
Jerusalem Design Week opens Sept. 19 with ‘ark’ theme
JDW 2024 is a free event that gives space to 80 designers to explore how we can begin to heal and redesign our future after the ‘flood’ of Oct. 7.

JDW 2024 is a free event that gives space to 80 designers to explore how we can begin to heal and redesign our future after the ‘flood’ of Oct. 7.

Kubiya says thousands of developers, including engineering teams at A+E Networks and Morse, are delegating critical production tasks to AI Teammates.

BRAIN.Q helmet’s tailored, low-intensity, low-frequency electromagnetic stimulation aims to enhance and accelerate the brain’s recovery after stroke.

Beeps and flashes warn of critical threats on the road and provides collision alerts, safe distance alerts and blind spot alerts.

Lensy envisions that within a few years, the optometrist will check your vision, press a button and hand you a perfect pair of custom contact lenses.

Sheba Medical Center scientists develop algorithm that predicts likelihood of a newly admitted patient suffering a potentially life-threatening PE.

Diamonds have been assessed by eye for centuries. Now Sarine makes it possible to do the job objectively, using artificial intelligence.

Darrow uncovers potentially high-impact mass and class actions involving faulty products, polluting factories, hazardous medicines and much more.

Revealense recognizes indicators from video clips that help client companies know if a customer is being truthful or not.

Researchers found significant disparities between male and female patients, even those who reported identical levels of pain.

HarvestR is developing a range of vaccines, each designed to control a different disease that affects a particular crop.

Blink Energy’s tiny device, fitted to one eyelid, monitors and analyzes blink patterns to detect or diagnose a wealth of health conditions.

Unlimited Robotics’ Gary robot is already on the job in Israel and Philadelphia, supporting overburdened healthcare staff with a myriad of tasks.

The trench’s discovery at the City of David answers many questions, but poses several more, like when it was constructed and how.

Researchers develop an efficient, convenient wearable solution that will allow for quantifying and collecting data on step length throughout the day.