BRN Discussion Ongoing

As an avid gamer myself, the following article about a Playstation 5 upcoming game caught my eye. I am sure Nintendo will be looking at ways/accessories to implement AI similarly with Akida.


Final Fantasy 16 will have wearable ‘AI assists’ to help less experienced players​

ATTACHABLE EQUIPMENT MAKES THE GAME EASIER FOR PLAYERS NOT USED TO ACTION GAMES

Final Fantasy 16 will have a unique approach to game difficulty, according to its producer Naoki Yoshida.

In an interview with Famitsu, Yoshida explained that the game will have an action-based battle system, similar to something like Kingdom Hearts, rather than a traditional turn-based battle system as seen in most previous Final Fantasy games.

However, he also acknowledged that not every Final Fantasy fan can play action games well, so the game has two modes called Action Focus Mode and Story Focus Mode, with the latter designed to be a “guarantee that even those who are not good at action games will definitely be able to enjoy it”.

Rather than simply lowering the combat difficulty, however, Story Focus Mode instead gives players a range of items that can be equipped to toggle various accessibility features to make aspects of the combat easier.

Firstly, FF16 has the concept of accessories for equipment. In Story Focus Mode, AI-implemented accessories are provided from the start, and Clive’s basic controls can be changed by attaching and removing them.

"For example, if an enemy attack is about to hit, Clive will make a perfect move to avoid it in a super-cool way.”

Yoshida then explained that because this may be seen as too easy for some players, the accessories are designed to be removed piece by piece so players can customise which assists they want.

“I think there are some people who think that if [the game] moves on its own, it’s not an action game,” he said. “For those people, there are some items where you can really feel the sensation of controlling the game yourself.

“For example, a few frames before an attack hits, a slowdown is applied, and during a grace period of about three seconds, you can press the R1 button, time returns to normal and Clive performs a superb evasion. We also have that kind of mid-point between auto and manual control.

“Accessories can be put on and taken off at any time, so you can adapt them to your skill level, removing them when you get used to them, or equipping them when you find it difficult.
 
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JPIck

Regular
Thanks for sharing.
At the 15 min 30 seconds Rob telson says they’ve helped NASA get to orbit and also they’ve been able to capture images at extreme low power and touches on helping Mercedes achieve their goals…and he said other vehicle manufacturers, plural!
I really love too that they are making good progress on breathalyser devices (assuming nanose) and the fact they are focusing on being close to the sensors which is exactly what the brain does. Being able to analyse water or air qualities of entire cities and preemptively respond to possible disasters.
 
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Quatrojos

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skutza

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Screenshot_20220623-101130_Twitter.jpg
 
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Revisiting the CEO Sean Hehir’s presentation to the 2022 AGM:

“When I started to evaluate joining BrainChip I started with the technology.

Being a Silicon Valley based executive I had easy access to some of the world’s best technical minds who I engaged to evaluate the core technology.

The overwhelming feedback was the technology is visionary in its design, unparalleled in flexibility, and transformative in performance.


As the engagement progressed, I met with many of the core team members and concluded that I had never met a more talented, dedicated, and focused group of individuals in all my years in the technology business.

I examined the trends which are undeniably compelling, the growth and disruptive nature of AI plus the decentralization of AI.

Furthermore, I started to examine the quality of the engagements with some of the world’s leading brands and the trust/promise they saw in BrainChip which further encouraged me to join this amazing company.

And lastly, with all the skills and talent the organization had, it was clear the experience and skills I possessed perfectly complimented the team and is exactly what BrainChip needed in a CEO; someone who knew how to fully commercialize technology…..

Where we are going

The Market is moving to the edge, and we are already here.

I spoke earlier about a 3 three-legged stool that highlighted research, product, and now commercialization, but as stated earlier the floor that the stool sits on is the market.

That market is large, fast growing, and requires more intelligence at the edge.

Today's data center AI model is power hungry, bandwidth wasting, lacks flexibility, not very intelligent and not suited for these undeniable technology trends toward distributed intelligence and learning at the edge.

As I get ready to close my prepared remarks, let’s go back to the foundation.

Two visionaries and the others that followed, worked diligently to create our world changing technology.

Unapparelled in its flexibility, scalability, performance that’s been technically vetted by prospects, customer, and analysts.

