
►
From YouTube: ACEA-IAI Demonstration 3.31.21 2pm
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
My
name
is
lauren
moore,
I'm
the
president
of
the
atlanta
county
economic
alliance,
the
orlando
county
economic
alliance,
is
a
designated
economic
development
entity
for
atlantic
county,
we're
a
private,
nonprofit
and
personally
and
for
the
organization
we're
very
excited
to
be
here
today.
This
is
uh
our
first
research
field,
testing
demonstration
collaboration
with
a
huge
huge
company
that
you're
going
to
hear
about,
in
fact,
4.2
billion
dollars
in
revenues
that
huge.
A
So
this
is
exciting
that
we're
able
to
partnership
and
partner-
excuse
me
with
israeli
aerospace
industries
of
north
america
and
the
reason
that
this
is
important
to
us-
and
you
know
everybody
here.
That's
local
will
understand
this
about
the
reliance
that
we
have
on
one
industry,
60
percent,
in
fact
of
our
economy,
relies
on
tourism,
gaming
and
hospitality,
60
percent.
A
A
They
do
not
happen
instantly
and
we've
been
working
and
working
and
working
on
this,
for
the
last
will
be
four
years
come
june
1st,
and
I
can't
thank
the
members
of
our
organization
and
all
of
the
political
and
governmental
support
that
we
have
and
you'll
hear
me,
because
I'm
going
to
introduce
the
speakers
and
I'm
going
to
interject
some
comments
in
between
you
know
here
and
keep
things
moving
um
of
why.
This
is
why
this
is
important
to
us.
I
also
want
to
stress
you
know
this
is
innovation.
This
is
technology.
A
This
is
research
and
development.
This
all
fits
with
what
this
administration
governor
murphy
is
trying
to
accomplish,
and
we
work
very
closely
with
the
administration,
all
of
our
elected
officials,
to
help
us
advance
our
economic
development
strategy
and
our
strategy
calls
on
working
in
the
aviation
industry,
and
why
is
that?
A
And
one
of
the
reasons
is
where
we're
at
the
atlantic
city,
international
airport
and
who's
next
to
the
atlantic
city,
international
airport,
the
william
j
hughes,
faa,
technical
center,
one
of
the
largest
laboratories
under
one
roof
in
the
world,
and
it's
here
in
atlantic
county
uh
with
a
1.5
billion
dollar
annual
economic
impact.
It's
actually
their
economic
impact
doubled
in
the
last
five
years,
and
uh
we
like
to
think
that
we
were
partly
responsible
for
some
of
that
with
what
we're
doing
to
build
the
aviation
industry
here
in
atlanta
county.
A
So
this
technology
has
a
broad
range
of
application
and
a
lot
of
projects
that
we
work
on
in
aviation
have
a
broad
range
of
application
to
all
of
our
industries.
You
know
here
so
and
the
reason
that
you
know
for
aviation.
We
want
to
get
people
back
in
the
air.
We
want
to
have
more
business
coming
through
the
terminal.
A
We
want
to
have
more
research
and
development
coming
here
and
this
kind
of
event
to
draw
attention
that
we
want
to
be
the
aviation
research
and
development
capital
of
the
east
coast
because
of
our
proximity
to
the
faa
and
atlantic
city.
International
airport
is
a
smart
airport
testbed,
and
that
means
that
we
can
do
experimental
research
and
development
here
and
all
of
our
partners.
I
can't
thank
all
of
our
partners
enough.
We
wouldn't
be
here
today
without
the
support
of
shelly
act,
john
schleifer
and
dr
eric
niederman
at
the
faa.
A
We
wouldn't
be
here
without
the
support
of
the
governor
and
sjta
uh
today,
so
that
kind
of
support
is
so
important
to
us
and
we
keep
them
all
informed
of
everything
that
we're
doing,
because
we
can't
do
this.
We
can't
do
this
alone,
so
without
any
further
ado,
I
want
to
introduce
tim,
crow
who's.
The
airport
director
tim.
B
Thank
you
lauren
good
afternoon,
everyone
on
behalf
of
the
south
jersey
transportation
authority
and
our
executive
director,
stephen
dougherty.
I
would
like
to
welcome
you
to
the
atlantic
city
international
airport.
As
lauren
mentioned,
we've
developed
a
great
partnership
in
terms
of
aviation
in
terms
of
business,
development
and
technologies
like
this.
So
thank
you
lauren
for
everything.
B
What
that
means
is
we
can
test
and
demo
technologies
like
you're,
going
to
see
today
from
israeli
aerospace
industries
you're
going
to
see
some
cool
technologies
today
that
is
going
to
help
with
the
fight
at
covet
and
making
the
passenger
journey
safer,
because
that
is
the
biggest
key
in
aviation
right
now
is
how
can
we
make
sure
that
passenger
feels
confident
and
traveling
and
getting
back
in
the
air?
At
the
height
of
the
pandemic,
we
were
down
95
compared
to
2019
in
traffic.
B
Different
efforts
airports
have
put
in
to
make
that
passenger
feel
safe.
