Israel Innovation 2.0

Inside Israeli Technology

Blogging is a phenomenon that isn’t just perceived as important in the United States, but in Israel, too. Back in October, I wrote a few posts about blogging in Israel and the different networks and platform technologies that I noticed being used. A lot of the attention I gave to blogging in Israel was in anticipation of attending the first annual WordPress Israel conference.

Recently, there was some discussion on the Digital-Eve Israel listserv (an email list for hi-tech professionals in Israel) about how to start a professional blog and which blog platform to use for it. In one of the posts, Miriam Schwab, CEO of Illuminea Marketing and Media and an organizer of the WordPress Israel conference, directed everyone to an entry on her blog about how a “really professional blog” is hosted on WordPress.

As there are several blog platforms aside from WordPress that are used by some highly-regarded professionals, including Blogger and MovableType, I decided to leave a comment disagreeing with the idea that “really professional blogs” are only on WordPress. I also included my belief that professionals just starting to blog should consider different platforms and that if the blog isn’t directly for their company, then it would probably be fine to start off on Blogger while learning the ins and outs of blogging.

Miriam’s response to my comment and Jacob Share’s short list of Digital Eve Israel members who blog (only 11!), piqued my curiosity as to how many Israeli companies (including VCs) that I have covered in my posts, have blogs. Surprisingly, and not so surprisingly, most of the companies I checked (especially the biggest companies, such as Teva Pharmaceuticals and Alvarion), don’t have corporate blogs. Many Israel-based venture capitalists on the other hand, do.

Here’s a list of a few of the Israeli companies that I have mentioned that do have blogs:
RedBend
eSnips
Metacafe
Gemini
Tvinci
Jajah
ooVoo
Aladdin
Commtouch

Here’s a list of some companies, including ones that I haven’t covered, that are noticeably missing:
Comverse
Commtouch
BluePhoenix
Magic Software
InfoGin
Alvarion
Vringo
Ness Technologies
Teva Pharmaceuticals
Voltaire

Update: August 8, 2008.

The week of December 16, 2007, was filled with new headlines related to the future of nanotechnology in Israel and abroad. Cleantech received its usual attention about investments, plans and government initiatives, and internationally, speculation of a recession in the U.S. and inflation continued. Check out these headlines and the rest of this week’s 29 Israel-related technology headlines below.

Cleantech:
Israel And The US Partner For Clean Energy

World Bank mulls financing Negev solar project

Evogene and Ormat subsidiary receive biodiesel grant

Ben-Eliezer offers plan to promote renewable energy

Israel Cleantech Ventures invests in Citrine Renewable Energy

Solar Market to reach $40 Billion in 5 Years

Investments and M&A:
Value of Israeli VC exits rises 30% in 2007

Don’t believe them: Brokers will tell you TASE stocks are a bargain. Here’s why they aren’t.

Noise control co Silentium raises $1.8m

Plenus invests $2.5m in Logia Content Development

Radcom raises $2.5m in PIPE offering

American VC funds favor Israel, China

CopperGate to be the 1st Israeli start-up to list on NASDAQ in 2008

Nanotechnology:
Israeli Nanotechnology companies have doubled since 2005

Yissum gives birth to biotechnology start up Nanolymf

Nanotechnology Companies Planning to Sell Shares

International:
South American trade block signs trade pact with Israel

Jim Rogers: US is in recession, the administration is lying

Your Taxes: Korea welcomes Israelis

Global Agenda: It’s back

China Less Willing to Be America’s Piggy Bank

Telecommunications:
Ericsson to equip Partner Communications with advanced 3G equipment

Breakthrough deal for Alvarion

Why The Internet Needs to Become a National Priority for Israel

Miscellaneous:
IBM Unveils Semantic Search For Corporate E-mail

Plexiglas-like DVD to hold 1TB of data

Meeting of the minds

Israeli women: Harassment vs. high-tech

The 1st Human Operating System

When you go to the doctor’s office, ever wish that your doctor actually had your full medical history, including what medications can and can’t be prescribed to you?

The Med-O-Card, an impressive USB card the size of a credit card, intends to make that wish come true. Created by Israeli health management company, CEPCO Holding Ltd., the Med-O-Card is an alternative to having a centralized medical information system for patients histories. Cepco, short for CEntral Patient COmmunication, is already providing this technology to the NAV Virchow Bund, a major doctors’ association in Germany, and is in talks with other health care groups around the world, including the U.S., to make this technology available to everyone.

I recently had the chance to ask Cepco founder and Chairman, Gil (Gunter) Pollanz, a few questions about this revolutionary new technology that’s coming to you soon.

