Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Intel acquires Israeli startup company Screenovate for $100 million

“The opportunity to become part of Intel with its market coverage, technology power and excellent connections opens new horizons for all of us,” said Screenovate founder and CEO Joshua Glazer.

Intel Israel at the MATAM high-tech and business park in Haifa. Credit: Intel.com.
Intel Israel at the MATAM high-tech and business park in Haifa. Credit: Intel.com.

The global tech powerhouse Intel announced on Monday that it acquired Israeli startup Screenovate.

No deal details were released publicly, though a source told the Israeli business daily Globes that Intel is paying $100 million for Screenovate, which is 10 times the $10 million it had raised.

The acquired company develops screen-duplication solutions that allow interaction between multiple devices.

Intel invested in Screenovate in 2014; after the acquisition, the Israeli company will join Intel’s Client Computing Group, according to Globes.

“The many research studies that we have conducted have found the enormous importance of the user experience, regardless of what device is being used,” said Intel vice president of client engineering Jim Johnson.

Screenovate founder and CEO Joshua Glazer said “the opportunity to become part of Intel with its market coverage, technology power and excellent connections opens new horizons for all of us.”

Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood Al-Saadi “directed and urged others to attack U.S. and Israeli interests and to kill Americans and Jews in the U.S. and abroad,” the Justice Department said.
One caller, who invoked Tucker Carlson, told Rep. Jared Moskowitz, a Florida Democrat, that “you’re the Hitler.”
“There will be ups and downs, but the potential for success is great,” wrote Yechiel Leiter, the Israeli envoy in Washington.
“I don’t want to quit. I’m not a quitter,” Steve Cohen said. “But these districts were drawn to beat me. They were drawn to defeat me.”
Federal prosecutors allege Elias Rodriguez carried out a premeditated terrorist attack motivated by “political, ideological, national and religious bias, contempt and hatred.”
“We shouldn’t host the relatives of people who attack our country,” said Sen. Tom Cotton.