This
airport
received
an
accreditation,
it's
called
an
airport
health
accreditation,
it's
a
worldwide
accreditation
through
airports,
council
international,
and
that
is
the
result
of
our
plan.
We
came
up
with
to
help
fight
the
spread
of
cobit
in
airports
and
to
also
make
that
passenger
feel
as
safe
as
possible.
B
The
technology
you'll
see
today
will
assist
with
that,
but
what
also
happens
is
even
when
kobit
is
over,
there's
still
a
need
for
all
this
technology.
We
don't
know
when
the
next
pandemic
is
going
to
be,
and
our
job
is
to
make
that
traveling
public
feel
safe,
secure
so
that
they'll
get
back
out
there
and
travel.
So
thank
you
and
I
hope
you
enjoy
the
demonstrations.
A
A
Our
goal
in
developing
this
partnership
with
israeli
aerospace
industries
of
north
america
and
showing
them
our
resources
and
our
assets
and
our
capacities
here
is
that,
ultimately,
we
want
to
convince
them
to
have
a
presence
here
in
atlanta
county
to
bring
high-tech
jobs
here
to
put
those
high-tech
jobs
in
our
national
aviation
research
technology
park,
which
is
right
next
door
and
you
pass
the
building
our
first
building
on
the
way
in
howard,
kyle
who's.
The
president
of
nartp
is
not
here,
uh
but
we
have
300
high-tech
jobs
in
our
first
building.
A
We
expect
to
break
ground
on
the
second
building
this
year
and
we
just
received
a
three
million
dollar
u.s
eda
grant
to
support
the
development
and
construction
of
an
11
to
14
million
dollar.
Second,
building
we
are
making
progress
despite
the
pandemic,
we
are
pushing
forward
and
how
we
got
here
today
is
even
more
intriguing,
of
course,
because
I
was
a
part
of
it,
but
we
wrote
a
four
page
white
paper
about
how
to
make
air
travel
safe,
using
this
type
of
technology
and
circulated
it
to
the
universe
and
it
got
attention.
A
It
got
the
faa's
attention
andrew
gross
he's
here
from
as
the
executive
director
of
the
new
jersey,
israel,
commission,
the
governor
took
a
trip
in
2018
to
israel,
and
we
had
this
white
paper
in
our
hand,
and
we
were
working
on
federal
legislation
to
drive
research
and
development
dollars
here,
so
that
we
could
get
some
federal
research
dollars
to
attract
companies
like
this
here
to
do.
The
research
here,
iai
contacted
us,
came
back
to
us
through
the
governor's
office
and
contacted
us
and
said:
hey
we're
interested
in
your
assets,
and
here
we
are
today.
A
So
keep
that
in
mind
we're
building
a
second
building.
This
technology,
you
guys,
is
fascinating
of
how
it
can
disinfect
large
areas
with
a
flash
of
a
light.
When
you
say
it's,
uh
it's
really
really
interesting
and
the
tomorrow,
where
it
takes
your
body,
metrics
real
body
metrics
in
real
time
to
detect,
if
there's
some
sort
of
health
concern
with
an
individual,
and
they
did
their
field
testing
and
demos
here
with
all
of
our
partners.
A
So,
having
said
that,
I'd
like
to
introduce
our
next
speakers
uh
secretary
of
state
secretary
tahisha
way
what's
interesting,
is
that
before
I
took
this
job,
I
worked
in
the
department
of
state,
worked
in
the
state
government
for
20
years
and
worked
for
the
last
secretary
of
state
secretary.
Well,
you
want
to
come
up
and
have
some
words.
D
D
D
B
D
C
C
C
In
doing
so,
we
are
laying
the
groundwork
for
new
innovations
designed
to
keep
us
safe,
allowing
us
to
return
to
commercial
travel
and
bringing
back
our
tourism
as
secretary
of
state.
My
portfolio
is
incredibly
diverse,
in
addition
to
serving
as
the
chief
election
officer
of
the
state
I
oversee
cultural
commissions
as
well
as
offices
focused
on
new
jersey's
arts,
history
and
tourism
and
speaking
of
tourism.
B
D
C
This
technology
has
the
potential
to
help
protect
us
from
airborne
illnesses
when
we
fly
after
living
through
this
unprecedented
year,
who
wouldn't
want
to
learn
more
in
closing,
I'm
truly
glad
that
new
jersey
is
able
to
partner
with
our
friends
in
israel
to
innovate
around
these
critical
needs.
I
believe
there
is
no
state
more
worthy
of
this
opportunity,
and
I
am
hopeful
that
this
will
lay
the
groundwork
for
a
relationship
that
will
grow
and
strengthen
in
the
years
to
come.
Thank
you
all
and
be
safe.
A
As
I
hear
secretary
ray
speak,
you
know
it
reminds
me
about
the
innovation
r
d
that
we're
trying
to
achieve
here,
um
and
she
really
does
you
know
she
oversees
travel
and
tourism
as
well.
I
remember
when
we
worked
for
the
secretary
of
state.
