BRN Discussion Ongoing

Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
This is an article written by the chief product officer at Tanium which helps business leaders defend against emerging attacks on the next frontier of security vulnerabilities. In terms of connected cars, it's really brings home just how important cybersecurity is and it's quite scary to contemplate just how vulnerable most systems (without Akida) would be.

It says that key fobs, telematics, entertainment systems, and third-party apps are the systems most vulnerable to attack and the situation is so serious that the car industry may one day be required to adopt a cybersecurity rating system similar to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s safety ratings system.

Akida's cybersecurity rating (courtesy of Bravo) = 11 out of 10. (y)





The Connected Car Is The Next Attack Vector​

Nic Surpatanu
Brand Contributor
Tanium
BRANDVOICE| Paid Program
Sep 7, 2022,09:21am EDT

Automotive hacks represent a looming threat for corporate fleets and consumer privacy.

These days, cars are rolling computers. Modern vehicles contain dozens of computer chips that control everything from cabin temperature to braking systems. The software running on these chips features more code—some 100 million lines—than the U.S. Air Force’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. But with so many hardware and software components involved in the complex automotive supply chain, connected vehicles can be difficult to secure.

Connected and autonomous cars generate terabytes of data every day, revealing driver locations, driving habits, billing details, and car performance. When people sync their phones or connect to Bluetooth in a car,—whether their own car or a rental,—frequently their call logs, contacts, text messages, music preferences, and even tweets and social media posts are frequently sucked into a car’s data storage. That data can help insurance companies and consumers discern exactly why accidents happen—in dramatic live-video detail.

The dangers to companies that use connected cars are evident as well: Fleets of commercial vehicles could be held hostage, leading to millions in ransom payments and weeks of downtime. An adversary could commandeer a fleet of autonomous vehicles and turn them into a swarm of weapons on wheels.

The treasure trove of highly sensitive data in connected cars requires a whole new level of protection, particularly against ransomware, cyberwar, and other cyberattacks that capitalize on software and hardware vulnerabilities. Corporations need to bolster their autonomous vehicles with the same kinds of risk management systems they use to protect their other IT networks, such as firewalls and intrusion detection systems (IDS), patch management, and threat hunting.

My job as the chief product officer at Tanium centers around helping business leaders defend against emerging attacks on the next frontier of security vulnerabilities. Connected cars honestly keep me up at night. But I am confident that companies and governments will continue to make strides in hardening vehicle defenses.

What companies are up against

Hacking cars and trucks has become downright easy. The world got a wake-up call in 2014 when security researchers were able to exploit a flaw in a car’s cellular connection to remotely kill the engine, cut the brakes, and hijack the steering of an SUV from 10 miles away. And late in 2021, a 19-year-old broke into more than two dozen electric vehicles across 13 countries from his home in Germany. He was able to control locks, lights, and temperature, as well as learn a car’s location and the owner’s email address—both potential commodities hackers could buy and sell.
At the DefCon hacking conference, Tanium’s own Connor Ivens demonstrated how easy it continues to be to break into a car. Ivens and his white-hat teammates were able to steal a car’s sensitive vehicle identification number—legally, of course. (The team failed to deploy the airbags and turn on and off a simulated “cloud car” by the auto-hacking competition’s deadline, although they’re hopeful they will succeed at the next one.)
The SUV hacked in 2014 and more recent breaches have been a serious eye opener for manufacturers and automotive suppliers to take cybersecurity more seriously. But as a host of experts discussed in a recent article, we have a lot to learn about the growing risk of cybercrime following auto hacks.

Where hackers go

Hackers are looking to exploit vulnerabilities wherever money can be gained, whether that’s ransomware attacks on fleets or stealing sensitive data such as customer billing details from EV charging stations. “The general rule is simple: They’ll focus on achieving the highest payday,” Guy Molho, vice president of products at Upstream, told Tanium. Upstream’s security technology is installed in more than 10 million vehicles worldwide.
Ransomware attacks on fleets are the No. 1 concern among researchers. Multiple attacks have targeted the nearly $800 billion U.S. trucking industry over the past few years. Internet-connected and autonomous vehicles are particularly susceptible to exploits because of the daunting complexity of their software systems.
Key fobs, telematics, entertainment systems, and third-party apps are the systems most vulnerable to attack. Also at risk is the entire environment in which vehicles operate, which includes the servers, satellites, and cell towers they communicate with, as well as infrastructure like smart traffic lights, embedded roadway sensors, and charging stations.

