BRN Discussion Ongoing

zeeb0t

Administrator
Staff member
Hi all

To prevent the BRN threads getting filled with discussion of the Russia -> Ukraine situation specifically (I don't want to call it a war just yet, even though it seems to be heading that way?) but anyway, back to my point - if we can continue discussion specific to that crisis in this thread? https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/ukraine-russia-unrest-war-and-impact-in-stock-market.141/

Of course happy to discuss it here where it relates to BRN! :)
 
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Hi all

To prevent the BRN threads getting filled with discussion of the Russia -> Ukraine situation (I don't want to call it a war just yet, even though it seems to be heading that way?) but anyway, back to my point - if we can continue discussion specific to that crisis in this thread? https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/ukraine-russia-unrest-war-and-impact-in-stock-market.141/

Of course happy to discuss it here where it pertains to BRN specifically! :)
Very clever you must have been a Cretan Philosopher in a past life.

Can only talk about it here when it pertains to BRN specifically which as we know can never be the case.

As I said very clever.
FF.
 
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zeeb0t

Administrator
Staff member
Very clever you must have been a Cretan Philosopher in a past life.

Can only talk about it here when it pertains to BRN specifically which as we know can never be the case.

As I said very clever.
FF.

Haha, well perhaps I can clarify my saying as meaning where it relates to BRN as a company / product etc. where as if it is just discussion around the crisis (war) or whatever the media is calling it at this stage, we have a thread for it.

I am suggesting we do this so that those who do not want to read about conflict all day (except where it relates to BRN somehow) may wish to avoid the subject.
 
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Hi FF,
I believe this is another reporter who may need a link to the BRN website.

When covid is in the rear view mirror I expect the so called tech reporters can attend trade shows and understand just how far advanced we are.

A quick search into Mr Charles Q Choi will alieve any frustration.

Be careful of the rabbit holes, don't wanna loose you down there.

Edge compute.
Yes I have done a little background research on Mr. Choi. He seems to be a very nice fellow quite likeable and does not appear to have any affiliations with Intel or IBM. The researchers who authored the paper are most likely funded in some fashion by Intel or IBM because that is what they do with universities world wide.

Looking at the range of areas Mr. Choi writes about I am sure he would be open to discovering all about AKIDA technology if given the opportunity.
FF
 
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zeeb0t

Administrator
Staff member
Got that . I thought the Ai connect was the connect as Bchips in last job description wanted DoD contract experience. Its connected for me as I also peruse us DoD stuff to see if I can find Bchips dots... ie


JAIC joint artificial intelligrnceweb site

Yes, there has been many valid discussions where it relates to BRN and that's fine... see my other post above :)
 
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Diogenese

Top 20
Lucas - prince of darkness. It may have taken more than 50 years to learn why, but now I understand. I had a second-hand Hillman and so did a couple of my cobbers. Minx's as early as 1953 through to mid-60's models. We spent more time pushing them home from the pub or the drive-in than driving them. The ignition system in mine was particularly reliable...to failure. Their history of failure was the cause of, otherwise unnecessary, romantic break-ups. The social history of a rural town in Western Victoria may have been vastly different without Hillmans.

Thank you Dodgy Knees for your vast knowledge. Strangely, I feel better now, simply for knowing. Lucas prince of darkness...pfft.
Hillman's - they came in black. During a night time car rally on the back roads (dirt) the driver realized we were approaching the check-point from the wring direction (alright - blame the navigator), so he turned off the lights and floored it (you can imagine the G-forces generated by a 1950's Hillman on full throttle). We sailed through the check-point at peak revs. Have you ever driven over a cattle grid at 45 mph?

During the same rally, a beautifully restored Holden ute flipped, no seatbelts, no injuries - Michelin tyres anre't so good on dirth roads.
I remember converting a car to electronic ignition because of Mr. Lucas and being tired of pushing. LOL FF
I did that too, but I didn't remember doing it.
 
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D

Deleted member 118

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Little bit more I found on that Bosch sensor

D453C1E7-36BD-482D-9E63-796265E63B55.png


 
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Nvidia tweeted this today 😡



29D4C003-7D49-4AF5-BF64-0340691F5A66.png
 
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Diogenese

Top 20
Will leave a candle in the window so you can find your way back. LOL FF
I have some bread crumbs to spare ...
 
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McHale

Regular
Will leave a candle in the window so you can find your way back. LOL FF
I probably need something similar to Byron lighthouse, but thankyou for the illumination.
 
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M_C

Founding Member
One of our guys in Hyderabad have posted on LinkedIn recently about a position we have going for a "ASIC Design Verification Engineers"............Here are a few of the "Likes" we got............

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M_C

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MarekLa

Member
I don't want to destroy any illusions here, however, the sensor was already presented on 09.11.2020. 🦎

Maybe they are an EAP customer from the beginning, who knows. Otherwise, I would claim that something else is in there
 
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D

Deleted member 118

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I don't want to destroy any illusions here, however, the sensor was already presented on 09.11.2020. 🦎
Presented, so why has it taken them 18 months to get a developed product for sale?
 
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McHale

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I have some bread crumbs to spare ...
I'm reminded here, of one of my favourite Nick Cave songs Stranger Than Kindness, it's overwhelming. Thank you kind sir.
 
