BRN Discussion Ongoing

Diogenese

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Hi Bravo,

Advanced Navigation is an Australian company with your friend and mine Malcolm Turnbull on the board.

Given the newly announced JD with MBDA/NILEQ, BRN should contact them urgently, because they wouldn't want one hand tied behind their back by using obsolete technology.


Since its inception in the 1960s, the Kalman filter has been commonly used to this day for guidance and navigation applications. It has undergone many adjustments designed to improve upon the basic implementation, such as the extended and unscented Kalman filter. In recent years, however, a new approach to filtering based on artificial neural network (ANN) processing has made significant breakthroughs that have pushed the inertial navigation industry into a new era.

Up until recently, little has been concretely achieved in the space of artificial intelligence (AI) for inertial navigation applications, until Advanced Navigation began commercializing a fusion neural network from university research in 2012.

The stakes have been further raised with the widespread use of GNSS jamming and spoofing technologies. This is forcing defence organizations to move away from GNSS-only solutions for position information and, instead, adopt inertial navigation systems (INS) solutions that can provide the necessary precision and reliable dead-reckoning performance.

How does an Artificial Neural Network (ANN) Work?

At its core, an artificial neural network has self-learning capabilities that enable it to convert inputs from various sensors into better resulting outputs as more data becomes available, over time. More precisely, a typical ANN goes through two distinct phases.

  • An initial phase, where processing units making up the ANN are “taught” a set of learning rules used to guide outcomes, recognize patterns in data by comparing actual output produced with the desired output.
  • A second phase, where corrections (referred to as back-propagation) are applied to the actual data to achieve the desired output.
Advanced Navigation’s solution uses the long short-term memory (LSTM) AI principle, which is well-suited to classifying, processing and making predictions based on sensor data with a variable duration between important events.

As LSTM operates over a long timespan, it is relatively insensitive to gap length as an advantage over the hidden Markov model generally associated with Kalman filters.

Advanced Navigation’s ANN relies on three types of memory:

  1. In the lab, long-term learning is hardcoded in the inference engine, based on many hours of testing in various environments.
  2. In the field, short-term learning operates to update the model in the inference engine twice per second. This learning is more constrained and offers what we call “medium level learning”.
  3. Once per minute “deep learning” operates across all sensor data, to self-model the system in order to make the most complex updates to the learned model.

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They mention optic fibre (OF) navigation. I assume they are using the Sagnac effect which measures the phase difference in light beams travelling in opposite directions around an OF loop to detect changes in direction.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sagnac_effect
 
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Diogenese

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Samsung Smart Glasses Could Debut in 2025​

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By Varun Godinho| 19 Nov 2024
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A new report has indicated that Samsung’s new XR glasses are being developed in collaboration with Google and will likely arrive in the third quarter of 2025. The new glasses are expected to share some specs with the Ray-Ban Meta glasses.
Research from Wellsen XR reveals a few new details regarding Samsung’s upcoming XR glasses. Samsung is reported to be planning an initial production run of 500,000 units of these smart glasses.
The glasses will reportedly be powered by Qualcomm’s AR1 chipset, the same chip that’s used in Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses.
The report claims that Samsung’s glasses will have a 12MP Sony IMX681 camera and a 155 mAh battery, almost the same as Ray-Ban’s glasses.
In terms of weight, the glasses would weigh 50g, slightly more than Ray-Ban Meta.
meta-ray-ban-camera-1.webp


Although there is no confirmation regarding a display, given the rumoured specs of the weight and battery size, Samsung’s XR glasses are not expected to feature a display.
In terms of capabilities, Gemini would handle AI tasks alongside support for “payment,” QR code recognition, “gesture recognition,” and “human recognition functions.”
Meta uses AI on its glasses to leverage the camera for multimodal analysis and answers (and scan QR codes), set reminders, and the company has also teased translation features.
Meta recently revealed a prototype for a future product: fully holographic Augmented Reality (AR) glasses. Named Orion, the glasses have a holographic display and users will be able to interact with it using voice, hand-tracking, eye-tracking, and a wrist-based neural interface.
Meta Orion AR Glasses

Meta Orion AR Glasses
While Samsung might trail meta in its smart glasses development, it is far ahead of Apple which is only now beginning to focus resources on developing a smart glasses version of its own. Apple’s initiative, code-named Atlas, began a few weeks ago and involves gathering feedback from Apple employees on smart glasses.
Additional focus groups are planned at Apple, and the studies are reportedly being led by its Product Systems Quality team. However, with Apple’s stringent quality standards and adoption of cutting-edge technology, it may result in a potential launch date of the smart glasses, if it does decide to go ahead with the project, of at least five years from now.



"The new glasses are expected to share some specs with the Ray-Ban Meta glasses." 10 out of 10.
 
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sb182

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CHIPS

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Yep, I believe the LInkedIn post from TCS referred to the blog that was posted a couple of years ago.
Still the reference mentioned ... but a date stamp would be nice.
Why the new LinkedIn post then? Reminding us of their enthusiasm for all things neuromorphic ?

However, puts the "next couple of years" comments into a different frame doesn't it!
That would be about NOW then.

I am sure they are still very enthusiastic about neuromorphic computing at the edge. In their last annual report, Tata Elxsi stated that they will be working with BrainChip for their health products in the coming year(s). Why should the parent company TATA not be using Akida/Pico/TENNs then? Maybe something is coming up and this "reminder" is to prepare the followers for it? I hope so!
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
I wonder what Prophesee is working on with our 2nd gen AKIDA along with all the bells, whistles, vision transformers and TENNs?

Remember this quote from Lucca Verre?


View attachment 60142


BTW, I'm going to assume these smart glasses which Zinn Labs and Prophesee are working on, would be vastly improved with the aid of the AKIDA gen 2.

