Showing posts with label Keepod. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Keepod. Show all posts

The Next Generation of the Startup Nation



Whilst all of the Jewish State is totally focused on the fate of three young Israeli boys, here are some recent news items that illustrate the importance that the Jewish State places on its children and youth.

Statistics published by the National Library to mark annual Hebrew Book Week shows that children's literature is a thriving sector, with 879 new books published last year.  Education standards in Israeli schools are also improving and for the first time, the European Foundation for Quality Management recognized four Israeli schools for implementing its Excellence Model for organizational management.

Today’s curriculum isn’t restricted to reading, writing and arithmetic. For example, 700 children from 18 Israeli middle schools took part in Israel’s “Youth, Water & Knowledge” program and competition to help prepare the next generation of Israeli water experts.  First prize went to the Israeli-Arab Al Mutanabi school of Kfar Manda.  Children’s education also isn’t confined to the classroom. At the Mini Maker Fair at the Bloomfield Science Museum in Jerusalem, children were encouraged to build robots, games and 3D products in 3D printers, all using new technology. Half a million Israeli children receive after-school environmental education to promote the collection, sorting and recycling of plastic bottles.

Israeli students are bringing home more prizes than ever. Israeli 12th graders returned from the 2014 Asian Physics Olympiad in Singapore with five medals and three honorable mentions.  Meanwhile, pupils from Ilan Ramon Youth Physics Center in Beer-Sheva won their 45th prize in the "First Step to Nobel Prize in Physics" competition.  Israel has won the most prizes of all countries, since the US-based competition began in 2007. 

Three of Israel’s older students have demonstrated their skills by winning second place at an International engineering students’ conference in Turkey.  Other students at the IDC’s miLAB in Herzliya are researching the next big start-up by exploring the future of technology, media and human-computer interaction.




Israeli children often “make a difference” before they have even left school.  A group of 13-year-olds from the Harel School in Lod has made a breakthrough that can help developing countries, by filtering water, using ground pieces of rubber made from scrap tires.  And a tiny 840 grams satellite designed by a group of Israeli high school students at the Herzliya Science Center was successfully launched in Russia.  Duchifat 1 will help locate lost travelers in areas with no cell phone reception.

Many of Israel’s innovations are aimed at helping children.  Israel’s Andromeda Biotech was doing so well in the Phase III trials of its DiaPep277 therapy for Type 1 (juvenile) diabetes that it was bought by US pharmaceutical company Hyperion.  Israel’s Tal Sagie recently launched Therapee - the world’s first online interactive program for treating enuresis (bedwetting). Tal and his father Jacob at their clinics have already cured 27,000 children of the problem.  Meanwhile, Israeli industrial designer Yoav Mazar has developed the Doona – for those families with infants that want to avoid packing the car with both a car seat and a stroller / buggy.




Of course Israelis don’t just look after their own children.  Israel’s Dr. “Miki” Karplus recently explained some simple techniques that Israeli doctors use to save lives of babies in Ghana.  The BBC has produced a film “Keepod ‘magic drives’ put Nairobi’s children online” to show how the $7 device can provide billions with computer access.  Strangely, the BBC didn’t mention that the Keepod is an Israeli invention!  Now over to Northern Ethiopia where two Israeli physicians from Haifa’s Rambam Medical center, Dr. Omri Emodi and Dr. Zach Sharony, performed 91 operations in 5 days to repair cleft lips and pallets.




The Jewish Agency for Israel held a camp for 100 children (Jews and Arabs) from southern Israel whose lives have been affected by rocket fire from Gaza and by other terror attacks.  And for ten years, the Middle East Education through Technology (MEET) program has been uniting budding young hi-tech Palestinian Arab and Israeli entrepreneurs. Palestinian Arab anesthesiologist Wafiq Othman, however, told one of the most moving recent stories. Israeli doctors at Save A Child’s Heart (SACH) saved his younger brother’s life and inspired Wafiq to train with SACH.

I’ll conclude by mentioning some programs that give opportunities for young people from overseas to see the Startup Nation for themselves.  Firstly, Israel’s Big Idea Summer Camp will teach new technologies to children aged between 7 and 18 from 30 countries.  Israel’s Technion has two programs for students from the USA. TeAMS (Technion American Medical School) in Haifa trains students to a standard high enough for the top US medical centers and University hospitals.  And the Technion’s latest exchange program with the University of Connecticut promotes joint research into new energy technologies.

Finally, there were over 13,000 submissions to the “My Family Story” competition for the best 3-D Art representation of their family history.  42 youngsters won a trip to Israel and will have their entries displayed at Tel Aviv University’s Beit Hatfutsot Museum of the Jewish People. 


We pray for the safe return of our children Gil-ad Shaer, Naftali Fraenkel and Eyal Yifrach.

