
Israeli medical startup AISAP, which is pioneering AI-driven diagnostics, has been recognised as one of the world’s most innovative and promising companies for 2025 by Fast Company. AISAP secured fourth place globally in the healthcare category, a remarkable achievement that underscores the international recognition of its groundbreaking technology and its impact on the future of medicine. One of their products, AISAP CARDIO, is the world’s first real-time AI-powered cardiac diagnostic platform. AISAP Co-founder Ehud Raanani is a Technion alumnus.
Autonomous Flying Cowboys Manage Livestock More Efficiently: Israeli tech startup BeeFree Agro has just delivered its first fleet of “autonomous flying cowboys” to a paying customer. The robots are eyes in the sky that will transform the way the world’s beef cattle are farmed. The drones supply a live feed for 30-minute missions over a ranch and provide high-resolution pictures that show the precise GPS location of every single cow, providing an exact count. Its first system went live in January in Brazil, where it currently manages around 3 million cattle. BeeFree Agro Co-founder and COO Dvir Cohen is a Technion alumnus.
The Woman Behind the Billion-Dollar Brain Surgery Breakthrough:Technion alumna Nora Nseir, founder and co-CEO of Nurami Medical, was recently featured by CTech in an informative Q&A. Nora speaks about founding the company with her partner, Dr. Amir Bahar, their products (which include an internal gel seal that degrades within the body once a wound is healed and a suture-free adhesive that can replace damaged meningeal tissue until new tissue grows), funding rounds, and more.