Rskiff
Regular
Some here have blood transfusions and change to Oh negative"So if you believe in company" (rgupta)
I really do believe in BRN!! ......as I said in a previous post my blood type is BRN positive
Cheers


Some here have blood transfusions and change to Oh negative"So if you believe in company" (rgupta)
I really do believe in BRN!! ......as I said in a previous post my blood type is BRN positive
Cheers
I may not be the right person to answer your question, but looks like brainchip have funding for 4-6 quarters. Then by Dec 23 renasas will launch their chip with akida inside. There is high possibility megachips will also start giving some royalties with in 4-6 quarters. 1 year can be a good time for BRN to sign new contracts with akida 2.Hello All
I was hoping someone could shine a light on a query I have.
First of all, I’m not bothered about the SP falling, I know that there’s a lot of manipulation going on atm. I have been accumulating in small parcels as the price has dropped. To me it’s a golden opportunity.
However, on crapper, a lot of down ramping is going on and in reference to Brn having funding only for a few more quarters and then will require a CR. I know that revenue might come into play but it probably won’t be enough to cover overheads.
With the SP currently at 15 cents and quarterly results due soon, it is quite possible that revenue would not have increased by much unless contracts are signed. The fact that no announcements have been made probably indicates no new contracts.
A quarterly report indicating no increase revenue will impact on the SP further and possibly driving the SP down to single digits.
So my question is:
How financially stable are Brn atm?
If Brn do require a CR it would mean more diluting of shares?
I know that in the long run Brn will achieve its revenue goals but shorters will take full advantage and this could put Brn in a very vulnerable state.
Keen to hear your thoughts. These are genuine questions which I’m hoping someone can give me genuine answers.
Thanks mate.I may not be the right person to answer your question, but looks like brainchip have funding for 4-6 quarters. Then by Dec 23 renasas will launch their chip with akida inside. There is high possibility megachips will also start giving some royalties with in 4-6 quarters. 1 year can be a good time for BRN to sign new contracts with akida 2.
So on the whole if the revenue is not getting through in next 4 quarters that will mean we overestimate our investments. But if renue of 2 million to 5 million start flowing through per quarter the sp will improve and even if we need a capital raise dilution will be minimum. On the other hand if revenue of 5-10 million start coming per quarter by then that will mean we may not need a capital raise at all.
End of the day no investment comes without a risk but investing at lower prices reduces those risks.
Dyor
At the 30th June 2023 we had 5 months
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Your saying 5 months but it states 5 quartersAt the 30th June 2023 we had 5 months
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Looks like we were typing at the same time5 Quarters...
OOPs my bad now edited5 Quarters...
OOPs my bad
Whilst I see a Nasdaq listing/ dual listing as inevitable given the success we all ultimately expect, I too hope it’s not undertaken prematurely.Hey Vlad,
I respect your input too mate, and hope you’re well.
I think having a seasoned board is what will prevent us listing on the Nasdaq. I believe they know full well what happens to premature listings which is why the company has stamped out any whispers of the relisting as soon as they start.
I hope you’re right about accelerated revenue, I’m ready to start seeing it!
Cheers
My post was written in great haste.Yes we need to up-list in the US asap, agreed.
The institutions are not allowed to trade OTC stocks in the US so very little is going on there.
From Investopedia:
While many financial institutions are prohibited from trading penny stocks, loosely regulated hedge funds have no such restrictions. That said, most hedge funds won't trade penny stocks on the long side: They far prefer short-selling penny stocks that look to have peaked after being heavily promoted. Penny stocks, although they often do indeed trade for mere pennies, can still be exceedingly dangerous to short because of the risk of a short squeeze. So while the risk-reward payoff for shorting a penny stock is too skewed (i.e., offering a limited reward if the short strategy works and unlimited risk if it doesn't) to be worthwhile for an average investor, the strategy may entice a deep-pocketed hedge fund.
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Who Actually Trades or Invests in Penny Stocks?
Although penny stocks are highly speculative, millions of people trade them daily.www.investopedia.com
And keep in mind if some revenue starts trickling in a few million a quarter in q4 onto next q1 it will probably be lumpy and grow.Looks like we were typing at the same time![]()
The other photo of our new best friends.
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I couldn't agree with you more @rgupta I was only thinking of the same thing last night when I was read the days comments last night. No truer a quote!!I believe in Buffet's famous quote "when everyone is fearful be greedy"
So if you believe in company then it may be a good time to become greedy.