Can you give a brief background about what your company does?
The company was started seven years ago to collect data in structured form so that individuals could have access to the same information and software quality as hospitals and medical practices have. We originally created web-based patient portals to hold this information. Today, our Med-O-Card allows for the storage of not just data that would be in a file usually, but also the installation of an entire operating system with software that can act on a hospital information system and will be offered to health care providers for their patients.

You have an interesting story about how you came up with the idea for this company, can you explain?
I am an economist and lawyer by profession and consider myself pretty active in sports. I didn’t think health was an issue for me because I was active. However, 11 years ago doctors found cancer in my lymph nodes. I was given a few weeks to survive and the option of taking a medicine that would destroy 99% of my immune system and would give me a 30% chance of surviving only. After doing my own research, I decided to reject hospital treatment and managed to survive.

About a year after the diagnosis, when I realized I was still here, I decided to create a firm which deals exclusively with providing a technical way to have data and information available at the moment when catastrophe strikes, if it is needed. That’s when I created this company.

Are you solely based in Israel?
We are based in Hod HaSharon, but part of our team is in Germany as well.

What’s the background of Cepco’s funding?
I started this company using $1 million from my family business. Now that we are working with health funds in Switzerland and the United States, any production costs is beyond our financial means though.

What type of funding are you currently looking for?
We’re currently looking for two stages. The first stage is seed money to finance the trials and tests in Germany and the second stage we need money for the launch. For the first stage we need about 1.5 million euro and for the second stage we need about 3 million euro. Once we’ve proven the need for this product, there’s a good chance investors can exit with 10 times the amount that was put in.

What’s the Med-O-Card’s advantage over other solutions?
Using Walletex’s USB storage card technology, the Med-O-Card has a technical unique advantage over other solutions. It looks like a credit card or any other card you might have in your wallet and can have ID information on it like but it also functions as a storage card that can hold one to 8 gigabyte of data and can have an entire operating system on it like a computer.

Using this technology, we rewrote the entire software for the Web portal system that we created, and the card is able to act on hospital information system. For a patient it allows input of data in a structured form. It provides a diagnostic health database for any country in the world and can combine different information to create on the card an instant high-tech risk analysis of a patient, including what prescription medications conflict with each other.

What are some other benefits of having the card?
The card has three major benefits. The first is that it is a storage card and not just a “smart card.” As such, this allows for the storage of all the necessary data, and instant access to vital information for the doctor and/or patient. The second is that most medical data is on large servers that make it hard for patients and doctors to easily access or meaningfully analyze and the information is vulnerable to serious security breaches. This card was designed to prevent any security breaches and as a decentralized method, it decreases those risks as well. The third benefit is that with the card in your wallet, it makes the patient an active knowledgeable partner to the health care system and gives the patient more control over their health care.


How much should individuals expect to pay for the card once it is on the market?

In Germany, patients on participating plans should expect to pay 4 euro a month for the card.

For more information on the Med-O-Card, check the Cepco Homepage.

News:
Last week, Europe had its 4th annual LeWeb3 conference focusing on technology in Europe. During the conference, Israeli Web-based operating system, G.ho.st received third place in a competition among the most promising startups that had been showcased.

Background:
According to the G.ho.st website,

“G. ho.st (“ghost”, the Global Hosted Operating SysTem) provides a free and complete Virtual Computer (VC) service, including personal desktop, files and applications, available from any browser. G.ho.st is the world’s first and only true open Web Operating System (Web OS), working seamlessly with leading third-party web applications. The G.ho.st VC delivers a mature computing environment to every person, which is free of charge, available everywhere and admin-free.”

Analysis:
G.ho.st is getting a lot of positive feedback and comments from the media and blogosphere. While, G.ho.st, which is open source, is competing against dozens of other web-based operating systems, most people seem to be impressed with its functionality, easy user-interface, and its stability — factors that surely led to G.ho.st being chosen as a startup to watch at LeWeb last week.

According to KillerStartups.com, “the service is ideal for people that travel a lot, or students that frequently use community computers.” With its 3 gigabyte of storage, it seems like the perfect replacement for the USB storage drive that individuals and companies embrace.

Aside from business travelers, G.ho.st’s VC also has significant potential to impact the enterprise market, which is currently being overtaken by open source and software-as-a-service (SaaS), as a whole. Although some of the biggest players in the field, Google and I.B.M., use the term cloud computing instead of WebOS, the basis for both is distributed computing on the Internet.

While Google’s online collaboration and office applications are ultimately G.ho.st’s biggest threat, Google will also help define the future of the field as it will be the one that will take the hit or bask in the glory when its services and other WebOS services, such as G.ho.st, start to really take business away from Microsoft’s Windows and Office sales and the software giant is forced to retaliate.

