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May. 4, 2021
On Saturday night, a young volunteer from one of the rescue organizations returned to Bnei Brak after the funeral of Yedidya Hayut, the 13-year-old who had been killed in the stampede at the tomb of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai on Mount Meron. He said that his arms still hurt from the resuscitations he carried out Thursday night – 16 in all, not all of them successful.
He couldn’t sleep at night, and he said he wasn’t the only one: “As a Zaka [emergency response] member, you come to the scene and you’re used to seeing a body, two, three. But here there were so many dead. Volunteers were crying.”
Telicomm helps municipalities connect their cities for smart applications by connecting cameras over limited cellular networks without the need for physical cables. This means that it can act as a solution for the growing demand in existing infrastructures that are burdened with limited bandwidths with wide-scale connectivity. The solution helps cities become more connected while saving on costs, set-up times, and easy mobilization.
Telicomm’s Shlomi Arbel. Photo: PR
“We are excited to have SIBF as our lead investor. Together we plan to accelerate our plans to introduce this unique solution to the international markets,” said Shlomi Arbel, Telicomm’s CEO. “Telicomm developed the only available solution for Smart City Camera projects in areas with no infrastructure. There is no practical limit to the number of cameras, the installation is quick and simple, and you can mobilize the solution quite easily.”