About

My name is Shlomo Strauss.

I am the owner of White Tiger Technologies, an online business dedicated to marketing hardware to businesses and companies, server management, and the development of technological solutions. Additionally, I serve as the Chief Information Officer and Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer (CIO / CAIO) at Channel 10 – Israel's economic channel.
In my role at Channel 10, I am responsible for establishing the channel's technological systems and infrastructure, setting professional standards, and leading technological projects and innovation within the company.

I am married and a father of three, a graduate of the Haredi Litvak education system, and I hold a certification to serve as a City Rabbi on behalf of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel.
The combination of accumulated technological knowledge and experience, alongside my daily proximity to the capital market world, allows me to provide a unique perspective and in-depth analyses of global processes. I share this perspective in posts that I publish twice a week on LinkedIn.

Every Friday, I publish a segment called "A Taste of Science for the Weekend," which explores a scientific topic in an engaging and enriching way. This blog was launched in June 2026 in honor of the 100th publication of the weekly segment, and it serves as an archive for all the technological and scientific content I have written.

A great deal of effort is invested in these posts to provide genuine value, an interesting perspective, and refreshing insights, even for those already closely familiar with the field.
All posts are written manually, without generating drafts or content using artificial intelligence. Avoiding the automated creation of content via artificial intelligence is what allows me to maintain a consistent, accurate, and professional tone, which is so crucial to the quality of the final product. Additionally, writing is a positive and enriching experience, and I see value in writing for the sake of writing, even when it can be made easier through technological means.

I have always loved science.
Science allows us to understand things, and this fact makes it particularly intriguing. This curiosity accompanied me during my teenage years when I was exposed to physics, a field that remains very close to my heart to this day.
The first post of "A Taste of Science for the Weekend" was uploaded to LinkedIn quite casually, and I was surprised by the extent of the exposure it received. I realized that a brief, accessible review of a single scientific topic each week could be a format that interests people on the one hand, and creates a commitment for me to read and expand my knowledge in scientific fields on the other.

This segment has turned Thursday nights into quality time for me. For two hours or more, I dive deep into a specific topic and study it thoroughly.
A small community of readers has developed around this segment, and I can proudly say that they are the highest quality and most intelligent readers on the platform. These readers contribute from their knowledge and experience, challenge me with intriguing questions, and spark discussions around the topic.

This fact brings me joy because it proves that the effort to create quality content yields results; simultaneously, it also compels me to repeatedly ensure that the professional standard of the content is high enough to pass the critical eye of academics in the field.
In recent months, I have had another little secret: the segment has proven to be an extraordinary tool for identifying investment opportunities.
Some of these are areas the market has not yet priced appropriately, while others certainly receive hype in the investment world—but examining them in depth makes it possible to understand the optimal investment timeline and identify the best companies in the field.

Among these investments are green hydrogen, nuclear energy, quantum computing, germanium substitutes, and Japan's semiconductor industry.
My resume does not hint at any connection to science, and my only connection to academia is that I am married to a chemist.

And yet, in my eyes, science is not just knowledge, but primarily a worldview and a way of thinking.
Science sanctifies facts over wishful thinking, curiosity over narrow-mindedness, and initiative over fatalism.
Science proves time and again that when we make the effort to understand what is happening around us and why things occur, we are capable of improving the quality of life for billions of people and preventing human suffering.
The scientific establishment is sometimes accused of arrogance, and there may be some justice in that. But the scientific establishment is also equipped with a humility that allows it to research, examine, make mistakes, and correct them—a humility that does not exist among those who oppose it.

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The science segment is open to interviews.
If you are a doctor, professor, senior industry executive, or manager of a scientific startup, you are welcome to write to me, and we will meet for a conversation.
The content of our discussion will be used to write the segment, allowing your ideas to reach a wider audience, and, of course, you will receive full credit for them.

Yours with love,
Shlomo Strauss

Connect with Shlomo Strauss on LinkedIn