They
were
right
next
to
me
uh
there
most
of
that
46
million
46
billion
a
year
by
the
way
comes
from
atlanta,
canada,
uh
big
chunk
of
it.
A
um
Our
next
speaker
is
andrew
gross.
uh
The
executive
director
of
the
new
jersey,
israel,
commission,
um
as
secretary
way
said
andrew,
has
been
absolutely
key
in
getting
us
uh
to
this
point
uh
with
israeli
aerospace
industries
and
helping
us
with
international
relations.
As
you
can
imagine,
uh
and
helping
write
down
the
visas,
I
mean
the
detail
that
went
in
to
make
this
happen
today
uh
was
extraordinary
and
we
couldn't
have
gotten
it
done
without
the
help
of
andrew
gross
andrew
lauren.
F
Thank
you,
uh
lord.
I
want
to
begin
by
thanking
you
and
everyone
at
the
acea
who
made
this
possible.
This
is
some
incredible
leadership
uh
down
here
and
I'm
so
excited
by
uh
by
what
we're
seeing
today.
Of
course,
I
want
to
thank
the
entire
team
from
iai
and
iai
north
america.
uh
Thank
you
so
much
again
for
being
here
and
for
partnering
with
the
state
of
new
jersey
and
with
our
friends
here
in
atlanta
county.
F
F
Here
from
the
governor's
office
for
all
of
his
support
in
making
this
happen
without
them,
this
would
not
be
possible.
Governor
murphy,
as
you
heard,
is
a
very,
very
strong
supporter
of
our
state's
relationship
with
israel
and
anything
to
do
with
innovation
and,
of
course,
our
friends
from
the
israeli.
F
And
what
we
see
here
today
is
a
realization
of
that
critical
need.
What
we're
seeing
today
is
some
of
the
best
and
most
innovative
israeli
technology
in
the
world
being
deployed
right
here
in
atlantic
county.
This
is
extremely
important.
It's
extremely
important
because
it
is
supporting
all
the
efforts
that
are
going
on
here
in
this
county,
particularly
in
aviation,
particularly
innovation,
and
we
want
to
do
everything
possible
to
assist.
F
So
again,
we're
here
to
bring
great
innovation
from
israel,
we're
here
to
help
reopen
and
restart
our
economy.
We're
here
to
support,
as
the
secretary
said,
our
tourism
industry
and,
as
was
said
so
many
times
today.
The
state
of
israel
remains
a
critical
ally
and
friend
to
the
state
of
new
jersey,
we're
so
proud
to
have
iai
here
today
with
us,
and
I
look
forward
to
working
with
all
of
you
here
to
continue
this
important
relationship
and
deepen
this
partnership.
So
again,
thank
you,
lauren.
Thank
you
to
everyone
here
for
making
this
possible.
A
Thank
you,
gentlemen,
for
your
support
for
that
part
of
that
package
included
an
aviation
district,
a
special
incentive
for
an
aviation
district
for
us
to
attract
aviation
companies
to
our
aviation
innovation
hub,
which
is
a
miles
surrounding
the
of
fence,
city
airport
and
the
faa.
I
can't
thank
you
guys
enough
for
your
continued
support
with
this.
That
package
is
so
critically
important
to
help
us
compete
with
companies
that
have
locational
decisions,
and
it
puts
us
in
a
very
competitive
position
um
and
noah
mcguire,
and
I
uh
will
continue
to
work
on.
A
A
A
H
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
lauren.
Thank
you.
Everyone
thank
you,
secretary
and
assemblyman,
and
to
my
good
friend,
andrew
ross,
um
I'm
here
representing
the
state
of
israel
and
the
consulate
of
israel
in
new
york
representing
new
jersey,
also
pennsylvania,
delaware
and
ohio,
and,
to
be
honest,
it's
the
first
time
that
I'm
coming
up
getting
out
of
new
york
since
the
pandemic.
I
just
arrived
here
in
december,
so
that's
a
very
good
opportunity
to
visit
the
atlantic
city.
H
um
You
know
with
diplomats.
We
are
very
often
invited
to
speak
about
friendships
and
special
relations
between
our
state
and
our
hosting
countries,
but
today
we're
not
just
speaking
today
we're
actually
seeing
and
witnessing
the
solid
proof
of
this
friendship,
a
solution
that
will
help
each
and
every
one
of
us
and
more
than
anyone
else,
um
the
atlantic
uh
county.
H
H
H
A
A
Cargo
conversions
on
aviation,
we're
hopeful
to
be
able
to
showcase
what
we're
able
to
do
for
iai
here
and
further
our
relationship
and
deepen
our
relationship
as
it
points
out
into
other
aviation
business
lines
to
do
that.
Research
and
development
here
in
atlantic
county.
So
we're
hopeful
that
this
is
a
stepping
stone
to
bigger
and
more
deeper
things
with
israeli
aerospace
industries.
A
The
next
person
that
I
want
to
introduce
is
very
special.