Time to defend

Auto manufacturers and suppliers have a lot of work to do to bolster their cybersecurity defenses. Meanwhile, regulators are compelling them to take action.
New regulations from the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) establish cybersecurity performance and audit requirements for all new vehicle types sold in 2022 and all new vehicle registrations starting in 2024. U.S. automakers will need to abide by the rules if they want to sell cars in UNECE’s 56 member states. It’s possible the auto industry may one day adopt a cybersecurity rating system similar to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s safety ratings, allowing consumers to shop for cars based on how well they meet security standards.
Automotive companies will continue to provide updates to their security and other internal software, but it is uncertain how effective those measures will be. Companies that own or operate connected fleets will need to employ the same or better cyber hygiene and patch management as they do with their other digital assets. They will also need to closely watch for emerging threats.
Billions have been invested in connected-car technologies, and there’s no going back to pre-internet days. The entire ecosystem of automotive companies, suppliers, and regulatory agencies now needs to work together to collectively ensure that security takes a front seat in the cars and trucks of the future.

 
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jk6199

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Bid / Ask ratios getting interesting for shares?
 
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Getupthere

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Two minutes after correction announcement
Someone liked it. 😂
1662601269586.jpg
 
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It is a little while since I read his CV and at the time I noted his age but what I think MegaChips were buying was his long history, contacts and credibility with the US semiconductor market. You don’t have what he has on his CV and only be 30 years of age.

I have seen a number of interviews with him now and his fatigued state in this one was not evident so we need to have regard to things like working at home because he had Covid(very common in US), jet lagged having been to Japan and only recently returned, hour of the day when this interview took place, there are a whole range of things that can be in play even having been up all night because an infant grandchild had been rushed to hospital.

If we look to the Brainchip half yearly he has certainly been effective in generating addition IP licence fees.

My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA

Fair call.

I do not like being negative about other people as I appreciate we are all different and bring different qualities and skill sets to contribute. Doug has similar interests to me and I do think he would be a nice guy however I was expecting more of a ”Wow moment“ at some stage during the interview. It sounded more like a history lesson. I’ve come away feeling better after listening to Rob, Jerome, PVDM, Ken, Anil and Sean. Or even after some Edge Impulse or the Dell Podcast.

I suppose I was very keen to listen to his interview and found it lack lustre. And as I said he did mention some interesting things and confirmed that Brainchip and Quadric are complimentary products.

However he lacked passion or conviction in the product. I didn’t hear “Incredible product, transformational” I didn’t hear significant emphasis on 1 shot learning, ability to add inference abilities to all five sensors, super low power, essential AI etc, what I thought were our main selling points!

I understand credibility is important and you don’t want to come across as to ”Car salesman like” however he didn’t sell his product to me, barely identifying what the product was or what it can do. Hopefully his reputation in the industry is enough to get the job done.

I do appreciate he would have a significant skill set and knows a hell of a lot more about the product than me but as the face of Brainchip for Megachips to America I hope he can cut through all the “Dazzle and razzmatazz” others may offer; to get our product out there.

It is a big new market but there is also fierce competition and I don’t want to end up like Beta because we weren’t bold enough at this point in our sales and marketing. (I don’t think we will but you can’t be too cocky).

Hopefully a deal with Nintendo will be a great start and as they are already customers with MegaChips I expect that to eventuate either 2023 or 24 …. and beyond!

