUS Singapore History Prize was established to encourage a wider engagement with Singapore history and works that deal with it. It will be awarded by a distinguished Jury Panel chaired by Mr Kishore Mahbubani, Distinguished Fellow, NUS Asia Research Institute. The other members of the Jury Panel are Emeritus Professor John Miksic, NUS Department of History; Professor Tan Tai Yong, President, Singapore University of Social Sciences; Professor Peter A. Coclanis, Director, Global Research Institute, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; and economist Dr Lam San Ling. NUS will announce the winner towards the end of October this year. The prize is a cash award of S$100,000. NUS has also issued two special commendations, without attendant cash awards: Reviving Qixi: Singapore’s Forgotten Seven Sisters Festival by Lynn Wong and Lee Kok Leong; and Theatres Of Memory: Industrial Heritage Of 20th Century Singapore by Loh Kah Seng, Alex Tan, Koh Keng We, and Juria Toramae.