I've written about this in the past. it's not a product like a phone, car, or a new laptop that you introduce, toss onto the market, and then see the numbers next quarter to determine if it's successful or not. These are entirely different, complex processes. Akida isn't just a chip you install in a laptop that suddenly boosts performance and starts having conversations with you or building a time machine. It involves a lot of work to figure out what kind of performance you can get from Akida for your future product and how to use it to the fullest. There's a lot of programming and development work involved. Just my opinion!