Cheers
 
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This is interesting particularly if you go to MegaChips US and click Ai:


My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
 
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This is interesting particularly if you go to MegaChips US and click Ai:


My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
It helps to understand that MegaChips marches to the beat of a different drum where customer confidentiality is everything and behind closed doors negotiations and discussions are carried out daily without the traditional look at me mum approach:

DESIGNLINES
SOC DESIGNLINE

Megachips: Japan’s Best Kept Secret​

By 11.21.2014 0
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OSAKA, Japan — Most engineers in the US don’t know Megachips. Never heard of it. Even over here, only a few cognoscenti in the Japanese electronics industry have the faintest idea that it’s a Japanese system LSI company in Osaka.
As most integrated device manufacturers in Japan falter through a series of ineffectual consolidations and poorly executed fab-lite transitions, Megachips — founded in 1990 by seven Japanese engineers as an independent fabless chip vendor with no parent company — remains Japan’s best-kept secret success. Megachips might have the best shot to become the next MediaTek, observers familiar with the Osaka-based company have told EE Times.
Megachips is Japan’s only fabless chip company listed among the top 25 in the world by IC Insights. The company has worldwide revenues of more than $600 million.

Megachips_takata_230.png

In a recent wide-ranging interview with EE Times, Megachips’ president and CEO Akira Takata laid out his bold plan to commit the company’s future growth not on ASICs for the domestic market, but ASSPs for the global market — by concentrating on sensor hubs for the Internet of Things, mobile, and wearable devices.
No prudent IC vendor today would dream of getting into the application processor market for smartphones — an empire already conquered by Qualcomm, Samsung, and Apple. Some, including Megachips are gunning for sensor fusion chips, motivated by smartphone vendors who are turning to a separate sensor fusion chip to offload an apps processor in their handsets.

If it works, this will be a dramatic shift in the company’s strategy, since Megachip’s cash cow is its custom ASIC business, not ASSP.
The Osaka-based company is known to be working with a select handful of Japanese system companies. Nintendo is one of the key clients Megachips has worked with since the inception of its fabless history. Although it has never unveiled its customer list (except for Nintendo), Megachips has reportedly claimed one of the top two Japanese camera companies as its large client for a long time."

AND IT WORKS FOR MEGACHIPS

My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
 
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Trouble here! 😛

_20220908_122129.JPG


Those aggregate shorts keep marching up..



🔥🔥🔥
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
A well-known leaker, Evan Blass, released a spec sheet detailing an unreleased Qualcomm chip called the Snapdragon 6 Gen, which was due for release on 15 Nov 2022, but might be released earlier because of the leak.

Manufacturing process 4nm (TSMC). I believe Peter van der Made has confirmed we could go to 4nm??

The chipset will be coming in with Adreno GPU although no-one knows the exact GPU and the numbers of the CPU and GPU cores are unknown as well.

If Arm cores are involved, then who knows, AKIDA might be as well. Here's hoping. 🤞




View attachment 15613

View attachment 15615





OK, so Qualcomm today introduced the Snapdragon 6 Gen 1. Are we definitely ruling this one out?
34 pm.png








33 pm.png


 
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FF what do u think New IPhone 14 Specs
A16 Bionic features an accelerated 5-core GPU with 50 percent more memory bandwidth — perfect for graphics-intensive games and apps — and a new 16-core Neural Engine capable of nearly 17 trillion operations per second. Using Apple’s best-in-class fusion architecture to combine performance and energy savings, the chip delivers more performance with a fraction of the power compared to the competition.


norice Words Neural and fraction of the power. possibly Akida ????
What I think about all things APPLE is after years of fruitless rabbit holes that it is very clever at hiding the nuts and bolts of how it is actually doing anything.

They are also ruthless in cutting loose any partner that discloses they are working with APPLE without permission.

They are also litigious in the extreme and adopt a take no prisoner scorched Earth approach where even if they lack merit they will spend and spend on their lawyers crushing the smaller player with the costs of the action.

In consequence my view has become their corporate veil is made of titanium and unless APPLE says in black and white in an official statement we are using "X" technology in our device they will drive you mad with their red herrings and misdirection's.

This would be the first time I have posted anything about APPLE in a very long time and I likely will not post anything about APPLE for a similar time into the future now that MegaChips exists as the convenient foil to anyone knowing who is using the AKIDA technology solution.

The last time I posted anything potentially APPLE related was way back on HC when I speculated that the statement by Ken Scarince that one particular customer had made it perfectly clear that any leak suggesting they were dealing with Brainchip would see them walk away and I suggested that this was consistent with the well known approach by APPLE. Is this enough evidence to base an investment thesis on most definitely not but sometimes I count APPLES instead of sheep when I cannot go to sleep.