It's
chairwoman,
brett
matic
brett,
you
know,
runs
a
business
and
runs
the
acea
as
the
chairwoman.
uh
You
know
here
so
she's
very
busy
very
engaged,
very
hands-on
and
without
her
guidance
and
advice
uh
to
keep
us
looking
forward
and
in
our
lane,
it's
just
absolutely
invaluable.
A
She
was
in
this
from
the
beginning
when
this
organization
was
put
together
and
for
her
to
be
here
today.
Just
really
excites
me
to
be
able
to
see
what
she's
been
working
on
since
2015
to
come
down
to
working
on
technology
demonstrations
and
creating
high
check
jobs
and
building
high-tech
parks.
Ladies
and
gentlemen,
chairwoman.
I
I
The
battle
against
covent
continues,
and
it
is
the
reason
why
we
are
here
today,
but
more
than
10
months
ago,
as
the
economic
alliance
was
providing
emergency
assistance
to
hundreds
of
local
businesses
impacted
by
coveted
shutdowns,
our
staff
stopped
and
took
a
breath.
They
forced
themselves
to
think
ahead.
I
I
I
I
I
We
have
so
much
here
and
we
are
thrilled
that
iai
recognized
many
of
these
advantages
and
chose
to
come
to
new
jersey
when
they
had
many
other
options
for
testing
and
demonstrations
in
other
states,
as
fate
would
have
it.
The
economic
alliance
wasn't
only
wasn't
the
only
organization
thinking
ahead
and
more
and
as
coving
began
more
than
10
weeks
ago,
10
months
ago,
wreaking
havoc
around
the
world
6000
miles
away.
Iai
was
also
thinking
ahead
in
similar
fashion,
like
the
alliance,
iai,
pivoted
and
recognized.
The
new
technology
might
help
us
recover
and
reopen
our
economy.
I
I
want
to
offer
a
special
thanks
to
governor
phil,
murphy
and
andrew
gross
of
the
new
jersey
israeli
commission,
for
bringing
this
collaboration
between
the
economic
alliance
and
iai
iai
learned
about
the
new
jersey
aviation
innovation
hub
during
a
trade
mission
to
israel
that
we
heard
about
this
morning.
So
thank
you
governor.
Thank
you,
andrew
gross,
thank
you
iai
and
thank
you
all
for
coming
to
atlantic
city
international
airport.
Today
it
is
now
my
distinct
privilege
to
introduce
you
to
ted
valdez,
the
chief
executive
officer
of
iai,
north
america,
based
in
virginia.
I
We
are
honored
to
have
ted
with
us
here
today.
He
is
a
retired
three-star
air
force
general
and
holds
a
phd
in
systems,
engineering
ted.
We
welcome
you
and
the
iai
team
to
atlanta
county
and
to
the
new
jersey,
aviation
innovation
hub.
We
hope
you
will
consider
us
for
more
iai
research
and
development
in
the
future.
G
Okay,
we're
at
the
home
stretch
for
the
talking
heads
uh
on
behalf
of
iii,
north
america
and
our
parent
company
ii
in
israel.
I
want
to
reciprocate
and
thank
you
for
everything.
That's
going
on
from
the
the
bigger
state
of
new
jersey
uh
down
to
the
ace
I
mean
if
we
have
built
a
partnership,
that
is
that
is
strong
and
growing,
and
as
I
was
standing
there
listening
to
people
talk,
I
think
it's
gone
beyond
a
partnership.
It's
now
reached
a
friendship
which,
to
me
is
something
that's
going
to
last
for
a
long
time.
G
D
B
G
It's
that
innovation
spirit
that
the
nation
has
that
finds
its
way
to
iii,
the
largest
defense
contractor
in
israel.
They
do
everything
from
spacecraft,
airplanes,
surface
vehicles,
subsurface
vehicles.
If
you
want
to
think
of
an
analogy,
think
of
lockheed.
This
is
their
version
of
lockheed
only
better.
G
So
it's
that
spirit
of
innovation
that
you're
going
to
see
today
taking
what
is
a
defense,
focused
company
and
answering
the
question
in
the
pandemic.
How
can
we
apply
the
technology
to
help
everybody
and
what
some
of
the
things
that
everybody
in
this
pandemic
are
worried
about
is
how
do
I
know
that
some
place
is
safe
and
how
do
I
know
the
people
I'm
dealing
with
are
not
infected
want
to
conclude
with?
Maybe
this
is
a
little
personal
bias
or
personal.
G
What
we
want
to
do
here
today-
and
I
think
we
will
do-
is
create
buzz
for
this
technology.
That's
pretty
easy
to
do
the
great
scientists
and
researchers
you're
going
to
be
introduced
to
will
convince
you
of
that.
But
secondly,
I
want
this
partnership
to
grow
because
to
get
this
technology
into
the
hands.
D
G
E
E
uh
She,
the
marketing
manager
out
of
eltel,
is
part
of
iai.
uh
So
after
we
do
that,
we
will
talk
about
the
granada,
which
will
be
demonstrated
by
mr
asaktamir
on
my
left,
who
is
responsible
for
the
program
management
of
the
system
and
mr
ayala
zeb,
who
is
the
r
d
technology
guru?
