I guess your question is reference to the differences,
1. In Judaism, IE Jews don't accept Jesus and Muhammad as prophets, where as in Islam, both Jesus and Muhammad are considered as prophets,
2. Judaism came before Christianity and Islam, later came Christianity in continuation of Judaism.. and then came Islam in continuation of Christianity. so you can say Islam is most updated version of both Christianity and Judaism. but Christians and Jews don't accept this fact, but Qur'an makes it clear in a lot of verses about it.
3. Few(few, not all) Muslims and Christians don't like Jews for a reason that Jews by history known as people who killed Jesus, and various other prophets.
there are few other minor differences in aspects to culture and geopolitics , but those are not that much important to mention.
There are few similarities between Judaism and Islam as well
1. monotheism
2. only eat halal meat
3. both think of Moses as prophet
Islam, Judaism and Christianity.
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam have all claimed the Holy Land for themselves.
islam christianity judaism hinduism
Islam was formed last
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam religions.
Islam and Judaism are two distinct monotheistic religions that share part of their history.
For Judaism and Christianity it is Jerusalem. For Islam it is Mecca.
-- Islam -- Judaism -- Christianity
Abraham is considered the father of Judaism, Christianity and Islam as the Old Testament's 5 books of Moses - The Pentateuch (books are: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numeri and Deuteronomy) are included in the Holy Book of Judaism that is Torah. Eventually he is considered as the father of Islam basically claims entire religions of Judaism and Christianity as "prophets" and predecessors of Islam.
Christianity and Islam both trace their roots to Judaism.
Abrahamic religions include Judaism, Christianity, Islam and the Baha'i faith. Christianity recognize Judaism but not Islam. Islam recognizes Judaism, Christianity but not Baha'i faith. And finally Baha'i faith recognizes Judaism, Christianity and Islam all together. And obviously he did not start anything. He simply preached the word of God, i.e. the holy revelations.
Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Though Islam doesn't view Jerusalem in the same manner as Judaism or Christianity. For Judaism and Christianity, Jerusalem is place of the world's foundation and the city where G-d's presence once rested. Islam's holy city is actually Mecca, in Saudi Arabia. Islam's claim to Jerusalem is political, not religious (or at least not at all in the way Christians and Jews view Jerusalem).