My opinion only DYOR - and good luck if its into APPLE.
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
 
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View attachment 16113
One percent is $1.56 billion US. Even half a percent is a lot of hamburgers.
 
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mrgds

Regular
It helps to understand that MegaChips marches to the beat of a different drum where customer confidentiality is everything and behind closed doors negotiations and discussions are carried out daily without the traditional look at me mum approach:

DESIGNLINES
SOC DESIGNLINE

Megachips: Japan’s Best Kept Secret​

By 11.21.2014 0
Share Post
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter



OSAKA, Japan — Most engineers in the US don’t know Megachips. Never heard of it. Even over here, only a few cognoscenti in the Japanese electronics industry have the faintest idea that it’s a Japanese system LSI company in Osaka.
As most integrated device manufacturers in Japan falter through a series of ineffectual consolidations and poorly executed fab-lite transitions, Megachips — founded in 1990 by seven Japanese engineers as an independent fabless chip vendor with no parent company — remains Japan’s best-kept secret success. Megachips might have the best shot to become the next MediaTek, observers familiar with the Osaka-based company have told EE Times.
Megachips is Japan’s only fabless chip company listed among the top 25 in the world by IC Insights. The company has worldwide revenues of more than $600 million.

Megachips_takata_230.png

In a recent wide-ranging interview with EE Times, Megachips’ president and CEO Akira Takata laid out his bold plan to commit the company’s future growth not on ASICs for the domestic market, but ASSPs for the global market — by concentrating on sensor hubs for the Internet of Things, mobile, and wearable devices.
No prudent IC vendor today would dream of getting into the application processor market for smartphones — an empire already conquered by Qualcomm, Samsung, and Apple. Some, including Megachips are gunning for sensor fusion chips, motivated by smartphone vendors who are turning to a separate sensor fusion chip to offload an apps processor in their handsets.

If it works, this will be a dramatic shift in the company’s strategy, since Megachip’s cash cow is its custom ASIC business, not ASSP.
The Osaka-based company is known to be working with a select handful of Japanese system companies. Nintendo is one of the key clients Megachips has worked with since the inception of its fabless history. Although it has never unveiled its customer list (except for Nintendo), Megachips has reportedly claimed one of the top two Japanese camera companies as its large client for a long time."

AND IT WORKS FOR MEGACHIPS

My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA

It helps to understand that MegaChips marches to the beat of a different drum where customer confidentiality is everything and behind closed doors negotiations and discussions are carried out daily without the traditional look at me mum approach:

DESIGNLINES
SOC DESIGNLINE

Megachips: Japan’s Best Kept Secret​

By 11.21.2014 0
Share Post
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter



OSAKA, Japan — Most engineers in the US don’t know Megachips. Never heard of it. Even over here, only a few cognoscenti in the Japanese electronics industry have the faintest idea that it’s a Japanese system LSI company in Osaka.
As most integrated device manufacturers in Japan falter through a series of ineffectual consolidations and poorly executed fab-lite transitions, Megachips — founded in 1990 by seven Japanese engineers as an independent fabless chip vendor with no parent company — remains Japan’s best-kept secret success. Megachips might have the best shot to become the next MediaTek, observers familiar with the Osaka-based company have told EE Times.
Megachips is Japan’s only fabless chip company listed among the top 25 in the world by IC Insights. The company has worldwide revenues of more than $600 million.

Megachips_takata_230.png

In a recent wide-ranging interview with EE Times, Megachips’ president and CEO Akira Takata laid out his bold plan to commit the company’s future growth not on ASICs for the domestic market, but ASSPs for the global market — by concentrating on sensor hubs for the Internet of Things, mobile, and wearable devices.
No prudent IC vendor today would dream of getting into the application processor market for smartphones — an empire already conquered by Qualcomm, Samsung, and Apple. Some, including Megachips are gunning for sensor fusion chips, motivated by smartphone vendors who are turning to a separate sensor fusion chip to offload an apps processor in their handsets.

If it works, this will be a dramatic shift in the company’s strategy, since Megachip’s cash cow is its custom ASIC business, not ASSP.
The Osaka-based company is known to be working with a select handful of Japanese system companies. Nintendo is one of the key clients Megachips has worked with since the inception of its fabless history. Although it has never unveiled its customer list (except for Nintendo), Megachips has reportedly claimed one of the top two Japanese camera companies as its large client for a long time."