Dyor
At the end of the day Brainchip need there juice in products , Products and Revenue if there is none it's going to be a short conversationI think many people here are too much in love with Sean Hehir and that's why they don't criticize him. Personally, I don't think he's doing a good job because he doesn't let us know what's happening and because he doesn't care about the SP. I can't judge the rest of his work, but since he doesn't talk about it (not the minor details, of course), I have to judge it negatively. And it is my right as a stockholder to do so.
It is also the company's job to monitor the SP and make shareholders feel more comfortable about their investments by releasing information more often. It seems to me like he doesn't care about shareholders at all and I don't like that feeling. I have worked for many CEOs in my long life and know how a CEO should appear in public. Sean is not like that at all. You got to the point with Church Mouse.
I really hope I'm completely wrong when I see the next 4C, and I'm more than willing to apologize then.
There is a lot of scaremongering going on over at HC. Since one's natural inclination is to be curious about the drama, getting caught up and emotional about it is too easy.Thanks mate.
There’s a lot of scaremongering going on over there, I know that is all part of the tactic but it got me thinking.
I hope what you stated is correct, it puts my mind at ease.
This could be something with keeping our 1000 eyes peeled on, especially since we recently-ish (1 June 2023) had Shyamal Anadkat from OpenAI touting the benefits of BrainChip's AKIDA.
OpenAI said to be considering developing its own AI chips
Sat, 7 October 2023 at 6:31 am AEDT·3-min read
- Kyle Wiggers
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OpenAI, one of the best-funded AI startups in business, is exploring making its own AI chips.
Discussions of AI chip strategies within the company have been ongoing since at least last year, according to Reuters, as the shortage of chips to train AI models worsens. OpenAI is reportedly considering a number of strategies to advance its chip ambitions, including acquiring an AI chip manufacturer or mounting an effort to design chips internally.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has made the acquisition of more AI chips a top priority for the company, Reuters reports.
Currently, OpenAI, like most of its competitors, relies on GPU-based hardware to develop models such as ChatGPT, GPT-4 and DALL-E 3. GPUs’ ability to perform many computations in parallel make them well-suited to training today’s most capable AI.
But the generative AI boom -- a windfall for GPU makers like Nvidia -- has massively strained the GPU supply chain. Microsoft is facing a shortage of the server hardware needed to run AI so severe that it might lead to service disruptions, the company warned in a summer earnings report. And Nvidia's best-performing AI chips are reportedly sold out until 2024.
GPUs are also essential for running and serving OpenAI's models; the company relies on clusters of GPUs in the cloud to perform customers' workloads. But they come at a sky-high cost.
An analysis from Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon found that if ChatGPT queries grew to a tenth the scale of Google Search, it'd require roughly $48.1 billion worth of GPUs initially and about $16 billion worth of chips a year to keep operational.
OpenAI wouldn't be the first to pursue creating its own AI chips.
Google has a processor, the TPU (short for "tensor processing unit"), to train large generative AI systems like PaLM-2 and Imagen. Amazon offers proprietary chips to AWS customers both for training (Trainium) and inferencing (Inferentia). And Microsoft, reportedly, is working with AMD to develop an in-house AI chip called Athena, which OpenAI is said to be testing.
Certainly, OpenAI is in a strong position to invest heavily in R&D. The company, which has raised more than $11 billion in venture capital, is nearing $1 billion in annual revenue. And it's considering a share sale that could see its secondary-market valuation soar to $90 billion, according to a recent Wall Street Journal report.
But hardware is an unforgiving business -- particularly AI chips.
Last year, AI chipmaker Graphcore, which allegedly had its valuation slashed by $1 billion after a deal with Microsoft fell through, said that it was planning to job cuts due to the "extremely challenging" macroeconomic environment. (The situation grew more dire over the past few months as Graphcore reported falling revenue and increased losses.) Meanwhile, Habana Labs, the Intel-owned AI chip company, laid off an estimated 10% of its workforce. And Meta's custom AI chip efforts have been beset with issues, leading the company to scrap some its experimental hardware.
Even if OpenAI commits to bringing a custom chip to market, such an effort could take years and cost hundreds of millions of dollars annually. It remains to be seen if the startup's investors, one of which is Microsoft, have the appetite for such a risky bet.
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OpenAI said to be considering developing its own AI chips
Discussions of AI chip strategies within the company have been ongoing since at least last year, according to Reuters, as the shortage of chips to train AI models worsens. GPUs’ ability to perform many computations in parallel make them well-suited to training today’s most capable AI...au.finance.yahoo.com
And this too...which suggests OpenAi maybe considering acquiring a chip company...
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OpenAI could make its own AI chips
OpenAI's new strategy to keep its AI services immune to the ongoing chip shortage is building its in-house AI chips.www.xda-developers.com