Who
is
responsible
for
that?
So
without
further
ado,
elon.
J
Thank
you,
everyone!
Thank
you
really.
This
is
really
honor
for
me
and
for
us
as
a
team
to
come
here.
No,
I
looked
last
night
online
new
jersey
is
about
the
size
of
israel.
The
population
is
about
the
same.
You
have
eight
million,
we
have
eight
million
plus
so
something
special
going
on
here
between
the
two
places,
and
I'm
really
grateful
for
that.
J
um
You
know,
as
said
the
iii:
israel,
aerospace
industries,
is
the
largest
defense
contractor
in
israel,
it's
owned
by
the
government.
We
have
amazing
employees
and
engineers
founded
back
in
53.
We
have
15
000
employees
and,
and
yes,
we're
involved
in
many
many
innovation
technologies,
and
you
know
back
in
the
pandemic.
J
J
So
we
are,
you
know
we
are
working
in
defense.
We
have
airport
security
systems,
we
have
systems
like
missiles
and
but
doesn't
matter.
We
took
those
technologies,
those
brains
of
the
best
engineers,
and
we
asked
them
let's
find
solution,
for
instance
the
tomorrow
that
can
identify
a
person
physiological
science
from
far
away,
because
what
is
the
pandemic
is
the
social
distancing.
J
So
you
know
if
you
go
today,
to
do
some
check
of
someone
breathing
a
doctor
will
put
his
hand
here
on
the
chest
and
look
on
his
watch
and
count.
We
don't
need
that
anymore.
If
you
want
to
check
someone's
heartbeat,
you
don't
need
that
anymore.
If
you
look
going
all
over
the
casinos
and
you
see
those
thermal
camera,
it's
only
temperature
here
we
have
a
system,
a
multi-layer
system
that
my
colleague
miss
felicity
will
give
some
information
about
it.
J
That
will
do
those
analysis
of
this
information
from
far
keeping
the
social
distancing,
and
this
is
example
how
we
use
the
defense
technology
towards
the
civil,
civil
aviation
and
civil
uh
application,
which
is,
which
is
a
great
thing.
So
thank
you
and
I
don't
want
to
take
too
much
of
your
time,
we'll
go
to
miss
felicity
and
then
we'll
do
the.
K
Demonstration
good
afternoon,
everyone,
I'm
felicity,
um
I'm
the
global
marketing
and
sales
manager
for
el
tao,
medical,
we're
sub-division
of
iai.
um
We
focus
on
bringing
life-changing
and
life-saving
technologies
such
as
the
tamar
to
the
world,
and
what
I
want
to
talk
to
you
about
today
is
the
tamar
this
system,
what
it
is,
why
it's
necessary
and
why
it's
necessary
for
beyond
the
pandemic
too.
So,
first
things.
First.
What
is
this
thing?
K
Well,
this
is
a
remote
non-contact
uh
distance
scanner,
we're
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
how
it
works
and
what
it
does
in
a
second.
But
the
big
thing
here
is:
um
you
know
we
come
from
israel
where
we're
constantly
scanned
for
security
reasons
um
when
the
pandemic
hit.
It
was
actually
very
interesting
that
people
only
focused
on
scanning
people's
temperatures.
K
D
K
Comes
as
a
response
to
the
lung
activity
that
doesn't
quite
function
properly
and
if
someone's
got
a
fever,
let's
say
the
eight
percent
of
people
who
display
a
fever,
it's
usually
about
ten
days
or
so
after
they've
actually
been
infected.
So
this
presents
a
massive
problem,
you're
looking
for
the
wrong
things
of
the
wrong
people
at
the
wrong
time.
K
So
another
thing
is
at
the
beginning
of
the
pandemic:
us
you
know
the
israelis
and
worldwide.
Everyone
was
rushing
to
send
their
frontline
medical
staff
in
to
check
these
potentially
dangerous
people.
Now,
if
you're,
sending
your
frontline
medical
staff
in
you're,
basically
setting
them
up
for
a
suicide
mission,
potentially
okay,
if
they
fall,
we
all
fall.
Nothing
is
going
to
get
done
if
they
go
away
and
unfortunately,
a
lot
of
them
got
ill
and
few
of
them
died.
K
D
K
I'm
gonna
take
you
through
it
a
little
bit.
This
is
the
tamar
tamara's
actually
named
after
an
elta
employee
who
um
it
was
all
over
the
israeli
news.
She
was
very
young.
She
was
like
40
or
something
she
was
a
gifted
engineer.
She
had
two
newborn
twins
um
and
she
called
the
virus
very
early
on
and
died,
and
it
led
to
people
like
in
line
scratching
their
heads
and
saying
how
could
we
have
prevented
this?
K
What
on
earth
happened
that
this
happened,
and
this
is
what
we
came
up
with
so
what
we
have
here,
the
tamar.
We
have
um
a
military
scanner,
okay,
that
we've
taken
from
military
use,
we've
converted
it
to
civilian
use
with
that.