AND IT WORKS FOR MEGACHIPS

My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
Megachips president and CEO ............ Akira Takata

Without too much fuss, i can see his new business card already,

Akida Takata
 
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This is interesting particularly if you go to MegaChips US and click Ai:


My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
I agree. Massive potential and at the moment probably our biggest earner!
1662606575775.jpeg


1662606621958.jpeg


1662606648412.jpeg


I just wanted to hear Doug mention some of the above as I can only go by my interaction being the interview today.

Looks like they have good systems and processes sorted to achieve the best outcomes. Which are developed with experience and good habits.

Akida’s magic will sell itself!

Cheers.
 

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OK, so Qualcomm today introduced the Snapdragon 6 Gen 1. Are we definitely ruling this one out?
View attachment 16116







View attachment 16114

If you take the CEO Sean Hehir's statement at the AGM seriously that others are claiming incremental improvement but no one is offering what AKIDA does then a 30% improvement is clearly nowhere near what adopting AKIDA technology for AI would achieve. Just look at the Nviso graphic comparing AKIDA with the rest. If it was a 10 fold performance gain I would be interested but then Anil Mankar was helping Nviso tweak beyond that so Snap the magic dragon is still using smoke and mirrors not real live magic as Peter van der Made described AKIDA science.

I think now we are in Universities its about time we had our own spot so vote one AKIDA Science.

My opinion only DYOR
FF


AKIDA BALLISTA
 
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gex

Regular


Adapting SRT’s M1 Hardware Portal for Navy Facility Health Monitoring and Prioritization
Award Information
Agency:
Department of Defense
Branch:
Navy
Contract:
N68335-21-C-0013
Agency Tracking Number:
N202-099-1097
Amount:
$239,831.00
Phase:
Phase I
Program:
SBIR
Solicitation Topic Code:
N202-099
Solicitation Number:
20.2
Timeline
Solicitation Year:
2020
Award Year:
2021
Award Start Date (Proposal Award Date):
2020-10-07
Award End Date (Contract End Date):
2021-12-10
Small Business Information
Blue Ridge Envisioneering, Inc.
5180 Parkstone Dr. Suite 200
Chantilly, VA 20151-1111
United States
DUNS:
616396953
HUBZone Owned:
No
Woman Owned:
No
Socially and Economically Disadvantaged:
No
Principal Investigator
Name: Jason Pualoa
Phone: (571) 349-0900
Email: andrew@br-envision.com
Business Contact
Name: Edward Zimmer
Phone: (703) 927-0450
Email: ned@br-envision.com
Research Institution
N/A
Abstract
Deep Neural Networks (DNN) have become a critical component of tactical applications, assisting the warfighter in interpreting and making decisions from vast and disparate sources of data. Whether image, signal or text data, remotely sensed or scraped from the web, cooperatively collected or intercepted, DNNs are the go-to tool for rapid processing of this information to extract relevant features and enable the automated execution of downstream applications. Deployment of DNNs in data centers, ground stations and other locations with extensive power infrastructure has become commonplace but at the edge, where the tactical user operates, is very difficult. Secure, reliable, high bandwidth communications are a constrained resource for tactical applications which limits the ability to routed data collected at the edge back to a centralized processing location. Data must therefore be processed in real-time at the point of ingest which has its own challenges as almost all DNNs are developed to run on power hungry GPUs at wattages exceeding the practical capacity of solar power sources typically available at the edge. So what then is the future of advanced AI for the tactical end user where power and communications are in limited supply? Neuromorphic processors may provide the answer. Blue Ridge Envisioneering, Inc. (BRE) proposes the development of a systematic and methodical approach to deploying Deep Neural Network (DNN) architectures on neuromorphic hardware and evaluating their performance relative to a traditional GPU-based deployment. BRE will develop and document a process for benchmarking a DNN’ s performance on a standard GPU, converting it to run on near-commercially available neuromorphic hardware, training and evaluating model accuracy for a range of available bit quantizations, characterizing the trade between power consumption and the various bit quantizations, and characterizing the trade between throughput/latency and the various bit quantizations. This process will be demonstrated on a Deep Convolutional Neural Network trained to classify objects in SAR imagery from the Air Force Research Laboratory’s MSTAR open source dataset. The BrainChip Akida Event Domain Neural Processor development environment will be utilized for demonstration as it provides a simulated execution environment for running converted models under the discrete, low quantization constraints of neuromorphic hardware.
anything come of this?