And with all my comments about commercialization, I want to assure you there is equal focus, energy, and resources to not only maintain our competitive advantage created by those visionaries but extend it.

We are:
• Aggressively sourcing and hiring world class tech talent.
• Filing new patents.
• Working diligently on documentation, look/feel, UI to make our technology
easier to consume.
• Paying close attention to our competitors.
• Refining, expanding, and accelerating our roadmap and see opportunities
beyond the edge.

For the short term, you can expect another major release of next generation IP and another reference chip prior to the next AGM.

Lastly before I turn the meeting back over to Antonio, let me briefly recap.

It’s been nearly a half year of building a commercial engine that is just now starting to reveal its possibility.

Key priorities and initiatives include:
• Structuring Commercialization.
• Understanding our Market Ecosystem.
• Clarifying our Business Model.
• Ensuring Product-Market Fit.
• Focusing on Marketing.
• Expanding Sales.

Our work on the commercialization leg of the stool has made substantial progress but it is a journey of continuing improvement.

But when you couple this commercial engine with our differentiated IP product, delivering proven and an exponential improvement on anything else available, plus a market which is moving to the edge, I am highly confident that the commercial results will come in a steady and sustainable fashion.

Even with all this hard work on commercialization in the last 5 months, the company and myself should be judged not on effort, but results.

With that said, I look forward to standing before you next year to share all the progress and results from this next critical chapter of BrainChip’s commercialization.”

So we are now 11 months and counting until the CEO stands before shareholders ready to be judged on his progress and results.

I have never anticipated an AGM more than the Brainchip 2023 AGM.

My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
 
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Yak52

Regular
“ Thursday /Friday (26/27 May) (sorry I cannot confirm, I do not have any data for these 2 days). “

Yak , missing info below

26 May 85,730,073 Gross / 68,197,586 Net 3.98%
27 May 93,137,091 Gross / 68,690,167 Net 4.01%
30 May 85,943,406 Gross / 58,786,482 Net 3.43%

PS , the data you have on the 25 May is the loaned information and not the borrowed / 57,504,661 G / 48,803,692 N 2.85%

Doz

Thanks Doz. That shows when it all happened .Mixed up that loaned/borrowed file also so thanks for pointing that out.

Yak52.
 
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butcherano

Regular
Hi guys .. I haven't really posted in this forum yet but used to from time in HC. My mum and I are long term holders of about 10 years. My mum has been trading for about 25. She is very ill and really doesn't have a long time left with us and she rang me at 5am from hospital this morning because she read a post that sharman from HC (forgive me for even saying his name of loud here) posted this morning that really concerned her. I said I would ask the 1000 eyes about it and to get opinions to ease her thoughts. I've copied a link he put up that has her worried.. you're thoughts would be truly appreciated.
G'day @Neesie71. You need to take everything shareman says with a grain of salt. He doesn't have any technical knowledge compared to the regular posters that we have over here and generally doesn't read any of the content that he posts.

Motiv look like they're years behind us and even if they catch up they'll be leagues behind us in terms of performance with their Altai processor.

I put a couple of links and screenshots below. If you follow the hyperlink at the bottom of the first article to the Motiv website you can see that they're only at the prototype stage. The Altai processor also only has 131 thousand neurons compared to Akida which has 1.2 million neurons. And it performs at 0.5W compared to Akida which runs in the micro to milli watt range.

The second article confirms that it's inferior to TrueNorth and we know from the benchmarking in all of Anil's presentations that TrueNorth is inferior to Akida.


https://www.vestnik-donstu.ru/jour/article/view/1835?locale=en_US

1655943479788.png


https://www.researchgate.net/public...hic_Engineering_in_Autonomous_Robots/download

1655943529188.png

1655943544742.png
 
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stuart888

Regular
Hey all!

I've been working on a small project - hopefully something useful for you all and for future investors of BRN. It's a small website that has a BRN timeline of important past and future events, and a few links etc. I made it so that we can have a quick reference of important BRN information and an easy way to introduce people to BRN.

https://akida.io/

Hopefully it's going to be useful. I have done my best to include as much as I can initially and will keep adding as new things come up.

A big thank you to TSE's "Founding Members" for their ideas and support and also to @Esq.111 for providing a list of upcoming events and @Fact Finder for allowing me to share his "The Brainchip Story".

I have made it on behalf of and for all of us shareholders and BRN supporters, so if there's anything you would like added or changed feel free to let me know!

