Lol. What about the people who sell in a long to those that buy at 2.34. Benefits the seller, buyer is now at a massive loss. Everything goes two ways.Hate is such a strong word, I don't "hate" them, I despise them (and I'm aware that hate is a word, used to explain "despise" but to me at least, the meaning is distinct from that).
Biologically speaking, I'd say we are in a "beneficial" symbiotic relationship with the Company (symbionts can also be parasitic).
Shorters, on the other hand are purely parasitic, offering no benefit whatsoever, to the Company that they parasitise.
There are many ways to make money, drug dealers and those that push child prostitution, are just "trying to make money" too.
I think there are clear distinctions between the morality of the methods.
Hence, in my opinion they are parasites.
Hi again @Baisyet,
hmm, I gave you a 2.5 hour head start, but since you haven’t reacted and it is already past midnight on parts of the East Coast, you are possibly already asleep. So let me share this then, before somebody else does:
Yesterday, I spotted this LinkedIn post by Pablo Miralles Roure:
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… and sometime later these comments:
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When I went back earlier today to check out any replies by Laurent Hili, I did indeed find one, but also a new question for Pablo:
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And checking back an hour or so later - voilà, there was the reply I had been hoping for and in fact suspecting…
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By the way, interesting company Pablo Miralles Roure works for:
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Why suspecting, you may ask?
Because I had right away recognised the name of the BrainSat paper’s main author, Raphaël Mena Morales, formerly with Airbus Defence and Space (UK) and now with MDA Space (UK):
Paper information (83502) — IAF
iafastro.directory
(Only the paper’s first page including the abstract is accessible on this website)
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Eight months ago, I drew attention to a reading-between-the-lines comment Raphaël Mena Morales had made under a LinkedIn post by EDGX from Belgium, announcing their first collaboration with ESA regarding their project “Onboard Neuromorphic Acceleration” (by then, we had already been aware of the EDGX / BrainChip collaboration for four months) and had (rightly, as it now turns out) assumed he and his potential collaborators were not exactly unfamiliar with Akida either…
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Now does that mean that Pablo Moralle Roure’s reveal is solid evidence that all the co-authors’ employers are somehow involved and we should rush to add all of them to the list of companies or institutions “confirmed as being engaged with BrainChip”?
Of course not.
Five months ago, Raphaël Mena Morales posted the following about the BrainSat project, literally stressing it started out as a wild idea between friends and former [Airbus] colleagues, calling it an “entirely independent initiative”:
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Obviously, it is still worthwhile to take notice of the BrainSat paper’s co-authors’ current employers, as these young engineers are now definitely confirmed to have first-hand experience with AKD1000, whether or not the companies, unis or research institutions they work for have ever been engaged with our company.
Interesting double-reference to BrainChip: Before joining BAE Systems (UK), Diviya Devani was the Mission Manager and Systems Engineering Lead for Space Machines Company’s Optimus-1, the Australian satellite that was launched on March 4, with the ANT-61 Brain (and hence Akida) onboard, which sadly got lost in space before communication could be established…
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(Since I can only attach a maximum of 10 files, I will post info about the remaining co-authors in another post)
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While the submitted BrainSat paper now lists Prerna Baranwal as one of the co-authors, who was also tagged in yesterday’s LinkedIn post by Pablo Miralles Roure…
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… the five month old LinkedIn post by Raphaël Mena Morales didn’t tag her, but instead Alex Yiannakou:
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Yes, we all have our opinions.Lol. What about the people who sell in a long to those that buy at 2.34. Benefits the seller, buyer is now at a massive loss. Everything goes two ways.
Comparing it to what you've just compared it to is quite far fetched lol.
Anyways, entitled to your opinion.
Hi Dio Ive had no luck as yet , found this from a few months ago I’ve only listened to the first couple of minutes and sounds great so far
Hi DB,Yes, we all have our opinions.
Personally I think they are unscrupulous scum and would be sitting at the same table with the aforementioned, at a function.
Do you think shorters are respectable honest type folk?
They are manipulative opportunists, who relish the manner in which they make money.
Dishonesty is their credo and that is a vein that would run through their lives and interpersonal relationships, it's an unavoidable aspect of their character.
Profit and money is their God and holds importance above all else.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with trading, as long as it's done as it is.
People that attempt to pump a stock (whether or not you believe sentiment affects perceived value) and then sell and reverse to downramping, are just as low life as shorters, in my opinion.
I'm sorry, but disingenuous, dishonest people and even corporations/entities with concern only for themselves and profit, above all else, just disgust me.
Honestly, in all things is a rare quality these days, some seem to think, it's an old fashioned concept.
You're welcome to think, they are just regular good folk, who you may enjoy sharing a beer with.
I understand and thought, more car manufacturers, would move towards producing humanoid robots, because it just makes so much sense.
