Rise from the ashes
Regular
I suspect all of us long-term holders are a bit special mate. I'll say it ... We are smarter than the average bear.When I talk about Brainchip at home all I get is Brainfarts in return
I suspect all of us long-term holders are a bit special mate. I'll say it ... We are smarter than the average bear.When I talk about Brainchip at home all I get is Brainfarts in return
Yes mate, Thank you.Was that the correct podcast I linked here?
Love your work @equanimous
That was removed from the videoCan anyone please give me the link to the Valeo press conference where the question was asked about BRN, and the 2 presenters looked like deers in the headlights??
I’ve never seen it, but would love to…
Thanks in advance….
Panda
I just held finger down on link and copied link.Yes mate, Thank you.![]()
Alot of gratitude to all the researchers and contributors here. Even having to build and form a less centralized and manipulated social platform to keep things shared openly and freely.I suspect all of us long-term holders are a bit special mate. I'll say it ... We are smarter than the average bear.
Hi @HopalongPetrovskiHi Folks.
For anyone with a spare 15-30 minutes check out on the BBC's webpage, their 'Science in Action' podcast latest episode.
Nothing specifically about our Company.
It's all interesting as you can see from the program summary below but particularly.......
the segment on the 75 years of transistor electronics starting around 14 minutes, 45 seconds in, particularly towards the end where the lady speaking when talking about "where next?" mentions "ambient intelligence" where the staggeringly large number of interconnected devices surrounding us have some level of embedded intelligence helping us live more healthy and more productive lives. The number of computing devices already exceeds the number of people in the world today and it is estimated that within the next 5 years there will be about 350 Billion computing devices that are connected wirelessly!
And yeah, she drops the old Ubiquitous in there as well.
Might be a bit simple for our Brainiacs, but some good fodder for us plodder's.
Sorry folks, couldn't find a way to embed a link but easy to find on the BBC.co.uk website.
Enjoy.
Science in Action. Find podcast on BBC website.
Fusion milestone - the science behind the headlines.
Laser fusion expert Kate Lancaster walks us through the technology that produced energy gain at the US's National Ignition Facility NIF
Whirlwinds on Mars
What the sounds of a dust devil passing over NASA's Mars Perseverance Rover tells us about the Martian atmosphere
75 years of the transistor electronics revolution - where next for Moore's Law?
December 16th 1947 was the day the first ever transistor device passed an electrical current. Trillions are made every day these days, powering our interconnected world. Roland recalls meeting some of the pioneers for the 50th anniversary, including Gordon Moore, and hears from Berkeley Dean of engineering Tsu-Jae King Liu how the revolution will continue for another 25 years.
Heck yeah, this place at times is a gold mine with near surface high grade gold. I couldn't handle the stupid at that shithole of a placeAlot of gratitude to all the researchers and contributors here. Even having to build and form a less centralized and manipulated social platform to keep things shared openly and freely.
Yes you can donate your computers processing power and run it in the background for science and medical research..Hi @HopalongPetrovski
One from the memory banks but the crew at TCS published a paper which I read early 2020 where they proposed a way to network the spare processing power of every mobile phone in a given area to solve complex problems cheaply without the use of power hungry super computers.
At the time I thought of Peter van der Made and his comments around networking AKIDA chips.
No opinion but I think the future is coming at us at an alarming pace.
Regards
FF
AKIDA BALLISTA
@Rise from the ashes Can you let me know which video it was? (I may just happen to have a saved copy of itThat was removed from the video
They never uploaded the full video it was a live webinar or whatever you call it. Unless you recorded the live feed we are shit out of luck.@Rise from the ashes Can you let me know which video it was? (I may just happen to have a saved copy of it)
They never uploaded the full video it was a live webinar or whatever you call it. Unless you recorded they live feed we are shit out of luck.
That part was removed before they uploaded the recording.
Hi Folks.
For anyone with a spare 15-30 minutes check out on the BBC's webpage, their 'Science in Action' podcast latest episode.
Nothing specifically about our Company.
It's all interesting as you can see from the program summary below but particularly.......
the segment on the 75 years of transistor electronics starting around 14 minutes, 45 seconds in, particularly towards the end where the lady speaking when talking about "where next?" mentions "ambient intelligence" where the staggeringly large number of interconnected devices surrounding us have some level of embedded intelligence helping us live more healthy and more productive lives. The number of computing devices already exceeds the number of people in the world today and it is estimated that within the next 5 years there will be about 350 Billion computing devices that are connected wirelessly!
And yeah, she drops the old Ubiquitous in there as well.
Might be a bit simple for our Brainiacs, but some good fodder for us plodder's.
Sorry folks, couldn't find a way to embed a link but easy to find on the BBC.co.uk website.
Enjoy.
Science in Action. Find podcast on BBC website.
Fusion milestone - the science behind the headlines.
Laser fusion expert Kate Lancaster walks us through the technology that produced energy gain at the US's National Ignition Facility NIF
Whirlwinds on Mars
What the sounds of a dust devil passing over NASA's Mars Perseverance Rover tells us about the Martian atmosphere
75 years of the transistor electronics revolution - where next for Moore's Law?
December 16th 1947 was the day the first ever transistor device passed an electrical current. Trillions are made every day these days, powering our interconnected world. Roland recalls meeting some of the pioneers for the 50th anniversary, including Gordon Moore, and hears from Berkeley Dean of engineering Tsu-Jae King Liu how the revolution will continue for another 25 years.
I'd appreciate any tip I'd recieve from anyone ,always gratefulI find it the opposite people are happy to take advice from me, ive done well for myself in this market over the last 25 years. But it seems after they have made a bit of money their attitude changes to ungratefulness.
I didn't even finish year 10 highschoolwere as most of them went to university and ended up with shit jobs. Yet I carry on trying to make life better for those I care about. When I probably should just
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I have just thought of a use case in consumer doorbells powered by AKIDA they could judge whether your better half or teenager has arrived home angry or petulant and refuse to open the door until their mood has improved.