Also a big Thank You to all of the 1000 eyes, your work is amazing and I love reading it all every day!

AKIDA BALLISTA

GR.
Big fan of yours GrandRhino. I think the message clout you provide is massive, you know Search Engine Optimization (SEO). Certainly 1000 eyes appreciates it big time.

I was thinking of the possibility to add a button (Corporate Videos), plus hopefully with Text Transcripts. If we can get the transcripts, it might be an easy paste up on your end, listing each corporate video, plus show the text below each one. That would be a lot of Search Engine Optimization, SEO text with maybe not that much work.

Just tossing out ideas, while thanking you. Best regards.


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Yak52

Regular
I find your posts very interesting and insightful, I learn a lot. I would like to thank you for this once especially!
Thank you cosors. Glad you can find something useful from the info posted. Hope it helps you with your investments.

Yak52 :cool:
 
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hotty4040

Regular
Hey Hotty,

That is great your mind is at ease. There are plenty of skilled people in here to solve many problems and questions which is great. Varying skills of all types!

I actually do have a Stinger GT which is a fastback (pic below) but I have always wanted a 1965 to 1968 Mustang Fastback (two different models in there). Though my car wish list is quite extensive with probably 100 or more cars on there. Brainchip stock will determine how many I can buy in the longer term. Lol

Nice looking wheels there Fb, keep up the polishing. Do like the mustangs a bit, my sister had one for a while, it was costly to maintain, so she sold it for an earner over the 3-4 years she owned it, ended up in Queensland somewhere. Myself, I prefer some of the older restorative types. Have an Rover P5 coupe, ( needs some attention though ), anyone interested ? Also, an Range Rover LSE, ( needs attention also ) but still a fine vehicle, anyone interested ?

Am driving a Jeep currently, Grand Cherokee, which has been a marvelous towing vehicle, been round Aus a couple of times dragging 3.5 tonnes, has done 120,000 km now, and has never failed. Who knows, how long before Akida will emerge into many vehicles pretty soon ( hopefully ), fingers crossed heh.

Let's hope that there will be an uplift in the S/P before too long, for BRN, it deserves something to happen, what a stock to hold, for the future. Just wondering whether to splurge a little more at these prices. Seems quite cheap atm, considering the potential on offer.

Good luck with your trading/investing Fb. (y):unsure:


Akida Ballista


hotty...
 
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SERA2g

Founding Member
NVISO webinar was fantastic last night.

If Tim is on this forum, well done!

NVISO are looking to be a small company set to achieve great things in lieu of their early adoption of akida.
 
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Diogenese

Top 20
Thanks @Diogenese I have some sort of virus along with rest of family thanks to daycare and was watching in between coughs and sneezes.

Now MegaChips was announced on the ASX last November (?) and in an interview not long after this the US MegaChips presenter said that they had worked with Brainchip to bring their engineers up to speed on the technology so clearly they were deeply engaged with Brainchip well before the announcement.

It is clear MegaChips is aggressively promoting Edge Ai to their customers in the US and automotive was one of the specific industries mention in the ASX MegaChips announcement.

It is interesting that the first area of application Nviso has worked on with Brainchip is automotive given health holds a significant interest for Nviso.

Speculatively putting together these things with the Continental screen and the many references the former CEO Mr. Dinardo made to Continental in his presentations and it is starting to look like a duck and walk like a duck but will it quack.

My opinion and speculation only so DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
Grandmother's remedy:

Rum and lemon juice -

Go easy on the lemon juice.
 
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Quiltman

Regular
Thank you cosors. Glad you can find something useful from the info posted. Hope it helps you with your investments.

Yak52 :cool:

I would also like to acknowledge the contribution and spirit in which TSE forum is conducted ... it helps ensure that we all focus on the company and it's accomplishments rather than the daily SP gyrations.
If I allow myself the luxury of projecting forward a couple of years, I expect the daily gyrations will be more in the vicinity of .50c a day ( representing 2% or some such value ), half of the current company Market Cap. If many of the LTH's here have managed to hold onto their shares, this will be serious personal $ movement on a daily basis. You will need to have a psychological strategy in place to hold your nerves!!
And this forum will be a large part of that strategy for me .... maintain focus on our tech, our customers, and not the market shenanigans.

