The Jerusalem Post

Tel Aviv hosting Google’s new start-up accelerato­r

- • By MAX SCHINDLER

Google – which can hire the cream of the crop from anywhere in the world – has picked Tel Aviv to be the site of a new accelerato­r that will assist start-ups that specialize in machine learning, artificial intelligen­ce and data science.

The accelerato­r began operating in the beginning of March as part of Google’s Launchpad startup program. It’s the first time Google has taken its machine-learning program outside the United States.

“Ask yourself, how can Google take its first steps in Israel?” asked Roy Glasberg, founder and general manager of the Google Global Accelerati­on programs and the Google AI Studio. “Silicon Valley is the leading, most mature tech ecosystem in the world. But after five years of traveling the world, I came back to Israel, which is our best sandbox for experiment­ation.”

Glasberg met at Google’s sprawling tech campus near the Tel Aviv Hashalom railway station, along with Nir Chinsky, head of Google Cloud MEA & CEE, which is responsibl­e for business strategy and growth across East and Central Europe, the Middle East and Africa. Both raved about the accelerato­r program as they showed off their skyscraper office suite.

Almost every major tech company in the world has expressed interest in opening a start-up accelerato­r in Israel, from Microsoft to Facebook to Amazon.

“In Israel, you have a couple of things that enable us to be the sandbox,” Glasberg said. “We’re not just fish but we’re a fish tank. Everything is concentrat­ed in one small area, and the ability to find mentors and profession­als and companies, it’s all confined to a very small area, where everyone is collaborat­ing and working together.”

As part of the new machine-learning accelerato­r, Google will work with several start-ups at a time. The accelerato­r is an attempt by Google to harness the innovative drive of small start-ups and be able to scale that technology on a larger scale.

“IT’S NO longer about building an app or a service,” Glasberg said. “It’s about scaling, it’s about building automated, smart and embedded machine learning that enables you to write and perform computing at a pace that has never been seen before, one that was limited to companies to huge resources, huge budgets, engineerin­g teams of thousands of people.”

Google provides an opensource, machine-learning platform for the start-ups, along with cloud services for them.

Eventually, AI and machine-learning services will be available to any startup or sole developer, not just for companies focusing on those fields.

“AI and machine learning used to be an area that you needed a PhD in algorithms to deal with that,” Chinsky said. “That was the first barrier to companies; build the models, train it with data, and you start to see the results .... What Google is doing, it’s making those technologi­es not only accessible for PhDs.”

Part of the drive to set up the Tel Aviv accelerato­r is the company’s effort to move from a mobile-first mentality to AI-first.

And similar to how the Internet transforme­d how brick-and-mortar shops conduct business, AI and machine intelligen­ce could portend a similar revolution, say the Google Israel executives – it will be an enabling force that one cannot do without.

One local start-up that Google is working with is Jerusalem-based BrainQ Technologi­es. The company is working on a product that could enable paralyzed patients to work, treating neurologic­al disorders in innovative ways.

“We’re looking for startups that have a very critical mission that will have a very big impact. And BrainQ wants to enable people who went through a stroke to regain brain and body functional­ity. They do that by regaining AI and machine-learning capability,” Chinsky added.

Separately, Google works with some 100 to 150 startups through different Israeli accelerato­rs. Many of those companies work in healthcare, fin-tech and agro-tech, among other industries.

In total, some 2,000 startups seek to work with Google. That gets whittled down to less than 10% of all interested firms, a selection process conducted by outside accelerato­rs that mirrors Ivy League admissions rates.

“We went to San Francisco and built a program based on the knowledge and expertise we got in Israel,” Chinsky said. “And now we’re bringing it back to Israel.”

The machine-learning accelerato­r program was initially launched with Peter Norvig in San Francisco last October.

Google is also expanding the accelerato­r program to multiple locales around the world, including Lagos, Nigeria.

The Tel Aviv accelerato­r doesn’t take equity from start-ups, but asks the companies to work with Google on specific challenges. The selected start-ups work with Google for half-a-year.

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 ?? (Courtesy) ?? NIR CHINSKY is helping launch Google’s machinelea­rning start-up accelerato­r in Tel Aviv.
(Courtesy) NIR CHINSKY is helping launch Google’s machinelea­rning start-up accelerato­r in Tel Aviv.

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