BRN Discussion Ongoing

jtardif999

Regular
The patented name would be as "Brainchip" one word.

But the headline might inadvertently drive some attention/interest our way, so it's a good thing 😉
I don’t think BRN has trade marked the name ‘Brainchip’. They are the company called ‘BrainChip’. On the other hand they have trade marked the name ‘Akida’.
 
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Manipulation at its best.

Big holders have been told nothing will be happening for over a year so they lend shares out to make money.

Shorters do there thing and short Brn all the way down to 20 cents.

Shorters don’t have to buy the shares back on market instead organise a after hours off market on the 30th November.

Retail always get f@“ed!

The share price will do what the share price will do. 😂
1701848079477.gif
 
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Makeme 2020

Regular
" The next 12 months are critical in many ways for Brainchip " Sean Hehir stating the obvious, that will complete his 3 of 5 year business
plan, I think he's done a very good job, much of which has been behind the scenes, he arrived to discover Brainchip had been wheeled out
to the launch pad a number of times, only to be wheeled back to the hangar for more R&D.

He has now positioned us, we are primed to be wheeled out to the pad for official launch countdown.

I have read a number of comments with regards Steve Thorne starting at Brainchip and how lucky Brainchip are to have his services,
yes that may be so, but all these new appointments don't just turn up at our door as a favour, they definitely have heard about the
brilliant work going on at Brainchip and the disruptive potential our technology holds, being able to show-off, showcase and secure
deals will be a nice fresh challenge to stimulate their own minds, you must appreciate that the companies they are leaving don't hold
that mental challenge anymore, otherwise, why quit your passion.

Who wouldn't want to be part of a company that has the potential to explode (in a positive way) has excellent staff retention because
of the value the founders both put into their team though respect and daily integrity. I think there's a bit of luck in being picked to
work at Brainchip in the first place.


"Having seen the market’s need for innovative AI solutions, I believe that BrainChip has the essential disruptive technology to make AI ubiquitous across a wide range of industries and use cases.”

If Intel or Habana Labs Ltd had what we have, he would have stayed put, glad he has seen the light, once again as with Dr Lewis, Steve brings
a huge network in this briefcase...... can you place a value on that, the answer is clearly no !!

Just my views......Tech.
Time will tell.
 
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C'mon DELL....you know ya want to :)

Three quarters into the post.



Top Tech Predictions for 2024​

Multicloud, edge, open ecosystems, PC love, and, of course, GenAI. Here's what Dell COO Jeff Clarke expects heading into 2024.

December 5, 2023 | 5 min read

By: Jeff Clarke, vice chairman and COO, Dell Technologies


Jeff Clarke, vice chairman and chief operating officer, Dell Technologies
This year has brought the fastest adoption curve of technology I’ve ever seen. Yes, I’m talking about generative AI (GenAI), but with it comes an accelerated pace of innovation in multicloud, edge, telecom, security and the PC ecosystem. GenAI’s influence across macro- and micro-trends is huge, but it isn’t the only big thing on my mind.

Here’s what I expect in 2024:

Data drama will boost the role of multicloud.​

We’ve experienced years of data growth and advances in compute power and storage performance. Guess what? More data is coming. More power and performance are coming. Our economy lives, runs and thrives on data. And AI loves data.

Organizations’ outcomes are only as good as the data on which they rely — garbage in, garbage out. IDC research has found that organizations are only able to extract 38% of the value of their data, likely because locating, accessing, processing and protecting data throughout its life cycle and across disparate environments is way too difficult.

There are data copies living on-prem and across clouds, proliferating data sources, data formats and tools making it hard to unlock real business value. With data and apps running across on-prem, edge and multiple public clouds, organizations will be pressed to get control of shadow IT and simplify for a cleaner view of their entire IT estates. Multicloud isn’t new, but 2024 is the year the approach gets a boost.

Better data outcomes are on the horizon.​

We know that over 80% of data lives on-prem, and over 50% of new data will be generated at the edge. That means workloads continue to be highly distributed and decentralized as AI moves to the edge across devices and applications.

Early-edge AI proof of concepts will begin to translate into better outcomes across the manufacturing, retail, healthcare and transportation industries. We will see customers create and use domain-specific, field-of-study-specific and process-specific models where data is stored and instantaneously acted on at their own unique edge.

It’s critical for organizations to use their own data to train and tune new models and run inference where data is created.
Think about a smart factory doing heavy process automation and creating real-time data. More and more resources are going to be at the edge of the network doing computation and storing information.

GenAI will move from proof of concept to proof of productivity gains.​

GenAI projects will shift from proof of concept to proof of productivity gains with greater adoption and scale across organizations and industries. And according to

From Dell’s GenAI Pulse Survey, 2023
our GenAI Pulse survey, 65% of organizations that have moved beyond pilot stages expect to see meaningful results from their GenAI initiatives in the next 12 months.

LLMs kickstarted exciting possibilities with GenAI. But I believe the diverse needs of enterprises will promote the rise of smaller, flexible and more efficient language models. As AI decentralizes and the algorithm evolves to support smaller models and smaller data sets, right-sized, less power-hungry infrastructure is increasingly important. We’re also seeing an advanced speed of architecture evolution with retrieval augmented generation (RAG) and other techniques, making GenAI outcomes more accessible.

Expect to see increased demand for open-source AI tools and the platforms that support them.​

The desire for greater choice will drive demand for open-source AI tools. This will make GenAI more accessible and promote innovation and AI transparency. As open-source adoption grows, developers will seek IT platforms that can seamlessly incorporate these tools across various domains, like MLOps, ITOps and AIOps. This integration is vital to support secure and scalable AI deployments within enterprise environments.

