Jacob Kiraz
Member
What ever happened to the Nitendo switch 2?
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How Akida's neuromorphic processor boosts AI efficiency | BrainChip posted on the topic | LinkedIn
Our latest blog explores how Akida’s neuromorphic processor takes advantage of activation sparsity in neural networks to deliver ultra-low-power, high-performance AI for applications where power, latency, and bandwidth are limited. Unlike conventional accelerators, Akida skips unnecessary...www.linkedin.com
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Yes, that statement actually comes from a paper presented at the IEEE ISVLSI conference in July 2023. The paper is titled "Comparative Analysis of Low-Power Anomaly Detection on Neuromorphic Chips for Controller Area Network (CAN) Data", and was co-authored by Tarek Taha (University of Dayton) and Simon Khan (AFRL), among others.
In the study, they implemented an anomaly detection model on both Loihi and Akida chips, using the same CAN dataset. The results showed that Loihi consumed around 91 times less power than Akida for this specific task.
However, it's important to note that this is not a general benchmark. The test was very specific to a certain use-case in vehicular networks, and the result depends heavily on the software setup, optimization level, and even how the power consumption was meassured. Also, Loihi is more of a research platform, while Akida targets edge applications with different design priorities.
So the result is interesting, but should'nt be overgeneralized.
It appears not everyone at AFRL resp. collaborating with AFRL would agree that Akida is always the superior choice:
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Anomaly detection of CAN bus messages on neuromorphic hardware
Anomaly detection is becoming an essential component of the modern automotive industry. With the increasing prevalence of smart vehicles, the number of Electronic Control Units (ECUs) integrated within automotive systems is also growing. These ECUs communicate through the Controller Area Network...spie.org
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My guess..The share price is currently at 19.25c, but there are 5x 1 volume buy-orders sitting at 19c.
Why on Earth would you be willing to wait for 19c for 1 unit, doesn't make sense, haha!
White knights or circling vultures?An XPU, or "X Processing Unit," is a broad term encompassing various specialized processors, including CPUs, GPUs, DPUs, and NPUs, designed for high-performance computing and AI/ML applications
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What SoftBank, Government Investments Could Mean for Intel's Business—and Stock
Intel shares jumped on Tuesday as investors responded to signals the Trump administration may throw the company’s troubled foundry business a lifeline.www.investopedia.com
EXTRACT ONLY
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White knights or pack of vultures?
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202508/1341346.shtml
US govt reportedly to take 10% stake in Intel
Move could erode trust in chip giant, change relationship between govt and businesses: experts
By GT staff reportersPublished: Aug 20, 2025 10:27 PM
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Thank you very much for pointing this out and for your thorough check.Hi @Baneino,
could you please share with us where you found evidence of that July 2023 IEEE ISVLSI conference paper titled “Comparative Analysis of Low-Power Anomaly Detection on Neuromorphic Chips for Controller Area Network (CAN) Data”, which you referred to in your above post?
Neither is it included in Tarek Taha’s extensive list of publications (which, while not quite up to date, should be exhaustive with respect to those published in 2023) nor could I find any trace of it when googling the paper’s title as such (except for your 28 July TSE post, that is).
The only conference paper listed on Tarek Taha’s website, which appears to be relevant to the topic, happens to be the 2024 paper “Unsupervised Anomaly Detection for Automotive CAN Bus on the Intel Loihi”:
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This is also the only paper on this topic I was able to find under Simon Khan’s Google Scholar profile, who - according to you - is one of the other co-authors.
Said 2024 conference paper was not a comparative analysis, though, plus the authors stated in their abstract that “To the best of our knowledge, this is the first low-power, unsupervised anomaly detection system using the Loihi or any other neuromorphic processor”, which obviously wouldn’t make sense if they had already published an earlier paper comparing Loihi and Akida.
(https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10651224/)
Then there is also the 6 August 2025 conference paper titled “Anomaly Detection of CAN bus messages on neuromorphic hardware” that I referred to in April, which equally appears to contradict the existence of a prior comparative paper by the same authors (cf. section underlined in red):
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Is that mysteriously elusive 2023 conference paper you claimed existed by any chance a GenAI hallucination?
Hi Bravo,HI @Diogenese,
Do you think BrainChip, Arm and IFS could be collaborating to create an Akida 3 chiplet on Intel’s 18A?
If Akida 3 is delivered as a standards-compliant chiplet, you would think it would dramatically broaden adoption, making it much easier for any multi-die SoC/SiP program - not just Arm’s - to plug Akida in.
This could also open the door to other players such as NVIDIA, AMD, Qualcomm, MediaTek, SoftBank (e.g. Stargate), Tier-1 automotive suppliers, and defense primes.
From a strategic standpoint, it seems both technically feasible and mutually beneficial:
Do you think Akida 3 could support UCIe or Arm’s Chiplet System Architecture (CSA)?
- BrainChip would gain wider adoption by positioning Akida 3 as a “drop-in” neuromorphic accelerator across multiple ecosystems.