We've
also
got
the
thermal
imaging
camera
and
a
laptop,
it's
a
very,
very
simple
device,
and
it
does
these
two
things
it
first
of
all,
it's
non-contact,
as
you
can
see,
the
lovely
al
is
sitting
there
over
there
he's
like
a
meter
away.
Okay,
like
three
feet
away.
K
Okay,
the
person
operating
this
doesn't
even
need
to
be
in
the
same
room.
They
can
be
in
a
different
country.
It
can
be
operated
remotely.
Okay,
so
that's
one.
A
potentially
infected
person
is
not
going
to
infect
anyone
around
them
or
the
device
itself
genius,
okay.
Secondly,
it's
remote,
as
I
said
uh
sorry
non-contact
now,
a
lot
of
devices
say
that
they're
non-contact
okay,
but
what
that
means
is
they're,
usually
standing
here.
So
there's
no
contact
of,
like
I
don't
know
a
few
centimeters
okay,
this
is
really
no
contact.
K
You
have
someone
rock
up,
they
can
stand,
they
can
sense,
it
very
still
very
still
um
and
you
detect
their
vital,
so
their
non-contact
physiological
signs.
Okay.
Now
what
we
mean
by
that
is,
if
you
look
over
there
on
the
main
board,
this
is
the
very
basic
version
of
the
tomah
okay.
um
This
can
go
in
any
way
like
direction,
but
these
are
the
main
things
that
we're
looking
for
at
the
bottom,
the
36.7
that
is,
the
celsius
version
of
his
body
temperature.
K
We
didn't
have
time
to
change
it
to
fahrenheit,
but
don't
worry,
he's
not
clinically
dead,
just
celsius
and
that's
basically
detecting
from
afar.
Okay,
because
quite
often
the
readings
that
you
get
from
a
forehead
check
and
an
actual
basal
body
temperature
are
slightly
different.
So
this
is
much
more
accurate.
We've
got
the
heart
rate
at
the
top.
K
You
can
see,
there's
like
a
15
to
30
seconds
time,
where
it's
detecting
and
calibrating,
um
and
then
you
detect
his
heart
rate,
uh
the
middle
one,
so
the
yellow
and
the
respiration
rate
that's
the
time
that
he
takes
to
breathe
uh
the
respiration
ratio
in
the
purpley
blue.
That's
how
long
it
takes
them
to
take
in
breath
and.
K
Okay,
now
usually
with
covered
paint
or
potential
covered
patients,
you
see
a
little
bit
of
craziness
going
on
there
because
it's
very
hard
to
take
an
air
again
to
express
that
air,
which
is
where
you
would
see
some
kind
of
fever
response
later
as
the
disease
progresses
and
at
the
bottom,
the
yellow
and
the
restoration
wave.
That's
how
easily
he's
breathing
okay.
So
it's
very
easy
from
this
to
detect
that
there's
an
issue
very
quickly.
Non-Contact
remotely
um
now
you
good
yeah
cool.
K
What
I'm
going
to
do
is
I'm
going
to
show
you
what
happens
when
things
go
wrong?
Okay,
um
it's
very
easy
for
me
to
do
this.
Yesterday
I
made
ilan
run
around
for
10
minutes
and
then
come
and
sit
down,
but
this
is
basically
what
happens.
You'll
see
very
quickly
if
something
isn't
right
because
it
will
flash
up
in
red
on
the
screen.
So
the
idea
is
that
tomorrow
adds
an
extra
layer
of
security,
whether
that's
your
health
checks
or
your
other
types
of
security
in
identifying
the
people
who
need
possibly
further
checking.
K
D
J
Okay,
all
right
so
basically
um
we're
gonna,
we're
gonna
start
the
test
and
I'll
ask
felicity
not
to
move
in
a
general
number
general
information.
Again
as
you
as
we
spoke,
the
regular
you
know
system
you
see
around
only
has
thermal
reading
the
temperature.
Here
we
have
a
multi
layer,
so
the
thermal
camera,
reading
the
temperature,
but
the
sensor,
the
main
innovation
session-
is
this
radar
that
actually
senses
the
movement
of
the
the
chest
of
misfelicity
and
actually
the
heartbeat,
and
you
can
see
now
she's
playing
with
very
fast
breathing
for
a
second.
J
J
K
K
We
have
to
really
put
a
lot
of
effort
in
to
make
them
not
good.
So
um
basically,
the
tamar
can
be
used
in
any
application,
it's
already
being
rolled
out
worldwide.
We
have
interest
in
airports,
so
we
have
interest
in
hospitals.
We've
actually
done
several
studies
in
israeli
hospitals
in
the
past.
Before
I
flew
here,
I
actually
went
and
installed
it
in
three
different
hospitals.
K
I'll
say
this
up
here,
because
it's
usually
the
most
common
question.
People
say:
how
can
you
use
it
in
hospitals?
