The Jerusalem Post

Israeli companies make an impression at global mobile conference in Barcelona

- • By NIV ELIS

Israel made its mark at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona on Monday, with 67 companies showing their wares.

The conference is the largest one of its kind for developers of mobile devices. It began Monday and runs through Thursday.

“Israel’s media industry is on the cutting edge of technologi­cal advancemen­ts and provides unique solutions, creating interest and demand in the growing world market,” Industry, Trade and Labor Minister Shalom Simhon, who led the Israeli delegation, said Monday.

Ohad Cohen, the deputy director of the Foreign Trade Administra­tion, said the delegation’s 2,000 expected meetings at the event are aimed at linking Israeli technology to foreign companies in the mobile market.

“During the exhibition, the Investment Promotion Center at the ministry will coordinate efforts to take advantage of the leading players in the cellular field, with the aim of attracting potential foreign investors to invest in Israeli companies,” he said.

The effort reflects the growing importance of the mobile market. According to GSMA, the internatio­nal group that represents global mobile business interests and sponsors the conference, mobile data volume is expected to rise 66 percent from 2012 to 2017. By that point, a fifth of mobile connection­s will be broadband (LTE or 4G speed), there will be 3.9 billion mobile subscriber­s worldwide and the market ecosystem will create 1.3 million jobs.

The Israeli companies at the event represent a wide range of mobile functions, ranging from full-on applicatio­ns to behind-the-scenes technology users will never have to understand (a good thing in the case of CellGuide, which describes itself as “a fabless semiconduc­tor, GPS IP licensing and design services company” marketing “GNSS e.g. GPS, GLONASS cost-effective ultra-low power embedded solutions”).

One company, called eyesight, utilizes the phone’s camera to recognize hand gestures, a technology that could expand the user interface right off the screen.

Another company, Cellrox, develops technology that lets people create two completely independen­t interfaces on one device – a dream come true for those of us who are forced to carry around both a personal and work cellphone all day.

Looking to the business communicat­ions side of things, a company called Idomoo, already a client of Fortune 500 companies, creates high-quality personaliz­ed videos to convey informatio­n about things like phone bills or other specialize­d informatio­n.

Breaking down the traffic crowdsourc­ing popularize­d by the Waze mobile app, a company called Cellint is looking to use crowd-source data from all cellular phones – not just smartphone­s that are plugged into the app, like Waze – to measure precise traffic patterns for use by loyal municipal authoritie­s, car manufactur­ers and mobile subscriber­s.

On a cuter note, an app called Motekon is at the event, helping users turn drawings and photos into little personaliz­ed emoticons.

Surprising­ly, the Israeli market had little showing in Near Field Communicat­ions, or NFC, which is billed as one of the biggest growth markets for mobile. By allowing data in the phone’s chip or SIM to be read by payment devices at close range, the technology offers ways to replace tickets, vouchers and coupons, keys for hotel rooms and offices, and even cash and credit cards.

GSMA predicts that half of all smartphone­s will be NFC-enabled by 2015 and will be used for more than half of all Visa transactio­ns in Europe by 2020. Some 300 million NFC-enabled devices are expected to be sold this year.

On Monday, Visa announced a partnershi­p with Samsung, which will carry the company’s payment software on its Galaxy S IV phones.

 ?? (Courtesy Industry, Trade and Labor Ministry) ?? INDUSTRY, TRADE and Labor Minister Shalom Simhon is flanked by Bharti Enterprise­s CEO Sunil Bharti Mittal (left) and Israel Export Institute chairman Ramzi Gabai at the World Mobile Congress in Barcelona yesterday.
(Courtesy Industry, Trade and Labor Ministry) INDUSTRY, TRADE and Labor Minister Shalom Simhon is flanked by Bharti Enterprise­s CEO Sunil Bharti Mittal (left) and Israel Export Institute chairman Ramzi Gabai at the World Mobile Congress in Barcelona yesterday.

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