- Intel would expand its foundry business by offering differentiated AI chiplets on 18A, attracting new customers (including the US govt, defense primes, etc.) and reinforcing its chiplet marketplace ambitions.
- Arm would strengthen its SoC value proposition by pairing Arm CPUs with complementary AI chiplets (like Akida), giving customers more modular design options.
Hi @TECH,
sorry to disillusion you, but this is not a new Accenture patent!
@Fullmoonfever had already posted about it more than a year ago.
This patent titled “Self-learning Neuromorphic Gesture Recognition Models” was filed on 22 November 2022 and first published on 23 May 2024:
https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-432356
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I also recalled referring to it in a November 2024 post:
https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-442579
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The only novel thing about the patent is that it has now finally been granted, after initially getting rejected back in February (cf. the meaning of B2 after the patent number as well as below patent history):
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As far as I am aware, Accenture has referred to Intel’s Loihi as a “neuromorphic research chip” in all their relevant patents at some point. Please provide proof of the contrary, thank’s!
One thing which adds urgency to the US/Intel deal is the threat to TSMC posed by the potential takeover of Taiwan.Hi Bravo,
Last time I looked, Intel were having problems getting 18A to work properly - very low yield per wafer.
In olden times, Intel would have been able to throw fistfulls (fistsfull) of cash at the problem but now they are strapped for cash, and the sharks are circling. Clearly there has been a backdoor deal with US gvt - Intel is too big to fail. Under the Chips Act, the gov would want IFS to succeed so maybe that's where their investment has gone. Of course, Intel also needs help with AI.
Nvidia was blocked from buying ARM, so this may prevent any merger, but collaboration is possible, it's just that there could be lots of fingers in the pie. Maybe IFS will be hived off - it's already notionally customer-agnostic. This would leave Intel pretty much as it was before IFS in 2024.
As for Akida 3, I see this as being the Rolls-Royce option (aerospace, defence, ...) because of its INT16/FP32 capability. This will take up a lot more wafer real estate per chip, making it much more expensive to make, say >3X. I think Akida 3 will be a specialist high precision option, while Akida 2 will be the "standard" workhorse.
I don't know if 18A is suitable for RadHard.
The advantage of chiplets is that it would make Akida available for a much larger range of applications without needing specialized IP SoC designs/wafer tapeout/production for each customer.
Okay, it's odd that that is the only article "I" could find on the Net in relation to Loihi 3..
But I did find this, from April last year and actually from Intel..
"Hala Point packages 1,152 Loihi 2 processors produced on Intel 4 process node in a six-rack-unit data center chassis the size of a microwave oven. The system supports up to 1.15 billion neurons and 128 billion synapses distributed over 140,544 neuromorphic processing cores, consuming a maximum of 2,600 watts of power. It also includes over 2,300 embedded x86 processors for ancillary computations"
The numbers seem familiar..
Somebody tell me what the frack is going on....
The previous article looks like it's..
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So this "Hala Point" is the size of a microwave oven and is already in 4nm?!
It ain't getting smaller any time soon, is my guess...
Today’s post by Lauren Reinerman-Jones from SwRI (Southwest Research Institute) is further evidence that the US Air Force - while currently evaluating Akida - continues to be interested in Loihi:
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#swri #intel #neuromorphic #ai #afmc711hpw #afrlryza #afrlrst #aflcmchby | Lauren Reinerman-Jones
It has been great sharing the excitement of our work with Air Force personnel in our #SwRI Dayton office. One of our partner’s at #Intel came to support #neuromorphic #AI demos to folks from #AFMC711HPW, #AFRLRYZA, #AFRLRST, and #AFLCMCHBY. Thank you to each of the Air Force personnel that took...www.linkedin.com
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Why spend all that $$$$ when your not going to use what you buy![]()
GROK says this:
There is currently no publicly available information about a Loihi 3 chip from Intel. The latest data refers to the Loihi 2, introduced in September 2021 as Intel's second-generation neuromorphic research chip. Built on the Intel 4 process (previously known as 7 nm), it supports up to one million neurons and offers significant improvements over the original Loihi, including faster processing, better energy efficiency, and enhanced connectivity options.
Intel is currently focused on advancing and applying Loihi 2, along with its open-source Lava software framework for neuromorphic applications. There are no indications in available sources that a Loihi 3 is in development or has been announced. If you have specific rumors or sources about a potential Loihi 3, please share them for a more targeted response.
Intel's most recent major advancement in this area is the Hala Point system, announced in April 2024, which deploys 1,152 Loihi 2 processors to create the world's largest neuromorphic system with 1.15 billion neurons.
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Projections for 2025 suggest Intel plans to integrate Loihi 2 into consumer devices for edge AI applications, but no announcements or details about a Loihi 3 have surfaced in official sources or recent reports.
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The company continues to focus on advancing Loihi 2 through research collaborations, the open-source Lava software framework, and systems like Hala Point for sustainable AI.