ISRAEL21C 6.27.14
Inbal Arieli, Viva Press, Karin Kloosterman,
and Shannon Delany talk high-tech.
Incubating companies focused on disabilities markets.
Prof. Hanna Dodiuk, right, with Shenkar President Yuli Tamir at a party celebrating the 20th anniversary of Shenkar’s polymers and plastics engineering departme nt.
Inside much of wearable technology will be Israeli ingenuity. Photo by www.shutterstock.com
OrCam’s smart glasses are meant to improve daily
life for those with visual impairment.
“Father of wearable tech” Prof. Steve Mann at the
WearableTech Conference in Tel Aviv.
Tech evangelist Robert Scoble at Jerusalem Venture Partners.
Omek Interactive’s gesture-recognition software
will be a big player in wearable tech.
From left, JVP Partner Yoav Tzruya, Nir Kouris,
Robert Scoble, JVP Partner Uri Adoni and
wearable computing/IoT strategist Julien Blin.
Tuvia Elbaum showing the ZUtA PocketPrinter to Dr. Harry Shum,
Executive Vice President for Technology and Research, Microsoft.
The inner workings of the PocketPrinter.
The inner workings of the PocketPrinter.
SpaceIL is heading for the moon.
Wheat is one of the endangered crops.
The Sensibo pod attached with two-sided tape.
The founders honed their smarts
in the 8200 intelligence unit.
VIDEO
The Fellows meeting with Ethiopian Israelis,
learning how they use community gardens as
tools of economic empowerment.
One stop was Leket Israel’s gleaning project.
Limor Nakar-Vincent, director of US Business Development, BIRD Energy.
The robots clean dust off 18,200 panels
at Ketura Sun every evening.
An Ecoppia robot at work
The Dead Sea has become a popular destination for medical tourism.
Dr. Harari’s DMZ Medical Center is based at the Lot Spa Hotel.
Dr. Marco Harari and his staff.
Dr. Marco Harari, center, with psoriasis patients Matthew Katz, left, and Sean Gallagher of Ireland.
Medical clowns at work in Rambam Health Care Campus, Haifa.
Beautiful to watch, thrilling to try yourself — kitesurfing at Tel Aviv’s Mediterranean beaches is a favorite extreme sport for Israelis and tourists alike.
VIDEO
The Sagie system’s bedwetting alarm.
Tal Sagie invented Therapee.
Photo of Galgal Refaim courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
This drawing shows how the mound sits in the Sea of Galilee.
This tourist spot isn’t the real deal. Photo by Matti Friedman/Times of Israel
Photo of ancient helmet courtesy of Israel Antiquities Authority.
VIDEO
Photo of Zedekiah’s Cave courtesy of the Tourism Ministry.
The Porter School of Environmental Studies.
Sackler Medical School.
Wolfson
VIDEO
Film by Elahn Zetlin.
Fresh salad with everything.
“Books are the neshama [soul] of this place,” says Ehrlich.
Pley allows for losing a few pieces.
A typical Pley package.
Pley CEO Ranan Lachman.
VIDEO
Debby and Zohar Elnatan with their sons,
from left, Rotem, Inbar and Shachar.
Cap 2: The family that plays together stays together
Hilla Ovil-Brenner is on her second startup.
Yehuda Neumark in Nepal.
Nobelist Prof. Dan Shechtman with Master Chef champion and microbiologist Nof Atamna-Ismaeel at the Mensch Foundation kickoff in Tel Aviv.
From left, founder Dr. Moshe Kaplan with
Nof Atamna-Ismaeel and Prof. Dan Shechtman.
VIDEO
These are a prototype for proposed Mensch Foundation cookies.
And the winner is … MeDusa.
The skyTran system will soar above cars stuck in traffic.
Israeli doctors saved the life of Mohamed Ashgar from Gaza
Fingertip sensor non-invasively assesses arterial health
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