Of course, any G.ho.st role in the enterprise will depend on how companies receive it in the workplace. Such a virtual desktop has the potential to offer significant pros and cons for employees and companies alike. It also might blur the line between the line of work and home and create a new security threat for IT departments to address.

However, before that point, as previously mentioned, G.ho.st is one of dozens devoted to a universally web accessible desktop, and a close eye on their progress should be kept. On this level, it seems that G.ho.st’s most immediate threat is Jooce, which has several similarities and differences to G.ho.st.

Additional Resources:
Interview with the G.ho.st – Zvi Schreiber
Can G.ho.st scare Microsoft?
G.ho.st Crunchbase profile
Mashable review
G.ho.st on TechCrunch
LeWeb recap

The U.S. dollar is falling, several foreign countries are experiencing significant growth rates, and the price of gold has risen from the $300 range to the $800 range. What should expatriates living in Israel invest their U.S. dollars in?

These questions and more were discussed at the first Jerusalem Investing Meetup event organized by portfolio manager extraordinaire, Zack Miller. Topics covered in depth included:

– Why investors invest internationally? Growth, valuation, diversification.

– How investors can invest internationally? Stocks, International bonds, currencies.

By applying what I have learned over the past few months about investing and technology in Israel with what was discussed at the meetup, here are my thoughts on investing in Israel and its high-tech companies:

While BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) have had the most growth in the past few years and promise the most return. Return on investments in these countries aren’t a guaranteed thing. Israel, on the other hand, also has a fair growth rate and a proven track record of getting money out of investments made in it. For reasons such as these, VCs are learning to love investing in Israeli companies and so should more individual investors.

To briefly expound, Israel is currently a bull market that has the highest concentration of engineers in the world and over 120 publicly traded companies in the US. After the United States, Israel has the largest amount of companies listed on the Nasdaq and is one of the top four countries American VCs invest in. Many companies, from Microsoft to Cisco to Google, have opened R&D offices in Israel. There is also talk that Google is planning to hire more local database experts as the demand for that increases.

If so many major companies find value in investing in Israeli technology, shouldn’t the individual investor as well?

Here are some well-established Israeli high-tech companies that are being recommended to individual investors, such as the expats at the meetup:

Comverse Technologies
Teva Pharmaceutical
Elbit Medical
Africa-Israel

I think these companies should also be recommended:
Voltaire
Given Imaging
Ormat Technologies

Think other Israeli high-tech companies should be recommended to investors? Enter the company or companies you recommend and I’ll add it here.

The week of December 9, 2007, was good for Israel’s cleantech sector with the announcements of the Oasis Investment Fund being a new VC fund investing in the Negev and the creation of a new energy tower by Technion researchers that could provide enough energy for entire regions. Also, HP announced its plans to buy NUR Macroprinters and Wall Street Journalist Technology Columnist, Walt Mossberg admitted his surprise at how technologically advanced Israel has become. Israelis abandonment of the U.S. dollar for rent and other purposes continued to prevail. Check out these and the rest of this week’s 26 Israel-related technology headlines below.

Cleantech:
Hebrew U. tech transfer co focuses on cleantech projects

New proposals for competitive energy market

Energy Tower: Power for 15 Earths?

Oasis Investment Fund — new VC investing in the Negev

MK tries to advance major environmental law reform

Investments and M&A:
HP to buy Israel’s NUR Macroprinters

Wound management co Polyheal raises $1m

OptimalTest raises $16m.

Chief Scientist to fund 8 new companies

Tactical UAV co Bluebird Aero Systems raises $7m

International:
India next goal for free-trade agreement

Yahoo! to start Internet Program for Technology Investors

Clyde Prestowitz: Israel should join the EU

Walt Mossberg: I’m amazed how Israel has changed

UN adopts Israeli-sponsored resolution on “Agricultural Technology for Development”

Telecommunications:
Breaking News: Kwiry launches viral platform, connects offline world with online

WiMAX Woes Weaken Alvarion

012 Smile.Communications: Competition in Israeli Telecom

Miscellaneous:
Social networks in Israel?

Aternity to collaborate with Oracle

Oracle and Israel’s Chief Scientist form joint venture with Aternity

Dan Dankner: Israel can be an investor’s paradise

Israelis start to abandon dollar linkage

ISRAEL – N-trig makes an online presentation of DuoSense next generation technology

New 3D Camera Makes a Hand a Joystick

Hi-tech output slides for fourth straight quarter

News:
Last month, enterprise software company, Magic Software Enterprises reported that it earned record revenues for the third quarter of 2007. On the same day, it also announced that Guy Bernstein would replace David Assia as Chairman of the Board.