IMO. GLTAH
 
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buena suerte :-)

BOB Bank of Brainchip
Thanks @Diogenese I have some sort of virus along with rest of family thanks to daycare and was watching in between coughs and sneezes.

Now MegaChips was announced on the ASX last November (?) and in an interview not long after this the US MegaChips presenter said that they had worked with Brainchip to bring their engineers up to speed on the technology so clearly they were deeply engaged with Brainchip well before the announcement.

It is clear MegaChips is aggressively promoting Edge Ai to their customers in the US and automotive was one of the specific industries mention in the ASX MegaChips announcement.

It is interesting that the first area of application Nviso has worked on with Brainchip is automotive given health holds a significant interest for Nviso.

Speculatively putting together these things with the Continental screen and the many references the former CEO Mr. Dinardo made to Continental in his presentations and it is starting to look like a duck and walk like a duck but will it quack.

My opinion and speculation only so DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
Get well soon FF :)
mr bean lol GIF by britbox
 
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Learning

Learning to the Top 🕵‍♂️
Through Youtube transcript: Click on ellipse (three dots next to save option of the youtube clip), then click Show Transcript.

See attachment
Thank you Ahboy for the transcript.

20220623_110036.jpg


At the 15:47, after referring to Mercedes;
"and other vehicle manufacturers"
Did Rob just spill the bean/confirm. Brainchip is working with other vehicle manufacturers. (FORD) or thier could be more?

Its great to be a shareholder.
 
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TechGirl

Founding Member
Some fun Thursday morning reading, article dated yesterday, doesn't mention BrainChip but relevant.


"satellites will process data themselves"

"Machine learning in space - The foundation of addressing these design challenges is to offload processing from the ground station and bring it on-board. Rather than sending data and images to Earth for processing – and introducing all the latency associated with this – satellites will process data themselves and send information about what that data means instead. This requires satellites to support AI capabilities in orbit, including object detection and image classification, to start."



"True unlimited on-orbit reconfigurability provides the software and hardware flexibility these systems need to implement and accelerate real-time AI capabilities"

"Space 2.0 promises an exciting future. The ability of the private sector to launch its own systems brings new vision to the industry. On-orbit processing will extend the capabilities of space-based systems into viable commercial applications that improve quality of life around the world. True unlimited on-orbit reconfigurability provides the software and hardware flexibility these systems need to implement and accelerate real-time AI capabilities. The move to organic packaging will enable the industry to onboard the processing and I/O required for next-generation systems. OEMs will enjoy the many benefits of design agility as it becomes easier to evaluate, design, adapt, and reuse space-based IP."





An evolution in the industry: Top trends for Space 2.0​

Story
June 22, 2022


INDERJIT SINGH


AMD

MINAL SAWANT


AMD
LinkedInTwitterFacebookEmailMorePrint
1655909640.jpeg

Space 2.0 represents a major shift in the development of defense and aerospace applications: With artificial intelligence (AI) applications moving aboard, systems must support higher processing and throughput capabilities. On-orbit processing requires an adaptive architecture so that systems can process, analyze, and reconfigure themselves to optimize performance and responsiveness. This, in turn, is driving innovation in organic packaging and reliability. Finally, to build these complex systems, engineers need greater design agility to accelerate development, maintain lower costs, and achieve faster time-to-launch.​

There has never been a more exciting time to design for space. Developing and launching systems into space is no longer solely within the reach of governments. The innovation, agility, and vision of private enterprise are ushering in a whole new era: Space 2.0. The shape of space is expanding far beyond traditional defense and aerospace to an expansive range of practical – and profitable – applications.

Consider SpaceX’s low-Earth orbit constellation of satellites to provide broadband connectivity. Because these satellites require less fuel to get into orbit and are less expensive to launch, they can deliver value while having a shorter expected lifecycle of just four or five years. In this time, technology will have advanced and the next generation of satellites will be ready to replace them.

Emerging trends

The tremendous interest in low-Earth-orbit constellations goes well beyond simply connecting the world’s seven billion-plus people. There are countless applications possible with this technology. Using a traditional satellite can take up to a month to process an image. In contrast, a constellation of smaller craft can provide real-time imaging that can be used immediately to help firefighters on the ground, detect and track objects like planes using hyperspectral cameras and synthetic aperture radar, or transform how users navigate the planet, just to name a few examples.