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Toyota Joins With Hyundai’s Boston Dynamics on AI-Powered Robots | Toyota Research Institute
“The work that we’re doing in generative AI can be a tremendous complement to the kind of work that Boston Dynamics has done.” – Gill Pratt, Chief Scientist at Toyota and TRI CEO. Bloomberg Senior Editor Chester Dawson spoke with our CEO Gill Pratt, Russ Tedrake, VP of Robotics research at TRI...www.linkedin.com
NoiceFurther to my recent postsabout the team around Raphaël Mena Morales, first author of the paper Brainsat: Hardware Development of a Neuromorphic On-board Computer applied to Methane Detection from Low Earth Orbit, which is being presented at the ongoing IAC2024 (International Astronautical Congress) in Milan. Thanks to @Baisyet, who had asked one of the authors in a LinkedIn comment about the neuromorphic hardware they had used, it was confirmed it had indeed been AKD1000.
As suspected, I might add…![]()
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Now here comes the software design team around Andrew Karim, who collaborated with them - we had already heard about that second group of enthusiastic young members of the Space Generation Advisory Council (SGAC) Small Satellite project group through my previous post:
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Their paper - also presented at IAC2024 in Milan - is called Spiking Neural Network Design for on-board detection of methane emissions through Neuromorphic Computing.
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So that makes another eight young space enthusiasts from three continents who recently had exposure to AKD1000 and will hopefully become Akida ambassadors (isn’t that catchy?!) to their present or future employers.
Two of them do not appear to have a LinkedIn profile, here is the rest:
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Interesting TRI are hooked in to a common university program.
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Toyota Joins With Hyundai’s Boston Dynamics on AI-Powered Robots | Toyota Research Institute
“The work that we’re doing in generative AI can be a tremendous complement to the kind of work that Boston Dynamics has done.” – Gill Pratt, Chief Scientist at Toyota and TRI CEO. Bloomberg Senior Editor Chester Dawson spoke with our CEO Gill Pratt, Russ Tedrake, VP of Robotics research at TRI...www.linkedin.com
FF shared the above article over on the other site.
Interesting comment in the article: One of the biggest challenges holding back the commercialization of neuromorphic technology is the lack of software maturity and convergence. Since neuromorphic architecture is fundamentally incompatible with standard programming models, including today’s machine-learning and AI frameworks in wide use, neuromorphic software and application development is often fragmented across research teams, with different groups taking different approaches and often reinventing common functionality. Yet to emerge is a single, common software framework for neuromorphic computing that supports the full range of approaches pursued by the research community that presents compelling and productive abstractions to application developers.
Dio do you think our software assists in bridging the gap they are referring
Does this have publish date anywhere? It says three years of research since establishment in 2018? So this article may be 3 years old now? But i can't see a date anywhere?
FF shared the above article over on the other site.
Interesting comment in the article: One of the biggest challenges holding back the commercialization of neuromorphic technology is the lack of software maturity and convergence. Since neuromorphic architecture is fundamentally incompatible with standard programming models, including today’s machine-learning and AI frameworks in wide use, neuromorphic software and application development is often fragmented across research teams, with different groups taking different approaches and often reinventing common functionality. Yet to emerge is a single, common software framework for neuromorphic computing that supports the full range of approaches pursued by the research community that presents compelling and productive abstractions to application developers.
Dio do you think our software assists in bridging the gap they are referring to?
Dam! I went to one of their events a few years ago which Peter presented at and wrote a pretty detailed summary of Peter's presentation and the general Q&A that followed. I didn't get a notification that this event was on otherwise I would have attended and done the same. Shame!Adam Osseiran gave a presentation on the Akida Pico at the AI Innovation Summit Australia - Indonesia
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I agree with this however they work within the rules of the game. It's our Governments and financial regulators that create the environment for the scummy parasites to operate. There are good reasons why shorting has been banned on other stock exchanges.Yes, we all have our opinions.
Personally I think they are unscrupulous scum and may as well sit at the same table with the aforementioned, at a function.
Do you think shorters are respectable honest type folk?
They are manipulative opportunists, who relish the manner in which they make money.
Dishonesty is their credo and that is a vein that would run through their lives and interpersonal relationships, it's an unavoidable aspect of their character.
Profit and money is their God and holds importance above all else.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with trading, as long as it's done as it is.
So called "Market Movers" fit in the same bin, they manipulate, purely to profit.
People that attempt to pump a stock (whether or not you believe sentiment affects perceived value) and then sell and reverse to downramping, are just as low life as shorters, in my opinion.
I'm sorry, but disingenuous, dishonest people and even corporations/entities with concern only for themselves and profit, above all else, just disgust me.
Honestly, in all things is a rare quality these days, some seem to think, it's an old fashioned concept.
You're welcome to think, they are just regular good folk, who you may enjoy sharing a beer with.