not much on their website
 
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Love this kind of talk 😎

471D8EC3-A9B8-4DB9-8AA0-D3EB795883E4.jpeg
 

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Love this kind of talk 😎

View attachment 16123
Efficiency is the key reason according to the ARM partner site to team the ARM Cortex M4 with AKIDA technology. In fact without going to the site and extracting the exact words my memory is that they really push the idea that AKIDA creates an unrivalled outcome.

My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
 
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What I think about all things APPLE is after years of fruitless rabbit holes that it is very clever at hiding the nuts and bolts of how it is actually doing anything.

They are also ruthless in cutting loose any partner that discloses they are working with APPLE without permission.

They are also litigious in the extreme and adopt a take no prisoner scorched Earth approach where even if they lack merit they will spend and spend on their lawyers crushing the smaller player with the costs of the action.

In consequence my view has become their corporate veil is made of titanium and unless APPLE says in black and white in an official statement we are using "X" technology in our device they will drive you mad with their red herrings and misdirection's.

This would be the first time I have posted anything about APPLE in a very long time and I likely will not post anything about APPLE for a similar time into the future now that MegaChips exists as the convenient foil to anyone knowing who is using the AKIDA technology solution.

The last time I posted anything potentially APPLE related was way back on HC when I speculated that the statement by Ken Scarince that one particular customer had made it perfectly clear that any leak suggesting they were dealing with Brainchip would see them walk away and I suggested that this was consistent with the well known approach by APPLE. Is this enough evidence to base an investment thesis on most definitely not but sometimes I count APPLES instead of sheep when I cannot go to sleep.

My opinion only DYOR - and good luck if its into APPLE.
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
Thanks so much FF always appreciate your words of wisdom and knowledge you are a wonderful asset for many of us here on this forum. I’m in the process of developing a citrus property and I always seek others who are more knowledgeable than me that way I learn.
I guess as a retired secondary teacher I have learnt to ask question. Thank you.
 
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TECH

Regular
Nice to see some movement northwards.....I have a question.

With a number of posts focused on the upcoming release of new AI Chips, either in the last quarter of this year or suggested by
various companies to enter the product market in Q1 2023 etc.

If Brainchips IP was/is embedded in their designs, wouldn't we be fully aware of it, as in, NOW?

These companies (dots) would have had to have signed an IP agreement prior one would suggest.

I see no such commitment at this present time, and I'm not referring to MegaChips etc.

Feel free to enlighten me on your view/position.

I do know one thing currently, the company is certainly holding its cards very close to its chest, not criticism, just an observation
of mine.

By the way "Karma" is coming to ALL shorters.... your deeds have a close out point, light is fast approaching Brainchip's tunnel, the
end is nigh for you lot........may the bright light shine down on all that sail with Brainchip....great to be a shareholder!!!!

Tech x
 
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Proga

Regular
Nice to see some movement northwards.....I have a question.

With a number of posts focused on the upcoming release of new AI Chips, either in the last quarter of this year or suggested by
various companies to enter the product market in Q1 2023 etc.

If Brainchips IP was/is embedded in their designs, wouldn't we be fully aware of it, as in, NOW?

These companies (dots) would have had to have signed an IP agreement prior one would suggest.

I see no such commitment at this present time, and I'm not referring to MegaChips etc.

Feel free to enlighten me on your view/position.

I do know one thing currently, the company is certainly holding its cards very close to its chest, not criticism, just an observation
of mine.

By the way "Karma" is coming to ALL shorters.... your deeds have a close out point, light is fast approaching Brainchip's tunnel, the
end is nigh for you lot........may the bright light shine down on all that sail with Brainchip....great to be a shareholder!!!!

Tech x
@TECH those with NDA's won't pay the licence agreement until their applications hit the market.

The 4c will tell us real quick if our IP is in the iPhone
 
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