Background:
According to a company description, Magic Software provides

“enterprise application development, deployment and integration technology. Magic Software’s platform-independent methodology lets companies achieve agility by quickly assembling composite applications, allowing programmers to create services and architects and business analysts to orchestrate and reuse these services to enable business processes. Through partnerships with industry leaders such as IBM and SAP and more than 2500 ISVs worldwide, Magic Software technology is used by more than 1.5 million customers around the globe.”

Headquartered in Israel, Magic Software was founded by David Assia and others in 1986 and was the first company to be co-listed on both the NASDAQ and the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE). It is a subsidiary of the Formula Systems and Emblaze Group of companies.

Analysis:
The third quarter is the second consecutive quarter in which Magic Software has had record earnings. Back in August, Timothy Prickett Morgan of ITJungle explained that Magic Software’s high second quarter earnings was the result of “restructuring and revamped product line.”

Since March, Magic has restructured its leadership with changes in its President/CEO, CFO and two new board members. As Assia was also the co-founder and former CEO of Magic Software, last month’s announcement that Chairman David Assia will be replaced by Guy Bernstein marked a strong changing of the guard and the direction of the company away from its management roots.

Accompanying such changes at the top, have been several announcements of high-stake deals and industry recognition. In May, Magic Software achieved IBM business partner specialty designation and a Magic Software subsidiary signed an initial $1.3 million agreement with KLM Cargo in June. In July, it signed its 200th SAP Business One partner and in October made a generous donation of its integration software to Penn State University.

Of course, in addition to Morgan’s reasons for Magic Software’s increased revenue, the information technology industry’s continued mass migration to implement service-oriented architecture (SOA) in recent years has certainly helped increase the demand and sales potentials for Magic Software’s products.

According to the website, Magic Software’s iBOLT Business Integration Suite,

“enables customers to easily design, develop and deploy automated business processes, including Business Process Management (BPM) and Business Activity Monitoring (BAM).”

Its eDeveloper,

“is a composite applications toolset, delivering an extremely productive, state-of-the-art technology for developing and deploying composite Web and Client/Server applications across and beyond the enterprise.”

Both products shorten the process times and offer to help increase profitability. While providing the means for other companies to increase profitability, Magic Software’s record earnings have helped the company resurface into the black earlier this year and continue its climb. What Magic Software offers and does next in 2008, should be watched closely.

Additional Resources:
The role of composite applications in an SOA
ebizQ.net Webinar: A Guide to Building Composite Applications
Oracle Extends Application Integration Architecture

A few weeks ago, I mentioned that the popularity and excitement surrounding the iPhone and Google-lead Open Handset Alliance would be indirectly beneficial to Israel’s Infogin, a company whose Internet Mobile Platform provides users with a better mobile web experience without their buying a new phone or upgrading any firmware on a phone. A service that might work well with it is mobile “seamless messaging” service, Tjat.

Mobile Marketing Magazine reports (via Startup Israel) that Tjat’s service has launched on Vodafone Live! and will be providing Vodafone in the Czech Republic its full range of services. According to the Tjat website, its services include:

tCHAT:

“The TJAT mobile IM solution, mobile operators can offer their subscribers quick and affordable access to the world’s most popular IM services from ICQ®, MSN®, Yahoo®, AIM®, Chikka®, and Google Talk®.”

tMAIL:

“The TJAT mobile email solution allows customers direct, efficient, connectivity to any portal/ISP email service, including popular ones like Google®, AOL®, Hotmail® and Yahoo® or any other POP3 subscriber mailbox.”

tSPACE:

“A full remote media and file library that can guarantee availability and management from any device with access to TJAT services (mobile handsets, landline phones, desktops, set top boxes). Available handset memory is no longer a constraint when on the go.”

Of course, the Israel R&D-based all-inclusive mobile messaging service is also working on adding more social networking sharing abilities to its mix. Until then, stay tuned and here is a link to diagram from the site that maps the services visually: http://www.tjat.com/innerData/images/dia01.jpg

During the week of December 2nd, Microsoft and Sun Microsystems announced commitments to furthering technological advancements in Israel and TVinci’s success with MTV Israel had TechCrunch raving about its smooth, aesthetically-pleasing user interface. Startups raised funds and cleantech kept up its steady media presence as it did during the week of November 26th. Here’s 25 news headlines from the past week that can impact your present and future business investments.

