Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots

JStone

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Business Week Magazine: Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots. From Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, the Mideast nation is blanketed with science parks and creativity clusters Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots - BusinessWeek
Israel's flourishing technology sector has earned the nickname "Silicon Wadi" (Arabic for "Valley") thanks to its powerful mix of pioneering high-tech and pharmaceutical companies and world-class research facilities such as the Weizmann Institute of Science and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. The country has attracted global tech giants such as Intel, IBM, Microsoft, and Motorola, which run major engineering centers there, but also has produced scores of homegrown innovators such as Teva, the world's largest generic drugmaker. Israel has the highest concentration of high-tech companies in the world outside Silicon Valley, and the most Nasdaq-listed companies of any country outside North America. For a look at 12 Israeli tech hubs, click on Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots - BusinessWeek
 
Business Week Magazine: Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots. From Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, the Mideast nation is blanketed with science parks and creativity clusters Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots - BusinessWeek
Israel's flourishing technology sector has earned the nickname "Silicon Wadi" (Arabic for "Valley") thanks to its powerful mix of pioneering high-tech and pharmaceutical companies and world-class research facilities such as the Weizmann Institute of Science and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. The country has attracted global tech giants such as Intel, IBM, Microsoft, and Motorola, which run major engineering centers there, but also has produced scores of homegrown innovators such as Teva, the world's largest generic drugmaker. Israel has the highest concentration of high-tech companies in the world outside Silicon Valley, and the most Nasdaq-listed companies of any country outside North America. For a look at 12 Israeli tech hubs, click on Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots - BusinessWeek

Oil was discovered by the Westerners, taken out of the ground by the Westerners, transported by pipelines built by the Westerners, then shipped all across the globe again by the Westerners. The Arabs are paid market prices which they now use to purchase luxury cars and virgins and exporting terrorism worldwide...

Not a great comparison for the "Religion of Peace" imo.
 
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Business Week Magazine: Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots. From Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, the Mideast nation is blanketed with science parks and creativity clusters Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots - BusinessWeek
Israel's flourishing technology sector has earned the nickname "Silicon Wadi" (Arabic for "Valley") thanks to its powerful mix of pioneering high-tech and pharmaceutical companies and world-class research facilities such as the Weizmann Institute of Science and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. The country has attracted global tech giants such as Intel, IBM, Microsoft, and Motorola, which run major engineering centers there, but also has produced scores of homegrown innovators such as Teva, the world's largest generic drugmaker. Israel has the highest concentration of high-tech companies in the world outside Silicon Valley, and the most Nasdaq-listed companies of any country outside North America. For a look at 12 Israeli tech hubs, click on Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots - BusinessWeek

Oil was discovered by the Westerners, taken out of the ground by the Westerners, transported by pipelines built by the Westerners, then shipped all across the globe again by the Westerners. The Arabs are paid market prices which they now use to purchase luxury cars and virgins and exporting terrorism worldwide...

Not a great comparison for the "Religion of Peace" imo.

Oil is a natural resource the backward Arabs steal from the Earth. The Jews invent and innovate
 
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Business Week Magazine: Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots. From Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, the Mideast nation is blanketed with science parks and creativity clusters Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots - BusinessWeek
Israel's flourishing technology sector has earned the nickname "Silicon Wadi" (Arabic for "Valley") thanks to its powerful mix of pioneering high-tech and pharmaceutical companies and world-class research facilities such as the Weizmann Institute of Science and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. The country has attracted global tech giants such as Intel, IBM, Microsoft, and Motorola, which run major engineering centers there, but also has produced scores of homegrown innovators such as Teva, the world's largest generic drugmaker. Israel has the highest concentration of high-tech companies in the world outside Silicon Valley, and the most Nasdaq-listed companies of any country outside North America. For a look at 12 Israeli tech hubs, click on Israel's High-Tech Hot Spots - BusinessWeek

Oil was discovered by the Westerners, taken out of the ground by the Westerners, transported by pipelines built by the Westerners, then shipped all across the globe again by the Westerners. The Arabs are paid market prices which they now use to purchase luxury cars and virgins and exporting terrorism worldwide...

Not a great comparison for the "Religion of Peace" imo.

Even with their oil wealth, the Rabs are still just sand rats.

The Economist Magazine: Arab World Self-Doomed To Failure
WHAT went wrong with the Arab world? Why is it so stuck behind the times? It is not an obviously unlucky region. Fatly endowed with oil, and with its people sharing a rich cultural, religious and linguistic heritage, it is faced neither with endemic poverty nor with ethnic conflict. But, with barely an exception, its autocratic rulers, whether presidents or kings, give up their authority only when they die; its elections are a sick joke; half its people are treated as lesser legal and economic beings, and more than half its young, burdened by joblessness and stifled by conservative religious tradition, are said to want to get out of the place as soon as they can.

One in five Arabs still live on less than $2 a day. And, over the past 20 years, growth in income per head, at an annual rate of 0.5%, was lower than anywhere else in the world except sub-Saharan Africa. At this rate, it will take the average Arab 140 years to double his income, a target that some regions are set to reach in less than ten years. Stagnant growth, together with a fast-rising population, means vanishing jobs. Around 12m people, or 15% of the labour force, are already unemployed, and on present trends the number could rise to 25m by 2010.

Freedom. This deficit explains many of the fundamental things that are wrong with the Arab world: the survival of absolute autocracies; the holding of bogus elections; confusion between the executive and the judiciary (the report points out the close linguistic link between the two in Arabic); constraints on the media and on civil society; and a patriarchal, intolerant, sometimes suffocating social environment. The great wave of democratisation that has opened up so much of the world over the past 15 years seems to have left the Arabs untouched. Democracy is occasionally offered, but as a concession, not as a right. Freedom of expression and freedom of association are both sharply limited. Freedom House, an American-based monitor of political and civil rights, records that no Arab country has genuinely free media, and only three have “partly free”. The rest are not free

Knowledge. “If God were to humiliate a human being,” wrote Imam Ali bin abi Taleb in the sixth century, “He would deny him knowledge.” Although the Arabs spend a higher percentage of GDP on education than any other developing region, it is not, it seems, well spent. The quality of education has deteriorated pitifully, and there is a severe mismatch between the labour market and the education system. Adult illiteracy rates have declined but are still very high: 65m adults are illiterate, almost two-thirds of them women. Some 10m children still have no schooling at all. One of the gravest results of their poor education is that the Arabs, who once led the world in science, are dropping ever further behind in scientific research and in information technology. Investment in research and development is less than one-seventh of the world average. Only 0.6% of the population uses the Internet, and 1.2% have personal computers.

Women's status. The one thing that every outsider knows about the Arab world is that it does not treat its women as full citizens. How can a society prosper when it stifles half its productive potential? After all, even though women's literacy rates have trebled in the past 30 years, one in every two Arab women still can neither read nor write. Their participation in their countries' political and economic life is the lowest in the world.

Arab development: Self-doomed to failure | The Economist
 
Yo.......Jstone.........last I checked Hebrews were a different ethnic group than Arabs.

Might wanna do some research..........just sayin'.........
 
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Yo.......Jstone.........last I checked Hebrews were a different ethnic group than Arabs.

Might wanna do some research..........just sayin'.........

"Hebrews" went out of vogue about 3000 years ago, dink :lol:

Might wanna do some research :clap2:
 

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