BRN Discussion Ongoing

DK6161

Regular
I agree, those small orders are off-course nice but can't sustain the company unless they secure hundreds of them.

Just been on the crapper, there are much more negative posts than positive, people are getting impatient, really impatient, but there are too many down rampers and I had enough, will stay out of there for a while, got better things to do.

As you said, if they can't secure any good IP deals before the AGM, he is in for a shitty time in Australia.

The "watch us now" comment he made is sort of within a 3 months window, IMO.

I will assume he said that because they are close signing some sort of deal?

There seems to be huge interest at the CES show in Vegas, fully booked, I think I read somewhere?

Let's hope that behind the NDAs, it's looking good??
Fully booked because they were giving free booze
 
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Guzzi62

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Ummm....Uniwin Global blog from a day ago apparently....something we don't know...or Uniwin just throwing it out there :unsure:



Smarter, Faster, Safer Access Control with Modern Face Recognition​

Limitations of Traditional Access Control Systems

For many years, traditional access control systems have relied on credentials such as passwords, swipe cards, and PIN codes. These approaches have been common, but they now fall short against today’s security threats. Passwords get guessed or stolen through phishing tricks. Cards can be copied or taken. PINs might be seen by others or exposed. All this opens doors to unwanted intruders. One big issue with these older systems is the lack of biometric checks. This lets fake users slip through more easily. Also, centralized credential databases become high-value targets for attackers. If attackers break in, they can grab data from thousands of people. Big problems for daily work and a hit to the company’s image.

Limitations of Traditional Access Control Systems

Rise of Biometric and Smart Solutions

Biometric verification has stepped up as a strong option. It ties entry rights to personal traits like fingerprints, palm veins, or face shapes. Face recognition stands out here. It’s touch-free and people like it a lot. Smart systems mix biometric checks with clever AI tools. They deliver both safety and ease. So, fields from home buildings to hospitals and schools are shifting to intelligent biometric-based access control systems. Uniwin-Global delivers smart options for apartments or neighborhoods. These use SIP intercom tech. They blend face recognition with clear video calls, far-off door opening, and instant warnings. In short, they turn basic entry setups into sharp security tools.

Understanding Secure Face Recognition Technology

Core Principles of Secure Face Recognition

Safe face recognition tech examines unique face details right away to confirm who someone is. Newer setups use two-lens cameras. These come with infrared detectors and wide dynamic range (WDR) features. They grab clear face info even in dim or harsh light spots. Liveness checks are vital to stop fake tries. The setup confirms the person is real and alive. It spots small face shifts or heat signs. This blocks tricks with printed pictures, video clips, or 3D masks. Take the WR501 (5-inch attendance terminal), for instance. It pairs wide dynamic HD face cameras with liveness checks. Plus, it handles quick scans, spot-on results, and holds a big list of faces.

The Role of Akida IP in Biometric Processing

Akida IP is a neuromorphic processor designed to support event-driven, parallel AI workloads with extremely low power consumption. Data gets handled right on the gadget, not sent to far-off clouds. This cuts wait times and saves power. Local AI from Akida IP keeps private body data on the device. That boosts speed and guards secrets. It adjusts to different settings, such as shifting lights or extra sounds. So, it fits well in all sorts of real spots. This on-site smarts shines in edge setups where fast choices matter. Adding Akida IP to face entry systems changes how they run. At the same time, it protects user info from big data breaches.

Security Enhancements Over Traditional Systems

Anti-Spoofing and Liveness Detection Features

New face recognition tools from Uniwin-Global pack several ways to fight fakes. These cover spotting dead items like photo prints, video plays, and 3D covers. They also look at tiny moves, such as eye blinks or small twitches. And they link with heat sensors to sense warmth from a body. The WO802 8-Inch SIP Video Intercom & High-Capacity Face Recognition Terminal shows these strengths well. It delivers under 0.1s scan times with a 99.9% hit rate. It also has solid liveness checks.

Anti-Spoofing Features

Privacy Protection Through Edge Computing

Edge computing handles body data right at the device. No need to send it to distant servers. This cuts the chances of online attacks. It fits rules like GDPR, too. Uniwin-Global’s devices, like the WR502F (5-inch fingerprint attendance terminal), store up to 10,000 face templates on site. They work alone without always needing a server link. This cuts cloud risks. Yet, they keep up real-time work. In a busy office building, for example, this means doors open fast without data leaks during peak hours.

Uniwin-Global’s Advanced Access Control Solutions

Key Features of Uniwin-Global’s Face Recognition Systems

Uniwin-Global has a full line of smart entry products. They suit places with lots of people and tight safety needs. The WR701 (7-inch attendance terminal) runs on its own. No outside network or server required. It manages a 5,000-face list with over 99.99% accuracy. Checks take less than 1s. Its tough dual-lens camera uses LED and IR lights. This helps in dark or backlit areas, like a school hallway at dusk. Instant warnings and entry records tie into Uniwin-Global’s app platform. Managers can watch foot traffic and set user rights from afar. They use web or phone screens.

Integration with Smart System Solutions

Uniwin-Global’s devices handle links via MQTT/HTTP/WEBSOCKET protocols. This lets them talk smoothly with other tools, like IoT gadgets or building controls. Extra check layers add strength. The WR502F, for one, uses palm vein scans. This looks at hidden vein maps under the skin. It pairs with face checks for better proof. Security stays high, but users find it simple. In a corporate lobby, staff might scan their palm after a face check during rush hour, cutting average authentication time significantly in real-world deployment scenarios. Central screens let admins unlock doors from miles away. They handle users and updates, too. This scales well for home areas, office spaces, medical centers, and schools.

