BRN Discussion Ongoing

wilzy123

Founding Member
No. No. $58.10 😏

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If anyone on this forum has a vpn, do you mind checking out the link to the job shown below? Not sure if its current, or something older, but it keeps appearing in my searches.

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wilzy123

Founding Member
Perhaps, Brainchip should also look at approaching some of the universities as well. We only found out a week ago that the AI lead at Latrobe University had no idea about Brainchip and the AKIDA technology.

@TECH If its not to much trouble, you may want to ask if they are actively pursuing Australian universities?

They are aware now.
 
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They are aware now.
Thanks for following up. What did the lecturer say when you brought up the topic with them?
 
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keyeat

Regular
I am angry.

Today I posted about Moschip since we hadn't heard much lately.

my question... is Moschip not relevant? Moschip the company that Demonstrated Brainchips Capabilities of Neural Processor IP and ASICs for Smart Edge Devices at IESA AI Summit?

Is Moschip spending 17.25 million dollars (26.5 million Australian) buying a company irrelevant?

The acquisition of the California-based Softnautics, which has offices in Pune and Ahmedabad and focused on product engineering solutions in embedded design, FPGA and VLSI, will help MosChip expand geographically, including enhancing presence in North America and result in broader access to talent pool, MosChip said.

The acquisition will be completed next quarter. The cost of acquisition is to be paid 52.6% in swap shares and 47.4% in cash. More than 185 employees would be added to MosChip workforce across various domains, the company said.

The transaction will strengthen MosChip’s embedded system design capabilities and enable it to serve existing clients better while enhancing the ability to acquire new customers, MD and CEO Venkata Sudhakar Simhadri said in a release.

Maybe this is just a small and insignificant dot.

Fact: Moschip has demostrated brainchips IP

Fact: Moschip was a CES 2023 Brainchip partner

Fact: Moschip has deep pockets.

Fact: Brainchip would like to licence their I.P. to Moschip

Fact: A Brainchip Licence would be small in comparison to their latest acquisition

Fact: Moschip spending 17.25 million dollars (26.5 million Australian) buying a company is not irrelevant




So then why am I being threated with an automatic ban for sharing Moschips latest acquisition?


In this forum it is okay for great contributors to put up fun silly pictures ... but if you provide a link for Moschip it can lead to an automatic ban.

Today at 12:57 PM
Dreddb0t: I am the law. Your post has been moderated, and you've been warned. Read the rules again and be vigilant - any further transgressions will lead to an automatic ban. Remember, ignorance is not an excuse.
Post: https://thestockexchange.com.au/posts/342270
Rules: https://thestockexchange.com.au/help/terms/

Reason: The post contains multiple links that are not relevant to the discussion and appear to be spam.

where is @Fact Finder when you need him?

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same happened to me, so looks like you need to post more than just a link , need to add some context for it not to get moderated.
 
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wilzy123

Founding Member
I am angry.

Today I posted about Moschip since we hadn't heard much lately.

my question... is Moschip not relevant? Moschip the company that Demonstrated Brainchips Capabilities of Neural Processor IP and ASICs for Smart Edge Devices at IESA AI Summit?

Is Moschip spending 17.25 million dollars (26.5 million Australian) buying a company irrelevant?

The acquisition of the California-based Softnautics, which has offices in Pune and Ahmedabad and focused on product engineering solutions in embedded design, FPGA and VLSI, will help MosChip expand geographically, including enhancing presence in North America and result in broader access to talent pool, MosChip said.

The acquisition will be completed next quarter. The cost of acquisition is to be paid 52.6% in swap shares and 47.4% in cash. More than 185 employees would be added to MosChip workforce across various domains, the company said.

The transaction will strengthen MosChip’s embedded system design capabilities and enable it to serve existing clients better while enhancing the ability to acquire new customers, MD and CEO Venkata Sudhakar Simhadri said in a release.

Maybe this is just a small and insignificant dot.

Fact: Moschip has demostrated brainchips IP

Fact: Moschip was a CES 2023 Brainchip partner

Fact: Moschip has deep pockets.

Fact: Brainchip would like to licence their I.P. to Moschip

Fact: A Brainchip Licence would be small in comparison to their latest acquisition

Fact: Moschip spending 17.25 million dollars (26.5 million Australian) buying a company is not irrelevant




So then why am I being threated with an automatic ban for sharing Moschips latest acquisition?


In this forum it is okay for great contributors to put up fun silly pictures ... but if you provide links for Moschip it can lead to an automatic ban.