Event Based Eye Tracking - Zinn Labs | Prophesee

YouTube·PROPHESEE Metavision Technologies·29 Feb 2024



PS: If I hear "let me look that up for you" one more time, I'm going to go cray-cray!



Hi @sb182, I "zinncerely" 😝( hehehe ) hope ChatGPT is wrong in this instance in saying that we're not working with Zinn Labs. I think there's a pretty good chance that we are. It certainly would be TENNs out of ten if we were! :)

IMO of course.
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
Screenshot 2024-11-22 at 10.36.33 pm.png
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
It's interesting because AKIDA Pico is targeting smaller devices. Hala Point wouldn't fit in your ear, unless you have very big ears.


World’s Largest Neuromorphic System, Intel sets world record with Hala Point​

November 22, 2024


[IMG width="377px" height="331.42px" alt="World’s Largest Neuromorphic System, Intel sets world record with Hala Point
"]https://lirp.cdn-website.com/08d313...tem-intel-hala-point-8032b050-1920w.jpg[/IMG]
Santa Clara, California, United States--Intel Corporation (Nasdaq: INTC) has built Hala Point, a large-scale neuromorphic system which can support up to 20 quadrillion operations per second, or 20 petaops, with an efficiency exceeding 15 trillion 8-bit operations per second per watt (TOPS/W), thus setting the world record for being the World’s Largest Neuromorphic System, according to the WORLD RECORD ACADEMY.

 
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Diogenese

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It's interesting because AKIDA Pico is targeting smaller devices. Hala Point wouldn't fit in your ear, unless you have very big ears.


World’s Largest Neuromorphic System, Intel sets world record with Hala Point​

November 22, 2024


[IMG width="377px" height="331.42px" alt="World’s Largest Neuromorphic System, Intel sets world record with Hala Point
"]https://lirp.cdn-website.com/08d313...tem-intel-hala-point-8032b050-1920w.jpg[/IMG]
Santa Clara, California, United States--Intel Corporation (Nasdaq: INTC) has built Hala Point, a large-scale neuromorphic system which can support up to 20 quadrillion operations per second, or 20 petaops, with an efficiency exceeding 15 trillion 8-bit operations per second per watt (TOPS/W), thus setting the world record for being the World’s Largest Neuromorphic System, according to the WORLD RECORD ACADEMY.

Do elephants need hearing aids, or do they just listen to trunk calls?
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
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Do elephants need hearing aids, or do they just listen to trunk calls?
Now you're showing your age🤗
 
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TopCat

Regular
Haven’t heard of Sahoma in a while. Wonder if they’re still talking to us?


 
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Diogenese

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Now you're showing your age🤗
Yes - I've had to explain it to a couple of millennials.

You know - you have to give them THE talk ...

"Once upon a time, when the world was still black and white, there was no internet and mobile phones did not exist ..."
 
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So my thinking is if we are to get an announcement prior to Christmas it will need to be next week or the following. After that the big companies will well and truly be closing shop for a month or two IMO.
Fingers crossed 🤞
 
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CHIPS

Regular
So my thinking is if we are to get an announcement prior to Christmas it will need to be next week or the following. After that the big companies will well and truly be closing shop for a month or two IMO.
Fingers crossed 🤞
I don't expect anything to come this year.
 
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I don't expect anything to come this year.
Mine Xmas present has already arrived in the way of my XRP and know I don’t know what do, cash some buy more BRN or let it ride, but I could buy a shit load more BRN 😂

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schuey

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If your right then Sean has failed......
Again.

After watching the Qualcomm 2024 investor day presentation on YouTube you would have to wonder why anyone would bet against them and chose a little ole Aussie chip company. Qualcomm have all bases covered. Can Akida slip in there somewhere?
 
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CHIPS

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If your right then Sean has failed......

This is too early to judge. Wait until the end of the second quarter of 2025, or at least until the next Annual Meeting ... Sean did not say THIS YEAR, right?!
 
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Frangipani

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Today, numerous articles on some of the promising future technologies Mercedes-Benz is exploring were published online, after the carmaker had recently invited journalists to its Future Technologies Lab in Sindelfingen.

And of course - you guessed it - neuromorphic computing was one of them.
(I also find solar coating another interesting concept).

There was also a press release by MB itself:

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Playmobil-Männchen im Einsatz… 😀

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German magazine auto, motor und sport published both an online article and a video on MB & neuromorphic computing earlier today (both in German) that literally confirm what I’ve been suspecting: that Mercedes-Benz is nowhere near to implementing neuromorphic technology at scale into their serial cars…




“Der Weg in die Serie ist noch weit.” - “It’s still a long way to serial cars”.

“Bis neuromorphe Chips ihren Weg ins Auto finden, wird es wohl noch einige Jahre dauern.” - “It’ll probably take a few years / It looks as if it will still take a few years until neuromorphic chips will find their way into (serial) cars.”


FF7DAB90-5B31-4D17-A941-047AAB3EA91D.jpeg





“Diese Technologie steht jedoch noch am Anfang und erfordert umfangreiche Tests und Zertifizierungen, bevor sie in Autos eingesetzt werden kann.”

“However, this technology is still in its infancy and requires extensive testing and certification before it can be used in cars.”

Something similar is said in the video itself around the 5 min mark.


Other articles are behind a paywall, but maybe one of you happens to be a subscriber and could check out whether there are any additional snippets of interest worth sharing?





My guess is that the next Mercedes-Benz LinkedIn post regarding NC will give us some more details about the research collaboration with HKA (Hochschule Karlsruhe) on neuromorphic cameras. Or it might be a post announcing the collaboration between Mercedes and Neurobus that I had spotted on Nov 12 (https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-441454).
 
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IloveLamp

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