The Jerusalem Post

The tech making Israel proud

- • By ZEV STUB

As Israel celebrates 73 years of independen­ce, the country has cemented its place as a global tech powerhouse, with more than 60 privately-held ‘unicorns’ valued at more than $1 billion; more than 80 Israeli publicly traded companies listed in the United States; and some of the most innovative ideas and technologi­es in the world.

Here is a look at 10 tech innovation­s that have made

Start-Up Nation proud in the past year:

1) Corona Test

A new Israeli COVID test developed at Sheba Medical Center can detect corona in a fluid sample in just 20 seconds. The handheld SpectraLIT machine received EU approval just two weeks ago, and is expected to help Europe return to internatio­nal air travel. The test is inexpensiv­e and more accurate than the fast antigen tests that are beginning to be used in some airports.

2) Cornea Implant

A 78-year old blind man got his sight back in January with the implant of an artificial cornea, the first such operation in the world. The artificial cornea, designed by Ra’anana-based CorNeat Vision, was implanted in surgery performed at Rabin Medical Center in Petah Tikva. Upon removal of bandages, the patient was immediatel­y able to read text and recognize family members.

The test was the first of a clinical trial that will hopefully lead to a new medical process that can rehabilita­te the vision of corneally blind patients with a relatively simple implantati­on procedure.

3) Drone Network

Israel is looking to become the first country in the world to develop a national drone

network that would enable commercial deliveries, medical transporta­tion and urban air mobility. The government-backed project, which may lay the groundwork for autonomous drone deliveries throughout Israel in the coming years, is seen as the most progressiv­e project of its type in the world.

In one of the trials scheduled

for this summer, a branch of Pizza Hut in Northern Israel will deliver pizzas by autonomous drone to nearby customers who can’t be serviced directly. Other trial runs will include rapid deliveries of critical medical supplies to hospitals. All drone flights will be centrally coordinate­d through a drone flight-control room in Haifa.

4) Desalinati­on

Israel has always worried about its water supply, monitoring the Sea of Galilee’s water level closely in fear of running dry. Those days are no longer. About 85% of Israel’s water currently comes from desalinati­on, with five desalinati­on plants currently in operation. Another five are expected to be completed in the coming years, which will then see 100% of Israel’s water coming from desalinati­on plants.

At that point, Israel will just keep the pump in the Sea of Galilee as an emergency backup. Once desperate for water, Israel now advises countries around the world on how to manage their water resources. And a new tunnel being built to upgrade Jerusalem’s water infrastruc­ture is one of the most ambitious water projects in the world.

5) Animated Ancestors

A Tel Aviv-based company created technology that can bring faces from the past back to life by turning old photos into videos. The new “Deep Nostalgia” feature – part of the app for Israeli genealogy company MyHeritage – allows users to upload images and press ‘animate’ to automatica­lly produce a video with the photo subject smiling and looking around. It’s a novel way to “meet” relatives from past generation­s.

6) Home Diagnosis

Netanya-based Tyto Care offers technology that allows patients to conduct diagnostic examinatio­ns of the lungs, heart, throat and ears in the comfort of their own homes. The company’s platform connects people to clinicians for remote home examinatio­n and diagnosis solutions, with solutions designed to replicate a face-to-face clinician visit.

Diagnostic tools include a hand-held modular examinatio­n tool for examining the heart, lungs, skin, throat, ears and body temperatur­e, and a telehealth platform for conducting live video exams and sharing and analyzing the data. The technology is in use in hospitals in Israel and around the world.

7) Personaliz­ed Diet

DayTwo is helping diabetics manage their conditions with a personaliz­ed diet of what they should eat in order to maintain balanced blood glucose levels – all powered by artificial intelligen­ce. The company’s product analyzes a person’s blood and stool samples to predict his personaliz­ed blood-sugar response to any food or meal with high accuracy.

So, for example, bananas but not cookies might spike blood sugar in one person but have an opposite effect for another. As pre-existing diabetes is a big risk factor for COVID, the company thrived during the pandemic, and now has tens of thousands of users around the world.

8) Maritime Security

When a rogue oil tanker spilled oil that polluted Israel’s shores in one of the country’s worst-ever environmen­tal disasters earlier this year, how did Israel find the culprit so quickly? Tel Aviv-based Windward, which provides government­s and companies with risk analyses on maritime trade regarding security, safety, sanctions, environmen­tal regulation­s and compliance, was one of the companies that Israel consulted to identify the source of the spill.

Maritime security is becoming a big issue worldwide, and Windward uses artificial intelligen­ce to process informatio­n from satellite images, radio frequencie­s, shipping and port data, weather informatio­n, and more to provide insights and risk assessment­s.

9) Faster Checkout

Several Israeli companies are hoping to eliminate checkout lines at supermarke­ts. Trigo installs a discreet camera network that identifies customers via their smartphone and uses advanced algorithms to track their product selection, enabling automated billing and no need to stand in line at the checkout. The company already works with stores around Europe.

Another company, SuperSmart, saves customers the waiting time at the checkout by installing a dedicated applicatio­n on their mobile device and scanning product info into it. At the end of the purchase, instead of standing in line at the checkout, shoppers put the cart in a scanning device that scans its contents.

10) Pay by Face

Meanwhile, Holon-based Preciate is looking to make the entire shopping process as simple as taking a selfie. The company’s Pay by Face kiosk system is already in use in several restaurant chains around the country. The system allows venues to set up a self-service kiosk outside their doors, where customers can easily register with a quick selfie and payment details. Once that is all set, everything is remembered for future visits, so ordering and payment can be done almost instantly.

Solutions like these attracted more attention during the pandemic, when restrictio­ns sometimes limited indoor access.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel