fbpx

The Colonel of Command Control

[additional-authors]
March 13, 2019
Natan Barak

If mPrest’s command-and-control system is the nerve center of Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system, then founder and CEO Natan Barak is its cerebrum. Barak, however, argues that some of the real smarts behind his technology stem from the legions of Charedi women he employs. 

A retired Navy colonel, Barak won Israel’s prestigious Defense Prize for his contribution to the Jewish state’s national security with the Iron Dome (developed together with Rafael Advanced Defense Systems). Sensors all over Israel report on airborne metal, which is then identified as an incoming projectile and then the system calculates if it’s going to land in population centers or deserted areas. In each instance, the system determines solutions for hundreds of real-time scenarios. 

Because mPrest’s command-and-control is flexible and generic, it can be adapted to almost any system in the world. For that reason, mPrest has since moved from defense to civilian solutions and, according to Barak, now operates in almost every country, powering IoT (internet of things) capacities: smart water utilities, smart energy, smart agriculture, vehicle tracking and even natural disaster forecasting. 

“First of all, we saved lives but now we want to make life more beautiful by increasing efficiency and reducing costs,” Barak said. 

As with the Iron Dome, the system collects data before a natural disaster from tens of thousands of sensors, radars and drones and concentrates them into a single picture to determine the impact on critical infrastructure and facilities. 

“Everyone thinks we are the startup nation because of our defense activity, but the truth is, [it’s] because we were learning Talmud for many years.”

Netafim, the Israeli company famous for pioneering drip-irrigation technology, started to use mPrest’s systems in a bid to overhaul its model. Now mPrest is enabling Netafim to remotely manage thousands of farms around the world, and that number is set to swell to tens of thousands by the end of the next year, Barak said. 

Another mPrest client, New Zealand’s electricity and gas distributor Vector Limited, recently made a $10 million investment in the firm, joining the ranks of existing investors including OurCrowd, Rafael, GE Ventures, Israel Electric Corp. and Angeleno Group.

Barak doesn’t wear a kippah but is Orthodox and a graduate of Bnei Akiva yeshiva. A strong advocate for Charedi women in the workforce, he runs a team comprised exclusively from that demographic. Although he admits that there are challenges to running such a team, such as frequent maternity leaves, the benefits far outweigh the pitfalls. “They do the same work as engineers — they’re no less good,” he said. In addition to being smart and quick learners, they also contribute to a positive work environment. “They are very devoted. They don’t waste time on Facebook and they are very, very straight,” he said, citing the example of an employee who asked permission before taking the time to make a personal phone call. 

Barak said that his Torah background probably had more to do with the trajectory his life took than his illustrious military career. The logic behind his theory applies also to Israel itself. “Everyone thinks we are the startup nation because of our defense activity, but the truth is, we are the startup nation because we were learning Talmud for many years,” he said. “The whole Talmud is about differentiators. One rabbi will say one thing and one rabbi will contradict. It’s about arguing, questioning and analyzing. This is the power and the beauty of our nation.”

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

The Philanthropic Pivot to Jewish Joy Is Misguided

The problem is not Jewish joy itself. The problem is the growing belief that Jewish joy can replace the difficult work of protecting the conditions that make Jewish flourishing possible in the first place.

Zionism and the Bones of Ezekiel

Nothing about the Jewish story—with its revolutionary insistence that there is one God, its history of relentless suffering, its triumphant return to the land it was expelled from millennia ago—is normal, and we shouldn’t try claiming it is.

Papa, Thank You

There are moments in my own life that I would not have overcome without what my father gave me. His resilience became mine. His mindset became my foundation.

The Two-State Conundrum

While I continue to personally believe that a two-state solution is preferable to sacrificing Israel’s Jewish or democratic foundations, I would never attempt to impose my priorities from 7,500 miles away.

Jewish Angelenos and our Allies Deserve Better

Los Angeles City Council member Nithya Raman wants to be mayor of Los Angeles, but after her actions earlier this month, many Jewish Angelenos are left wondering whether her vision for the city truly includes all of us.

When Hippies Hate

The one community that should have shown unwavering solidarity with Israel after October 7 was the Park Slope Food Coop. Unless they were tripping out on antisemitism last week, what could possibly have drawn them to the side of carnivorous barbarians?

Israel in Three Words

Israelis seem to have a special affinity for that electric energy of the here and now. Maybe that is how the country has made it this far— millions and millions of “What do we do now?”

Boring, Very Boring

AI is accelerating our decline into a monoculture, where everything sounds the same, a culture that is dull and unoriginal.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.