Today at 12:57 PM
Dreddb0t: I am the law. Your post has been moderated, and you've been warned. Read the rules again and be vigilant - any further transgressions will lead to an automatic ban. Remember, ignorance is not an excuse.
Post: https://thestockexchange.com.au/posts/342270
Rules: https://thestockexchange.com.au/help/terms/

Reason: The post contains multiple links that are not relevant to the discussion and appear to be spam.

where is @Fact Finder when you need him?

Frustrated Keyboard GIF


Sorry, I didn't actually see what you posted originally about Moschip, but I am failing to see why fact finder is required or why a company acquisition by Moschip is even relevant here.

You post was likely moderated because others on the forum failed to see any relevance, and reported your post as a consequence.
 
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Tony Coles

Regular
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S

Straw

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Esq.111

Fascinatingly Intuitive.
I am angry.

Today I posted about Moschip since we hadn't heard much lately.

my question... is Moschip not relevant? Moschip the company that Demonstrated Brainchips Capabilities of Neural Processor IP and ASICs for Smart Edge Devices at IESA AI Summit?

Is Moschip spending 17.25 million dollars (26.5 million Australian) buying a company irrelevant?

The acquisition of the California-based Softnautics, which has offices in Pune and Ahmedabad and focused on product engineering solutions in embedded design, FPGA and VLSI, will help MosChip expand geographically, including enhancing presence in North America and result in broader access to talent pool, MosChip said.

The acquisition will be completed next quarter. The cost of acquisition is to be paid 52.6% in swap shares and 47.4% in cash. More than 185 employees would be added to MosChip workforce across various domains, the company said.

The transaction will strengthen MosChip’s embedded system design capabilities and enable it to serve existing clients better while enhancing the ability to acquire new customers, MD and CEO Venkata Sudhakar Simhadri said in a release.

Maybe this is just a small and insignificant dot.

Fact: Moschip has demostrated brainchips IP

Fact: Moschip was a CES 2023 Brainchip partner

Fact: Moschip has deep pockets.

Fact: Brainchip would like to licence their I.P. to Moschip

Fact: A Brainchip Licence would be small in comparison to their latest acquisition

Fact: Moschip spending 17.25 million dollars (26.5 million Australian) buying a company is not irrelevant




So then why am I being threated with an automatic ban for sharing Moschips latest acquisition?


In this forum it is okay for great contributors to put up fun silly pictures ... but if you provide links for Moschip it can lead to an automatic ban.

Today at 12:57 PM
Dreddb0t: I am the law. Your post has been moderated, and you've been warned. Read the rules again and be vigilant - any further transgressions will lead to an automatic ban. Remember, ignorance is not an excuse.
Post: https://thestockexchange.com.au/posts/342270
Rules: https://thestockexchange.com.au/help/terms/

Reason: The post contains multiple links that are not relevant to the discussion and appear to be spam.

where is @Fact Finder when you need him?

Frustrated Keyboard GIF
Evening Neuromorphia ,

I'm not shaw what's going on, but your input is always welcome & gratefully appreciated.

I'd say to Zeeb0t , look at who reported your post, as there could well be nefarious actors at play.

Keep up the great work, it is appreciated.

Regards,
Esq.
 
Last edited:
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
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Labsy

Regular
The manipulators still have their heel on our necks and the shortee's are bleeding us dry as they can, without actually killing their golden goose.
They can only continue this play till expected and/or unexpected news drops and then hopefully flows.
According to how we rise, different scenarios will manifest.
If our growth is steady, and slow, they will cling on with some persistence riding us up, as they have ridden us down.
IMO this will be the play they favour as it allows them maximal possible control of our entity and maximum wealth extraction.
Unexpected news (ala MB announcement circa Jan 2022) could have them scrambling desperately to hold our bucking bronc.
But having witnessed it, like us, that will be a scenario they will be somewhat prepared for this time and depending on timing and other potential commitments they may be able to control our ascent more effectively this time using their full arsenal of lies, deceit and smoke and mirror trading techniques.
In the meantime....watch out for those "Klingon's on the starboard bow" 🤣


Good stuff 🫵👍
 
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miaeffect

Oat latte lover
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IloveLamp

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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
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Gearitup

Member
No mention of BRN unfortunately but should be in the discussion...