This
version
of
the
tamar
is
very,
very
basic
and
where
it
goes
from
here,
no
one
will
know,
because
it's
so
versatile-
and
so
you
know
it
just
keeps
growing
with
all
the
stuff
we
can
do
with
it
now
we're
using
it
in
hospitals
and
it's
non-medical
sense,
which
means
uh
the
israeli
covert
wards
are
kind
of
like
wrapped
up
in
cling.
K
D
K
L
Thank
you,
um
hello.
um
I
am
uh
softamir,
I'm
from
the
aviation
group
of
israeli
aerospace
industries.
um
I'm
come
from
an
innovation
background.
I
uh
headed
the
innovation
branch
of
the
aviation
group
for
the
last
four
years,
or
so
I'm
an
industrial
designer
by
my
studies,
so
I've
come
from
a
very
multi-disciplinary
uh
background
same
as
the
organization
I'm
representing
here.
L
The
interesting
thing
about
technology.
That's
a
quick
overview
that
it
is
only
as
good
as
your
ability
to
deploy
and
use
it
to
put
it
into
effect,
and
that's
all
that
was
our
notion
where
we
began
uh
early
the
mid
of
last
year
to
start
to
develop
uh
the
granada
here.
The
uh
what
you
see
here,
of
course,
is
uh
is
an
r
d,
a
fully
operational
uh
unit
of
all
the
capabilities,
but
it's
still
encapsulated
in
a
box
that
can
be
altered
uh
design.
L
You
can
still
tinker
with
the
technology
inside,
so
uh
we
started
uh
scouting
all
the
mines
and
picking
all
the
the
visions
of
the
engineers
and
the
operational
people
and
even
test
pilots,
and
we
went
into
the
wind
channel
testing
facility
to
see
what
everybody
thinks.
What
would
be
the
best
way
to
deploy
this
kind
of
technology?
Uvc
has
been
known
for
quite
a
while
to
be
effective
against
bacteria,
but
there
are
a
lot
of
issues
with
using
it
and
putting
it
to
use
in
aircraft
uh
uh
in
airports,
terminals,
businesses
and
so
on.
L
So
this
is
what
we
came
up
with.
uh
I
want
to
show
you
share
with
you,
a
small
clip
that
will
film
here
uh
uh
in
uh
in
atlantic
county
in
this
airport,
in
the
facilities
starting
to
trying
to
see
how
this
work
uh
within
actual
operational
environment,
because
what
we
for
sure
knew
and
that's
why
we
we
are
so
happy
with
this
collaboration
here-
is
that
you
need
to
touch
the
the
field.
You
need
to
touch
the
uh
uh
your
clients,
your
users,
to
make
this
technology
that
we
thought
of
effective
and
usable.
L
This
unit
was
designed
and
built
to
operate
inside
an
aircraft
in
places
where
our
surfaces
used
to
uh
prepare
food
in
the
lavatories,
and
so
on,
uh
surfaces
that
are
prone
to
uh
infection
uh
and
contamination
with
viruses
and
uh
and
bacteria
it
has
all
the
uh
components
uh
to
operate
by
itself
doesn't
need
to
be
connected
to
a
power
source.
It
has
all
the
control,
all
the
safety
mechanisms
and
everything
needed
to
be
operated
completely
by
its
own.
L
The
nice
thing
about
this
is
that
each
unit
operates
by
itself
and
if
it
senses
that
something
is
wrong,
it
will
automatically
kill
the
light
and
make
sure
nobody
is
harmed
single
press.
All
the
parameters
are
being
transmitted
to
the
units.
They
are
checking
themselves.
They
are
making
sure
that
no
people
are
around.
This
is
the
safety
buzzer
indicating
to
everybody
to
move
away,
and
once
everything
is
cleared,
your
units
fire
up
and
if
I
want
to
uh
just
demonstrate
how
the
uh
safety
works,
it
just
kills
the
light.
If
someone
is
moving
around.
L
L
L
And
finish
its
cycle
as
programmed
there's
a
lot
to
this
unit
that
you
don't
see
the
inside
uh
computer
module
the
connectivity,
the
wireless,
the
safety
mechanism,
the
uh
data
and
ai
algorithms
inside.
However,
you
can
see
the
arrays
of
uvc
leds
on
the
top.
You
can
see
the
safety
light.
You
can
see
the
proximity
sensors
uh
at
the
uh
around
the
unit
to
make
sure
that
no
uh
movement
or
activity
is
missed.
There's
the
on
off
switch,
there's
a
there's.
L
The
safety
switch
there's
the
keypad,
which
ensures
that
only
people
who
knows
the
code
and
the
activity
parameters
are
that
uses
the
unit.
There's
the
mobile
um
battery
pack,
which
uh
provides
for
many
many
uh
dozens
of
cycles,
which
one
between
recharged
and
everything
is
packed
in
a
very
robust
and
compact
unit,
uh
final
product
to
be
approximately
20
to
25
percent
smaller
than
this
one.
L
You
have
to
excuse
this
and
some
guy.
He
was
a
bit
chat
like
when
his
film
was
shot.
