Israel and its High Tech Revolution

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Eric Schmidt

Eric Schmidt‏ shares in his personal Google+ account what he has learned from his recent trip to Israel  

Source: Eric Schmidt‏'s Google+ account

Israel has few natural resources and has about half of its GDP tied up in export oriented businesses. The country is simply too small and with little opportunity to cooperate in traditional business with its neighbors, Israel has become a high tech hub. Google has a large engineering and sales operation in Israel, whose achievements are definitely world-class.

In our meetings four things became clear about Israel as a high tech, innovation engine:

a) The country has a long commitment to universities and science. The Prime Minister talked about the number of Nobel Prize winners, and his commitment to education, in much detail. Israel is an example of a country that succeeds because they emphasize science and engineering, not unlike South Korea but in a very different context.

b) The universal military service is integral to this process. Students (male and female) graduate two or three years later than they do in the United States and in most of Europe, and are simply more focused, better trained and more organized as a result. The teams are often led by someone in his early thirties and the teams are often people who worked together intensely during their military service. The core areas of Computer Science now revolve around data analytics, big data, artificial intelligence, and large networks of information. These are the same areas developed in the intelligence parts of the military, leading to teams already expert in these areas before they form the companies. Surely the new Israeli push in cyberintelligence will generate many new network security startups, for example.


c) Israel technology benefits greatly from the Internet. The traditional route to success is a technology group in Israel and and sales and marketing group in the Bay Area or New York. The Internet makes this much much more likely to succeed as geography fades away. There are a number of "under the radar" Israeli firms serving customers in Turkey, China, and other Asian countries where they would never have been able to operate before.

d) The security situation may actually help as some told us that there is a "live for today" attitude, taking more risks in business than other countries would. Another possibility is simply the age of the country: with perhaps forty years of socialism followed by more recent twenty years of capitalism, there are simply too few incumbencies to oppose innovation. For more on this, read the "Startup Nation" book.

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'Israel is a greentech power'

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Ecological Farm Solar Panel

PMO, Foreign Ministry and Environmental Protection Ministry launch international campaign meant to present Israel as world leader in development of eco-tech

Source: Ynetnews

 

 

Israel has launched its first ever international "green" campaign, meant to promote the nation's achievements in the field of environmental technology.

The campaign, put together by the Prime Minister's Office, Foreign Ministry and Environmental Protection Ministry, includes an international ad campaign, which is set to air, among others, on international TV networks such as CNN.

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Google chairman Eric Schmidt: Israel is a 'tech miracle'

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Eric Schmidt

Speaking at a Tel Aviv conference, Schmidt praises Israel's engineers and development centers and discusses the role of technology in the region's political upheaval.

Source: Haaretz

Google chairman Eric Schmidt said on Monday that the company's development centers in Israel are among the company's most efficient and that Google is constantly expanding them.

Speaking at a Tel Aviv conference called "Big Tent," Schmidt said that the quality of Israel's engineers is very high, not least due to the country's universities and the training acquired in the army. He also praised local salespeople as among the best in the world, saying they continue to contribute to the company's profits.

"We love Israel," Schmidt said, drawing applause from the crowd.

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BGU students develop autonomous drone

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Parrot AR.Drone

Software engineering students' program enables AR Drone helicopter to fly automatically, without remote control

Source: Ynetnews

Maxim Kirilov, Yuri Bakolin, and Yuval Kovler, three software engineering students from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, have developed a program that makes the AR Drone helicopter autonomous – allowing it to fly without being remote-controlled.

With the new program, the drone – equipped with two cameras and an ultrasound sensor – receives instructions by Wi-fi from a computer in range.

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Israel’s Water Tech Could Aid India’s Holy River

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Boat on Ganges

GE’s Ecoimagination, the project aimed at fostering innovation in clean technology, dedicated a cover article to how Israeli water technologies are working to clean up the holy Ganges river in India.

Source: Israelnewtech

The Ganges River provides India with more than 25 per cent of India’s total water resources. The river is considered sacred for Hindus, who believe its waters represent the goddess Gaṅgā. It is also consistently ranked as one of the filthiest rivers in the world. Bacteria levels in parts of the Ganges are 120 times greater than what is considered a safe level for bathing. Much of the river’s pollution comes not only from industrial and agricultural waste but from direct human contact.

The World Bank has committed $1 Billion to the project, called the “Ganges Action Plan”.

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Gait analysis made easy

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people walk

Israeli startup SensoGo’s walking monitor aims to make orthopedic assessments more accurate and accessible.

Source: MFA

For millions of adults with the degenerative joint disease osteoarthritis -- the most common form of arthritis -- studying the way they walk provides clues to the severity and progression of the disease as well as how to treat it.

Israeli startup SensoGo is developing a new, inexpensive solution for gait analysis conceived by computer engineers and an orthopedist from Barzilai Medical Center in Ashkelon.

Existing walking labs are too expensive to be a practical option for gait analysis, considering that about 27 million Americans alone have osteoarthritis and millions more suffer from other orthopedic problems affecting their legs. SensoGo aims to turn a walking lab into a common instrument in the orthopedist’s office.

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