Sunday 26 June 2016

Cisco Executive Chairman signs R&D MOU with Israel



John Chambers, Cisco's chief executive, company world's largest networks, has signed a protocol agreement on Sunday in the advancement of digitization in Israel during a meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Three years earlier, Chambers predicted that Israel would be the first country to be scanned from beginning to end, and Sunday MOU seemed to define a roadmap for how this could happen.

The MOU scored ten different possible areas for cooperation between the company and the Israeli, such as digital education, digital health, human capital, innovation and government research centers.

Cisco technology could be used to create the fastest Internet infrastructure and make it easier to connect devices to the "Internet of things", the everyday devices network by sensors and modems.

In health, for example, the introduction of portable devices could be helpful for researchers guzzling data, and help doctors end when patients get sick.

The government also seeks modes more effectively itself, creating a common data system in the cloud that would make it easier for departments to communicate with each other and build a plan to exploit the power of creation of Israeli companies in government. The Office of the Chief Scientist is developing a similar initiative.

On Monday, the center of Jerusalem R & D will host Cisco cameras at an event in the future of television, called "The future starts now."

It is intended to showcase new innovations in the field of television and video, including cloud storage for video, customizable televisions, virtual reality, and new security features.

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