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Deleted member 118

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Maybe they are an EAP customer from the beginning
Maybe to me is a no doubt they wasn’t, but with a product for sale very soon, revenue could start flowing from this in the last 6 months of this year
 
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hamilton66

Regular
I will just have to stop doing research. Every time I think I know the full potential of AKIDA in a lay sense I fall into another hole and the following article is one very deep hole into which I need Dio to dive and come back with an explanation that will satisfy my needs and allow me to sleep:

Brain-Inspired Chips Good for More than AI, Study Says

Neuromorphic tech from IBM and Intel may prove useful for analyzing X-rays, stock markets, and more​

CHARLES Q. CHOI
15 FEB 2022
4 MIN READ
A green microchip with silver dots

Intel’s neuromorphic research chip Loihi is part of a class of microprocessors designed to mimic the human brain's speed and efficiency.
TIM HERMAN/INTEL
NEUROMORPHIC CHIPS ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IBM INTEL MONTE CARLO PARALLEL COMPUTING NEUROMORPHIC COMPUTING


Brain-inspired “neuromorphic” microchips from IBM and Intel might be good for more than just artificial intelligence; they may also prove ideal for a class of computations useful in a broad range of applications including analysis of medical X-rays and financial economics, a new study finds.
Scientists have long sought to mimic how the brain works using software programs known as neural networks and hardware known as neuromorphic chips. So far, neuromorphic computing was mostly focused on implementing neural networks. It was unclear whether this hardware might prove useful beyond AI applications.
Neuromorphic chips typically imitate the workings of neurons in a number of different ways, such as running many computations in parallel. In addition, just as biological neurons both compute and store data, neuromorphic hardware often seeks to unite processors and memory, potentially reducing the energy and time that conventional computers lose in shuttling data between those components. Furthermore, whereas conventional microchips use clock signals fired at regular intervals to coordinate the actions of circuits, the activity in neuromorphic architecture often acts in a spiking manner, triggered only when an electrical charge reaches a specific value, much like what happens in brains like ours.
Until now, the main advantage envisioned with neuromorphic computing to date was in power efficiency: Features such as spiking and the uniting of memory and processing resulted in IBM’s TrueNorth chip, which boasted a power density four orders of magnitude lower than conventional microprocessors of its time.
“We know from a lot of studies that neuromorphic computing is going to have power-efficiency advantages, but in practice, people won’t care about power savings if it means you go a lot slower,” says study senior author James Bradley Aimone, a theoretical neuroscientist at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque.

Now scientists find neuromorphic computers may prove well suited to what are called Monte Carlo methods, where problems are essentially treated as games and solutions are arrived at via many random simulations or “walks” of those games.
“We came to random walks by considering problems that do not scale very well on conventional hardware,” Aimone says. “Typically Monte Carlo solutions require a lot of random walks to provide a good solution, and while individually what each walker does over time is not difficult to compute, in practice, having to do a lot of them becomes prohibitive.”
In contrast, “Instead of modeling a bunch of random walkers in parallel, each doing its own computation, we can program a single neuromorphic mesh of circuits to represent all of the computations a random walk may do, and then by thinking of each random walk as a spike moving over the mesh, solve the whole problem at one time,” Aimone says.
Specifically, just as previous research has found quantum computing can display a “quantum advantage” over classical computing on a large set of problems, the researchers discovered a “neuromorphic advantage” may exist when it comes to random walks via discrete-time Markov chains. If you imagine a problem as a board game, here “chain” means playing the game by moving through a sequence of states or spaces. “Markov” means the next space you can move to in the game depends only on your current space, and not on your previous history, as is the case in board games such as Monopoly or Candy Land. “Discrete-time” simply means “that a fixed time interval happens between changing spaces—“a turn,” says study lead author Darby Smith, an applied mathematician at Sandia.
In experiments with IBM’s TrueNorth and Intel’s Loihi neuromorphic chips, a server-class Intel Xeon E5-2662 CPU, and an Nvidia Titan Xp GPU, the scientists found that when it comes to solving this class of problems at large scales, neuromorphic chips proved more efficient than the conventional semiconductors in terms of energy consumption, and competitive, if not better, in terms of time.
“I very much believe that neuromorphic computing for AI is very exciting, and that brain-inspired hardware will lead to smarter and more powerful AI,” says Aimone. “But at the same time, by showing that neuromorphic computing can be impactful at conventional computing applications, the technology has the potential to have much broader impact on society.”
One way the neuromorphic chips achieved their advantages in performance and energy efficiency was a high degree of parallelism. Compounding that was the ability to represent each random walk as a single spike of activity instead of a more complex set of activities.

“The big limitation on these Monte Carlo methods is that we have to model a lot of walkers,” Aimone says. “Because spikes are such a simple way of representing a random walk, adding an extra random walker is just adding one extra spike to the system that will run in parallel with all of the others. So the time cost of an extra walker is very cheap.”
The ability to efficiently tackle this class of problems has a wide range of potential applications, such as modeling stocks and options in financial markets, better understanding how X-rays interact with bone and soft tissue, tracking how information moves on social networks, and modeling how diseases travel through population clusters, Smith notes. “Applications of this approach are everywhere,” Aimone says.
But just because a neuromorphic advantage may exist for some problems “does not mean that brain-inspired computers can do everything better than normal computers,” Aimone cautions. “The future of computing is likely a mix of different technologies. We are not trying to say neuromorphic will supplant everything.”
The scientists are now investigating ways to handle interactions between multiple “walkers” or participants in these scenarios, which will enable applications such as molecular dynamics simulations, Aimone notes. They are also developing software tools to help other developers work on this research, he adds.
The scientists detailed their findings in the 14 February online edition of the journal Nature Electronics.

My opinion only and frustration DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
F/F, not sure if this has been posted.
Just another duck jumping on the back of the line. GLTA
 
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I have seen this on numerous websites, touting some type of industry report for the meagre price of USD$4000! Dated December 2021. Must be a hell of a read

Always good to see Brainchip mentioned with the heavy hitters - first in a non-alphabetical ordered list too

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