Funds raised and M&A:
Start-up DensBits raises up to $10m

Medgenics raises ₤3.3m in AIM IPO

Hilan Tech buys IT consulting firm

Oridian to be acquired by India’s Ybrant

UK firm buys Ester Neurosciences in $30m deal

Funding Roundup: Solar, Fuel Cells, Batteries Score Cash

Cleantech:
Israel fights world’s oil addiction by going green

Israeli startup develops ambitious plant to rid the world of waste

Canadian cleantech foundation CEO to visit

Israel Ingenuity: Interview with Meir Ukeles of Cleantech Israel Ventures

Delegation and International recognition:
3 Israeli Companies Top The EMEA 500 Fastest Growing Technology Companies List!

InSightec Selected as a 2008 World Economic Forum Technology Pioneer

Japanese business leaders to visit Israel

Internet, TV and WiMax:
ICQ founders in interactive TV venture

Tvinci Makes MTV Israel Rock So Much Harder Than MTV.com

Israelis among world leaders in Internet usage

AdsONScreen seeks to add to TV marketing options

France Telecom, Alvarion team up on WiMAX venture

Miscellaneus:
Microsoft joins forces with Israel to educate people for the future

Media firms seek Homeless

Alvarion in talks with France Telecom

Matrix, Leading Israeli IT Company, Will Commence Pilot of BENEFIT CRM System

Sun Expands Discount Program To U.K, Israeli Startups

Israel’s technology exports hit by rising materials costs

Mobileye Advanced Vehicle Technologies Power Volvo Car’s Driver Alert Control (DAC) System

News:
In the past two weeks, Voltaire, Ltd. has received significant media coverage for being listed at the top of Deloitte’s Fast 500 EMEA list of fastest growing companies and for its recent partnering with Tibco Software, Inc.

Background:
Founded in 1997, Voltaire Ltd. is headquartered in Israel and is fast becoming the leader in high performance grid computing solutions. Voltaire offers storage switching Grid Backbone products based on Infiniband to help improve the speed of information in data centers and HPC environments. According to a company description, “Voltaire’s products leverage InfiniBand technology and include director-class switches, multi-service switches, fixed-port configuration switches, Ethernet and Fibre Channel routers and standards-based driver and management software.” With a rapidly expanding client base, Voltaire has offered its solutions primarily in “enterprise, governmental, research and educational organizations.”

What is InfiniBand?
According to a definition on the InfiniBand Trade Association website,

“InfiniBand is a pervasive, low-latency, high-bandwidth interconnect which requires low processing overhead and is ideal to carry multiple traffic types (clustering, communications, storage, management) over a single connection.”

The site additionally explains that “InfiniBand Architecture is an industry standard, channel-based, switched fabric, interconnect architecture for servers. InfiniBand architecture changes the way servers are built, deployed, and managed.”

Analysis: Infinite possibilities for Voltaire

It’s no secret that Internet use by companies and consumers require more bandwidth for faster-processing and InfiniBand is currently the top technology available to them. With Internet applications containing more and businesses relying on applications more, InfiniBand has been deployed on supercomputers in industries ranging from government and financial services to entertainment.

InfiniBand’s continued expansion in the near future means continued good prospects for Voltaire, whose products are based on the technology. As part of its effort to help maintain this trend and make sure CIOs and data center professionals, among other IT professionals, fully understand it and embrace it, Voltaire is on the steering committee of the InfiniBand Trade Association.

Of course, Voltaire’s main reason for playing an active role in the industry is to get its name out and sell its Grid BackBone software. One of its most popular solutions is the Multiple Grid Director, which allows switches to be “interconnected to form very large high performance clusters and grids that can grow into the thousands of nodes with ‘pay as you grow’ scalability.” Solutions such as this and GridVision Enterprise, have helped form the “backbone” of Voltaire’s 50,612% growth in the past 5 years, propelling it to be the fastest growing company in Deloitte’s Fast 500 EMEA.

Voltaire’s deal with Tibco Software last week “to deliver a high-throughput, low-latency messaging solution for advanced electronic trading environments” in the financial services industry helps ensure that the company will continue to grow at an above average rate and promises to make it one of the leaders in expanding bandwidth solutions in the future.

Additional Resources:
Inside a green data center
New Supercomputer Blasts Off
Sidebar: Is InfiniBand Ready for a Comeback?

The fastest growing company
Voltaire ranked as fastest-growing tech company by Deloitte
3 Israeli Companies Top The EMEA 500 Fastest Growing Technology Companies List!
Voltaire Powers Two of the World’s Top Five Fastest Supercomputers on the New Top500 List

Know of/part of a hot Israeli company (established or start-up) in cleantech, telecom, voip or IT that you think should be covered in “Company in Focus”? Leave a comment and let me know.