Low-Earth-orbit satellites also can mean shorter missions, which reduces risk and costs. Using satellites in this way means a possible increase in the overall pace of innovation in space, moving to newer process nodes and packaging technologies much earlier. When the payload can be updated every five years instead of every 10 to 20 years, this enables mission specialists to do more with less each successive generation.

Among the major trends is the rise of on-orbit processing, which requires more compute and input/output (I/O) slots; this, in turn, is driving the move toward organic BGA [ball-grid array] packaging and away from legacy technologies like ceramic column-grid-attach solutions. Also seen: a sharp increase in development agility, resulting in faster evaluation, prototyping, and the launch of new technology. (Figure 1.)

62b32ad127013-imageedit_1_9614761118.jpg


[Figure 1 | On-orbit processing requires more compute and I/O, which means a shift in packaging requirements.]

Challenges of designing for space


Operating in space presents some of the most challenging barriers to design: First, the environment is extreme and unforgiving, and systems must be ruggedized and designed for no single point of failure. Downtime for maintenance is not an option in space. In addition, designers must deal with challenges such as:

  1. Limited downlink bandwidth: A satellite can capture a lot of data; however, the pipe to Earth isn’t wide enough to send it all back.
  2. Faster time to market: The window for launching new products is shrinking as development expands beyond traditional defense and aerospace applications.
  3. Designed for reuse: Space-based systems are no longer one-and-done; they must now be platforms whose IP can be reused across multiple missions.
  4. Low latency and high bandwidth: For broadband communications to be viable, the system must have minimal latency with seamless and reliable connectivity. (Figure 2.)
62b32b46dd63b-imageedit_1_6039243444.jpg


[Figure 2 | The challenges of designing for space are detailed.]

Machine learning in space


The foundation of addressing these design challenges is to offload processing from the ground station and bring it on-board. Rather than sending data and images to Earth for processing – and introducing all the latency associated with this – satellites will process data themselves and send information about what that data means instead. This requires satellites to support AI capabilities in orbit, including object detection and image classification, to start.

A key part of making on-orbit processing viable is understanding that AI is an ever-changing field of research and that machine learning (ML) models require continual optimization. First, ML models can adapt over time to become faster and more accurate. Second, the algorithms themselves change as new breakthroughs are made. Thus, space-based systems need a flexible and adaptive architecture that can change models and algorithms “on the fly.”

Because ML is involved, programmable software is not enough. ML is compute-intensive and requires hardware acceleration to provide real-time responsiveness. When the algorithms change, the hardware needed to accelerate the algorithms change as well. Thus, an adaptive platform requires a combination of configurable software and hardware that can update in concert with each other. In short, to support on-orbit processing, systems need to be able to process, analyze, and reconfigure from the architecture up through to the application code.

Moving toward organic packaging

Being able to deliver reliable system components that will operate during the long mission life needed and the extreme environments found in space require a completely different level of design, manufacturing, and testing. Quality control must work with design teams from the very start to achieve the levels of reliability required by the government.

For example, Six Sigma, an established and reliable leader in the defense and aerospace industry for over 30 years, is the sole supplier of solder column attachment to ceramic-grid-array packages, primarily used in space applications. While the government has actively sought out a second source, the processes and expertise required to provide the world-class reliability offered by Six Sigma are so rigorous that, to date, no other supplier has been able to achieve certification.

As the industry moves toward new process nodes like 7 nm technology, the dies are too large for legacy space-grade packaging and techniques like solder column attachment. Simply put, the processing requirements for on-orbit AI won’t fit anymore. There’s also the significant increase in I/O to consider.

As a result, the industry is beginning to move away from legacy packaging and to organic packing and flip-chip packaging for space-grade products. In addition to being able to support the larger die size and I/O needed, organic packaging reliability has been proven in the commercial market and has a much wider ecosystem of support.

Of course, there are still challenges to overcome: Space development will not shift overnight. It takes years to qualify space-grade products, and the many legacy ecosystems in place will continue to need support. However, the defense sector is interested in having access to the latest technology, and the players understand that innovation means change.

Continued innovation in space-based design and systems

The defense and aerospace industries – as well as any company considering space-based applications – need technology that can provide the necessary performance, adaptability, and reliability for Space 2.0 applications. New technology alone is not enough, however. As systems become more complex, the difficulty in integrating components becomes more challenging. Even evaluating a simple ML platform can take weeks when developers must integrate components from multiple vendors themselves.