The future of the Jewish nation is the next generation.

Michael Ordman writes a free weekly newsletter containing positive news stories about Israel.
For a free subscription, email a request to michael.goodnewsisrael@gmail.com

Right Down to the Wire



The excitement of living in the Start-up Nation can be electric.  You can often feel the buzz from highly charged Israeli entrepreneurs developing their latest wired and wireless innovative products.  You never know, until the last moment, what new life-changing Israeli devices and discoveries are going to be announced. This week I wanted to share some of the latest news that is literally coming over the wire almost every day in the Jewish State.

Regular readers of this blog know that I like to begin with medical news items.  Acwire from Israel’s MediValve is a unique guide-wire tool that has just received European and FDA approval. It helps cardiologists perform the extremely difficult task of implanting heart valves at the exact required spot, thus saving thousands of lives.  In the US, 60,000 deaths from pressure ulcers (bedsores) can also be prevented if more hospitals follow the lead of those installing the MAP (Monitor Alert Protect) system from Israel’s Wellsense. A pressure-sensing mat alerts nurses to reposition patients regularly. 


The wiring of the brain is still a mystery. But as Dr Ofer Yizhar of Israel’s Weizmann Institute explains, the new neuroscience of optogenetics examines light-specific activation or suppression of neurons in the brain.  It could help us understand memory problems, schizophrenia and autism.  Moving further down the body, the Israel transplant center has announced that over 200 patients no longer need to be wired up to dialysis machines thanks to kidney transplants.  Last year 90,000 Israelis signed new ADI organ donor cards, bringing the total of registered holders to 787,087.

They say that all successful entrepreneurs started small.  So it is handy that Yissum, the Research and Development Company of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, has developed micro-sized electrical circuit wiring from low-cost oxidation-resistant copper nano-inks.  They replace the expensive silver inks that make up circuits in RFID-tags, solar cells, sensors and electrodes for displays.  While we are talking small, Tel Aviv hosts NanoIsrael 2014, the fourth bi-annual conference & exhibition in March.  Over 1,200 nano-tech professionals are attending from over 36 countries. The exciting possibilities include ultra tiny storage systems, contact lens sensors for diabetics, protective clothing, water purification, renewable energy and super-fast computers.

We now travel on the high wire from the micro to the macro. Forty students at Herzliya High School have built a low-cost micro-satellite to be launched by Russia in April.  The 10cm cube will circle the Earth every 90 minutes and form part of a network of international satellites designed to provide a cell phone lifeline to travelers in remote areas.  Back in civilization, Israeli start-up Glove has an app to help mobile phone users select the network provider with the consistently best reception. 


Israeli technology is hard-wired into the core of most of today’s computers and mobile hardware.  Indeed it seems to be chips with everything, what with Israel’s Altair Semiconductor installing its 4G communications chipset in the new Google/HP Chromebooks.  The 4G chips access the Internet at ten times the speed of 3G chips.  You can even put a microchip from an Israeli start-up called Oggii on your dog to check if it’s healthy. Or you can boost the Wi-Fi signal to any laptop, tablet or smartphone with the unique “implicit beamforming” technology from Israel’s Wi-Fi chip manufacturer Celeno.

Rafael Advanced Defense Systems will definitely be beaming if its new Iron Beam system performs well at next month's Singapore Air Show. Iron Beam’s high-energy laser based air-defense system complements Iron Dome by intercepting very short-range rockets, mortar, and airborne target attacks.  Meanwhile, the UK’s Economist magazine gave rare praise to the Israeli whose research led to a radar system that helps avoid collisions – between aircraft and flocks of birds.  And you can watch the ultimate fly-by-wire video as Israel’s unmanned flying car completed its first fully automatic test flights.  The Air Mule Vertical Takeoff and Landing craft from Israel’s Tactical Robotics has great potential for use as an air ambulance.


I’ll finish by descending from the clouds to describe two contrasting Israeli innovations.  You can’t get more low-tech than a collapsible camping grill made from stainless steel wires.  Israeli Roee Magdassi (a student at the Bezalel Design Academy in Jerusalem) has designed the Stakes camping grill that folds up to the size of a paper towel when not in use.  His IDF service inspired him to make a lightweight alternative to the ones he had to carry in his army backpack.  Finally, the makers of the seven-dollar Israeli-developed Keepod “thumb drive” have launched the first project in their program to “computer-enable" some of the world’s 5 billion people who don’t have access to technology.  Via Crowdsourcing, you can wire some funds to help 1500 of Nairobi’s slum dwellers get on-line and have a new chance in life.

Stay wired in for more news of exciting Israeli innovations.

Michael Ordman writes a free weekly newsletter containing positive news stories about Israel.
For a free subscription, email a request to michael.goodnewsisrael@gmail.com