So
I
tried
to
make
up.
um
We
had
three
key
factors
in
mind
when,
when
we
designed
and
uh
put
this
system
into
effect,
um
one
there
should
be
automation,
it
means
that
everything
should
run
smoothly
by
itself.
You
don't
want
any
operator
mistakes,
you
don't
want
to
uh
specifically
train
and
and
have
like
a
granada
operators
this.
L
You
actually
cannot
operate
it
where
people
are
inside
uh
uvc.
Light
is
very
harmful
to
bacterial
viruses,
but
also
in
great
doses,
doesn't
do
any
good
for
humans
as
well.
So
this
uh
unit
cannot
be
operated,
no
matter
how
how
much
you
press
the
button?
It
will
not
fire
when
people
are
around
it.
So
automation
is
the
first
thing,
uh
the
the
second
uh
factor.
L
The
key
factor
was
streamline
streamlining
it
into
the
operational
scenario
or
the
workflow
of
the
business
or
the
body
that
or
the
environment
in,
under
which
it
needs
to
be
operated,
meaning
that
if
you
have
a
business,
if
it's
a
school,
it
needs
to
be
uh
operated
uh
by
itself
in
the
cafeteria
or
in
the
classroom.
uh
Allow
for
the
normal
day-to-day
operations
to
carry
on.
If
it's
in
an
aircraft
the
flight
attendants
need
not
have
additional
work
in
order
to
operate
it.
L
This
needs
to
be
seamlessly
uh
incorporated
into
the
workflow
of
the
business
or
the
operation
it
works
inside
and
the
third
aspect
that
granada
is
very
good
at
is
standardization
and
certification.
Every
time
it
operates.
It
measures
the
uh
surfaces,
it's
looking
at
the
amount
of
energy,
the
time
it
is
irradiating
it
locks.
All.
The
information
sends
it
to
the
cloud
and
then
whoever
is
operating.
L
These
are
the
steps
that
we
have
taken
in
order
to
ensure
uh
the
safety
of
our
operation,
and
that's
a
great
step
from
just
uh
you
know
saying
that:
uh
okay,
so
one
guy
with
a
mop
cleaned
this
table
two
hours
ago.
Well,
you
probably
did
a
good
job,
but
this
is
not
measurable.
This
is
not
nothing
that
can
be
standardized
and
then
measured
uh
towards
our
certification.
L
uh
The
units
that
you
see
here
are
there
are
two
variants.
This
one
is
an
actual
ubc
unit.
It's
not
it's
activated,
but
the
safety
switch
is
off,
meaning
that
doesn't
matter
what
I
press,
which
will
not
be
radiate.
This
is
uh
just
for
for
show,
but
it
will
emit
once
operate
a
uvc
light
and
disinfect
whatever
is
in
front
of
it.
The
two.
L
You
see
over,
there
are
white
light
units
same
as
the
flash
in
your
mobile
phone.
It
doesn't
go
any
harm,
just
don't
look
at
it
because
it's
quite
bright,
they
are
interconnected.
That's
one
of
the
features
of
this
unit,
meaning
that
a
single
operator
can
trigger
one
unit
and
all
the
units
that
are
connected
to
it
or
speaking
with
each
other.
Each
one
will
fire
under
the
circumstance
circumstances
under
which
they
are
in
at
the
moment.
L
So
this
unit,
uh
looking
here
at
the
seats,
will
operate
in
a
certain
uh
uh
cycle,
time
uh
in
intensity
and
also
the
hemisphere
and
the
the
orientation
on
configuration
of
the
lat
lamps.
The
led
light
allows
it
to
radiate
only
in
a
certain
direction.
The
other
one
will
operate
at
full
power
trying,
while
trying
aiming
at
disinfection
luggage
coming
out
of
the
conveyor
belt.
So
um
let's
yeah
can
we
trigger,
though,
all
right
so
they'll
trigger
this.
D
L
D
L
Okay,
so
you
can
see
that
this
one
is
only
all
upper
projecting
to
this
side
and
I
will
now
kill
it.
The
other
one
still
works,
because
it
doesn't
doesn't
see
any
any
people,
so
the
lights
are
important.
Uvc
contaminate
this
sticker.
In
the
comments,
this
contamination
is
very
important,
but
the
the
connectivity
and
the
sensoring
capabilities
of
sensing,
the
environment
and
then
calibrating
the
energy
and
amount
of
energy.
That's
what
makes
this
unit
effective
and
highly
deployable
now.
This
is
a
pre-product
demonstration,
meaning
the
technology
inside
is
already
completely
sold.
L
L
If
you
wire
it,
then
it
works
endlessly,
but
it
works
better.
When
directed
you
need
to
create
a
risk
assessment
of
the
work
environment
in
your
specific
business
say
that
this
table
is
the
greater
source
of
contamination.
uh
These
areas
where
people
are
coughing
and
breathing
on
these.
Otherwise,
if
you
want
a
unit
that
will
also
be
strong
enough
to
project
enough
energy
to
the
other
side,
you
will
put
in
a
sensor
that
will
see
people
over
there.
uh
Units
are
also
speaking
to
each
other,
so
you
can
not
you.