It’s critical to understand the demanding requirements developers face while building reliable systems for space.

True innovation and on-orbit reconfigurability will be possible with:

  • 2.5/3D die integration and packaging technology
  • Chiplet and chip-to-chip (C2C) interconnect technology
  • AI engines and domain-specific architectures
  • Next-generation routing to eliminate congestion
  • ASIC-like clocking with flexible clock placement and skew balancing
  • Intelligent 3D analytical placing tools to optimize timing, congestion, and wire length
  • Soft-core processors supported by tools for ML-centric applications
Space 2.0 promises an exciting future. The ability of the private sector to launch its own systems brings new vision to the industry. On-orbit processing will extend the capabilities of space-based systems into viable commercial applications that improve quality of life around the world. True unlimited on-orbit reconfigurability provides the software and hardware flexibility these systems need to implement and accelerate real-time AI capabilities. The move to organic packaging will enable the industry to onboard the processing and I/O required for next-generation systems. OEMs will enjoy the many benefits of design agility as it becomes easier to evaluate, design, adapt, and reuse space-based IP.
 
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Sorry to hear about your mum. But my initial thought is welcome to the website Shareman or friend.
My thoughts exactly Rocket.

dog-angry.gif


What a joke, someone comes on here, with a product in development, expressing grave concern of competition!

What is really low, is the made up story of her mother's situation, in an attempt to attract compassion.

It has since been worked out that "Nessie" from HC, did have an unwell mother, but that does not mean that she is who she claims to be here.
The timing with the shorting. The fact it was "her" first post here.
A "Russian A.I. Chip" posing a threat, to Western markets?
Worried about something Shareman said.
Saying they'd been shareholders for "about 10 years" (before even the AZK reverse takeover) ie no shares.
If they really had been in since the beginning, they would not be concerned about a Russian chip "in development".
Are all and remain red flags to me, as to her integrity as an "actual person".


I may cop some flak for this assessment, as being insensitive, but I've seen this tactic before and it's as low as you can go.

Shorters are showing the lowest forms of desperation now..

My opinions only!
 
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D

Deleted member 118

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D

Deleted member 118

Guest
My thoughts exactly Rocket.

View attachment 9912

What a joke, someone comes on here, with a product in development, expressing grave concern of competition!

What is really low, is the made up story of her mother's situation, in an attempt to attract compassion.

I may cop some flak for this assessment, as being insensitive, but I've seen this tactic before and it's as low as you can go.

Shorters are showing the lowest forms of desperation now..

My opinions only!

No flak from me and I’m always happy to be corrected if wrong.
 
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N

Neesie71

Guest
Very sorry about your mum but with so little time you should encourage her to leave HC it is toxic.

From your comment about HC you do seem to understand this so with respect this should be your focus not whether one of the most corrupt technology industries in the world has caught up with AKIDA in two years.

As far as this company is concerned there is a recent Russian research paper authored by three Russian academics published on Researchgate this month looking at the present state of Neuromorphic computing in the world and Intel, IBM and BRN are the only ones they rate which seems strange when they have had a neuromorphic chip released over there since 2012.

I expect that you have been focused on your mum and not really taking any notice of the fact that the world has isolated Russia.

If this technology is a real advance and not in breach of Brainchip’s patents the fact that the EU, the UK, the USA, and Australia are definitely not going to deal illegally with Russia makes it very hard for them to compete.

Add to this that NATO, DARPA and NASA are not going to go near Russian technology any day soon I think your mum can rest easy.

I do come back to my original point however and that is you should move heaven and earth to redirect your mum away from social media and share investments onto family in her remaining days.

My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
Thank you for taking time FF to reply. I have tried to encourage mum to use this forum but she is 75 and set in her ways so I try to read in here to let her in on the good stuff. Right now reading about her investments keeps her mind active and distracts her from her situation. She loves share trading with a passion and it puts a sparkle in her eyes. We're all devoting or time to her but she always likes to keep reading and staying in the loop. I can honestly say it's probably kept her alive way longer than she should have. She respects you highly and from the bottom of my heart I appreciate what you all have to offer. Mum has been my mentor and my rock so I will continue to read in here and do my own research to carry on my mum's legacy and her love of Brainchip which she discovered herself over a decade ago. From my mum to you all Thank you and Akida Ballista x
 
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