AFR: Forget Nvidia and consider these ASX stocks instead​

Tom RichardsonMarkets reporter and commentator
Aug 15, 2023 – 6.00am

The race to reinvent the workplace by integrating artificial intelligence into business processes will unleash some of the greatest investment opportunities of the next decade and could push certain stocks up five or 10-fold in value across multiple sectors.
Kelly Brough, Accenture’s head of AI for Australia and New Zealand, says ChatGPT captured the imaginations of executives.
But identifying winning companies is the challenge, as almost every business could boost sales or reduce costs by using AI to automate tasks, create more goods and services or communicate better.
The C-suite demand to adopt and leverage AI is accelerating so much that Goldman Sachs has estimated companies will invest $US200 billion ($306.9 billion) in 2025 to drive AI-linked efficiency and productivity.
Management consultant Accenture plans to double the number of global staff it has helping companies unlock the technology’s benefits from 40,000 to 80,000 over the next few years
Accenture – as the NYSE-listed corporate-makeover specialist – argues AI co-pilots will soon be a constant assistant for every employee in office jobs in areas like financial services, software services, the media, advertising, public relations, law, medicine, the civil service, academia, and human resources.

“ChatGPT really brought the reality and potential of AI into the imaginations of the majority of executives in the world and Australia,” says Kelly Brough, the head of Accenture’s applied intelligence division for Australia and New Zealand.
“Retail is one place where both analytic and generative AI together can improve a retailer’s ability to analyse product mix and how it is placed on shelves,
“An AI-driven approach could see a 2 per cent to 10 per cent increase in sales from applying an algorithmic approach, and some of that’s because AI is more specific based on store location.”

Finding winners​

Accenture in Australia advises many of the most powerful chief executives and boards on how their businesses can beat the competition.
The company’s research claims 40 per cent of all working hours could be impacted by generative AI assistants like Chat GPT-4 because language-related tasks account for 62 per cent of total employee work hours, and 65 per cent of language tasks are capable of being transformed into more productive activity through augmentation and automation.

The dawn of the AI revolution has equities analysts and fund managers scrambling to identify potential winners before the broader market cottons on to them.
Emmanuel Datt, the Melbourne-based founder of investment group Datt Capital, says companies must have the sufficient digital technology in place to use AI as a bolted-on assistant, with data footprints large enough to be interpreted by AI to improve performance.
“Something like software logistics group WiseTech is ideal,” Datt says. “As they have global data and are entrenched in their industry, they capture lots of efficiencies and benefits from adopting AI.
“Financial services is another big one because they have long tails of customer data. Lenders, for example, have lots of credit data on customers. Insurers have a long range of historical data.
“Retailers with customer loyalty programs can trace spending habits of consumers to target and personalise marketing.
“And sticky tech platforms like Netwealth and Hub would be silly not to adopt AI given they have all this customer data.”

RBC Capital equities analyst Wei-Weng Chen says online retailers such as Kogan, Adore Beauty, and furniture merchant Temple & Webster could grow sales by using computer programs to write descriptions for around 300,000 items for sale online.
“So, [Temple & Webster] can convert more website users into sales, it’s almost impossible to manually write a good description for all items for sale online,” he says.
6d1a3ba20f8e574814a3a1ca9dc4fbcbb2cabdfb

AI investment is set to reinvent the workplace and flow through to every company’s financial statements
“But with AI they can do that and drive up conversions as customers have more confidence in what they’re buying with a better description and staff previously doing that they can put into more revenue generating roles.
“Temple & Webster are also rolling out ChatGPT as their pre-sales bot, so you can ask the bot, is this couch suitable for me as I have a husky dog at home?”
He adds that sharemarket investors should favour online-only retailers instead of hybrid or bricks-and-mortar retailers such as Harvey Norman and Nick Scali, which have to pay staff on showroom floors and rents for stores.

“You can’t AI your lease costs, so the online players have an advantage. ChatGPT is very cheap, they want to get companies using it. Travel companies’ customer support and chat is a big part of their business, so they’ll use it.
“Webjet at the start of the pandemic said it had to hire additional staff to deal with the volume of calls, so with a chatbot for customer support, if you crack the code it’ll be pretty powerful.”
Ultimately, for every investor the nosebleed profits will come from finding AI winners before the market.
It’s no use buying Nvidia today if everyone knows it’s a big winner, you have to find the Nvidia of tomorrow.
But if Accenture is on the money, almost every listed business is a candidate to surprise the market as an AI winner by growing sales or profits faster than expected.
Meanwhile, evidence of AI-driven success in financial statements will likely result in the market assigning businesses higher profit multiples to boost share price gains as the market’s mania for AI unfolds.
 
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