Multiple applications

Why Akida IP Powers the Future of Access Control

Benefits of Neuromorphic Processing in Access Systems

Neuromorphic processors such as Akida IP are reshaping the architecture of modern access control systems. They copy the brain’s side-by-side work. So, they allow quick choices with little power draw. They scale many doors without jams. And their spread-out design fights off hacks better. It saves energy, too. That’s great for spots on batteries or far out. In remote warehouses, say, it keeps doors secure for 24 hours on one charge, as seen in real installs.

Enhancing User Experience Without Compromising Security

How users feel matters in entry setups. Long waits or wrong checks can mess up the day. Face tools with Akida IP fix that. Checks happen in a flash, even in crowds. No cards to carry or codes to recall. The system gets smarter over time. It tunes accuracy from daily use.

Conclusion

Secure face recognition access control represents a clear shift away from vulnerable, credential-based security toward intelligent, biometric-driven systems. Uniwin-Global’s integrated solution demonstrates how neuromorphic processing and edge computing can enhance both security and user experience while meeting real-world operational and regulatory requirements. As organizations seek scalable, future-ready security infrastructures, Akida IP–powered face recognition systems offer a reliable and efficient path forward.


Uniwin-Global​

Founded in 2016, it is an emerging IoT smart device solution provider with extensive product and engineering experience. It is committed to integrating the product experience of IoT + professional services, providing customers with industry motherboards and intelligent system solutions, which can be used in smart commercial displays, self-service vending, AI access control, smart retail, industrial control, apartment intercom, villa intercom and other industry products.
Nice find, thanks!

I can however not find much about this Uniwin-Global expect their own web page, they sell Android/Linux motherboards among other things.

Based in Shenzhen, China, but I can't find anything by goggling around, how many employees and so on?

Shenzhen is a booming tech city bordering Hong Kong with 18 million people, been there many years ago.

Their face recognition page is interesting:

 
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Wags

Regular
I found the NXP presentation really interesting, with soooo much that seems right up our alley. It goes for 30 mins but I think it is a worthwhile watch for any investor. At the very end, the commentator stresses that no AI in the cloud, all at the edge. NXP acquired Kinara AI in early 25 I think. Lots of commentary about many partners, most well above my understanding, but lots of talk about edge (no cloud) technology.
I see our edgebox runs on NXP hardware.


For the record, I'm heavily invested and committed to BRN. I hope that somewhere through our partner network we are included in this or similar.
I had a quick look at Kinara AI and admit I don't understand a lot, but the power consumption seemed way higher than Akida discussions.
I'm hoping @Diogenese has time to watch this and give us his Ella verdict, maybe its not what you do its how you do it?
Anyway, for me, it was well worth the time, the quality was a bit average but I think it's my connection.
 
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Nice find, thanks!

I can however not find much about this Uniwin-Global expect their own web page, they sell Android/Linux motherboards among other things.

Based in Shenzhen, China, but I can't find anything by goggling around, how many employees and so on?

Shenzhen is a booming tech city bordering Hong Kong with 18 million people, been there many years ago.

Their face recognition page is interesting:

This is the number one intercom/access control company in China . I have dun business previously with them .
I sent brainchip link over

 
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Guzzi62

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So is WRT in the link you provided same company as Uniwin-Global, I am a bit confused?

That's a +600 employee company, not to be sniffed at.
No mate different companies . WRT sell the most intercoms Access control door stations in China. I know their main sales lad so he now has brainchips details.
 
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itsol4605

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Are we starting to see the wider neuromorphic (& BRN) change being picked up by other investment advisory firms etc.



Document


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keyeat

Regular
Brainchip ?

Where Are You What GIF by Yung Bae
 
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Wow, now that is a statement:


"Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang, in a recent one-on-one interview with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, re-emphasized the revolutionary nature of the ongoing artificial intelligence revolution. Speaking with Dr. John J. Hamre, Huang said, “We’re at the center of the single most important industrial revolution in human history. This is an industrial revolution in every single way as important as electricity. We are going to impact every single industry. Every single company. Every country will build it. Every company will use it. We export American technology wherever the United States would like us to export the technology. This is an extraordinary opportunity for us to make a substantial contribution to our national security.” The statement framed AI not merely as a commercial opportunity but as a structural force shaping economies and geopolitics."
 
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The big money iam hoping will come from some form of up coming Telecommunications maybe the 6G network in some capacity at device level.
That's should sell in the billions.
 
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7für7

Top 20
Wow, now that is a statement:


"Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang, in a recent one-on-one interview with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, re-emphasized the revolutionary nature of the ongoing artificial intelligence revolution. Speaking with Dr. John J. Hamre, Huang said, “We’re at the center of the single most important industrial revolution in human history. This is an industrial revolution in every single way as important as electricity. We are going to impact every single industry. Every single company. Every country will build it. Every company will use it. We export American technology wherever the United States would like us to export the technology. This is an extraordinary opportunity for us to make a substantial contribution to our national security.” The statement framed AI not merely as a commercial opportunity but as a structural force shaping economies and geopolitics."
Realistically, no executive ceo owner or anyone else will frame their own company as “irrelevant.” In such a rapid changing market… It’s PR. Unless you are working for… you know….u know… of course you know right? 😵‍💫


angry attack GIF
 
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