The availability of both closed- and open-source models and tools to help enterprises implement GenAI will continue to expand. This year, Meta released Llama 2 as a family of open technologies, which helped the industry shift toward openness. There will be more foundational models, accessories and tools to help develop GenAI systems, secure them and manage the data they need.

As users look to maximize these models and tools, we know that majority partnerships, like ours with Hugging Face, will help these AI builders seamlessly take advantage of open-source libraries while keeping their data securely on-premises.

We also see a big push for architectural and silicon innovation to support a range of workloads running in a highly distributed landscape. These include DPUs, FPGAs, neuromorphic and quantum computing chips, created with sustainable IT in mind to reduce energy consumption. Today, we track over 100 diverse AI accelerators in development and expect demand in 2024 to pull more options into production.

You’ll love your PC…even more​


The PC continues to get more powerful. Moving beyond AI integrated into systems for better performance, we’re about to see AI come to life and deliver on the promise of digital assistants.

For example, instead of mostly command-and-control interactions driven by you typing on a keyboard, there will be additional non-text-based ways to prompt technology to have a bi-directional experience between humans and PCs. Imagine a future where you can collaborate or co-create with voice, visual commands and gestures.

Envision allowing your PC to interpret your mood, facial expression, tone of voice or even a change in the way you type for a much richer experience that delivers the result you are looking for and in your preferred format. Your PC experience will transition from searching to prompting, from reading to understanding, from editing to directing.

As we ask our devices to do more, it will require PCs that use language modeling, language processing and machine learning capabilities to improve the user experience. AI making its way to the device also brings with it efficiencies like cost effectiveness, improved privacy and security, reduced latency and sustainability benefits. It will also require a new architecture that doesn’t purely rely on the CPU or GPU for processing.
While we can’t always predict the future, we have no doubt that 2024 will be another wild ride of innovation. As a tech optimist, I am confident that innovation will drive amazing societal and business progress.

Interested in hearing more from Dell thought leaders on 2024 predictions? Click this link to register for an upcoming broadcast featuring Chief AI Officer Jeff Boudreau and Accenture Chief AI Officer Lan Guan on demystifying generative AI and key advice for the year ahead.
 
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Makeme 2020

Regular
" The next 12 months are critical in many ways for Brainchip " Sean Hehir stating the obvious, that will complete his 3 of 5 year business
plan, I think he's done a very good job, much of which has been behind the scenes, he arrived to discover Brainchip had been wheeled out
to the launch pad a number of times, only to be wheeled back to the hangar for more R&D.

He has now positioned us, we are primed to be wheeled out to the pad for official launch countdown.

I have read a number of comments with regards Steve Thorne starting at Brainchip and how lucky Brainchip are to have his services,
yes that may be so, but all these new appointments don't just turn up at our door as a favour, they definitely have heard about the
brilliant work going on at Brainchip and the disruptive potential our technology holds, being able to show-off, showcase and secure
deals will be a nice fresh challenge to stimulate their own minds, you must appreciate that the companies they are leaving don't hold
that mental challenge anymore, otherwise, why quit your passion.

Who wouldn't want to be part of a company that has the potential to explode (in a positive way) has excellent staff retention because
of the value the founders both put into their team though respect and daily integrity. I think there's a bit of luck in being picked to
work at Brainchip in the first place.


"Having seen the market’s need for innovative AI solutions, I believe that BrainChip has the essential disruptive technology to make AI ubiquitous across a wide range of industries and use cases.”

If Intel or Habana Labs Ltd had what we have, he would have stayed put, glad he has seen the light, once again as with Dr Lewis, Steve brings
a huge network in this briefcase...... can you place a value on that, the answer is clearly no !!

Just my views......Tech.
Sean loves clocking up those free flights around the globe.
Big money for the Directors nothing for shareholders.
 
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Quatrojos

Regular
The more I think about the name brainchip the more I don’t like it for some reason, I like something that ends in Ai or similar maybe something like neuromophic intelligence or even akidaAi. I had to rebrand once after Apple didn’t like me calling my phone repair shops applecreens.
It has AI and IP in it.
 
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The more I think about the name brainchip the more I don’t like it for some reason, I like something that ends in Ai or similar maybe something like neuromophic intelligence or even akidaAi. I had to rebrand once after Apple didn’t like me calling my phone repair shops applecreens.
Thats because they wanted you to call it applescreens!
 
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Thats because they wanted you to call it applescreens!
Well there lawyers scared me enough to change my name to Apple instead
 
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SERA2g

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Proga

Regular
How on earth are they going to cover 62mil ?? I just don't get it!
The price will be well over $2.34 by the time they manage to cover as noone is selling!
I just don't get how on earth u would want to short 62 million shares . Im beyond understanding
They have already covered 82m in 3 months. Almost there. How? 🤷‍♂️

Thanks to @buena suerte :-) we know the volume is being traded. Apart from the 30th of November I haven't noticed too much after close trading.
 
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Frangipani

Top 20
tom&Jerry likes this post

*Baconlover likes this post

I am somewhat surprised so many of you believe it is actually BaconLover playing cat and mouse over on HC.

As I see it, the real BaconLover seems to be rather amused by that assumption; at least he appeared to be, when some HC posters made that claim a while ago (I haven’t been following it that closely since…), though, at the same time he also voiced his disappointment over being mistaken for someone else he deems way less intelligent than himself. So perhaps I can brighten his day a little (as he evidently continues to read the BRN threads in this forum) and hand him a cool pack for his bruised ego by reassuring him that not everyone suspects BaconLover and TomAndJerry to be the same person.

So here comes my theory: After getting himself banned from TSE just over two months ago, the poster with the self-professed penchant for salt-cured pork decided to rise from the dead in that place that shall not be named, where he is now reunited with his equally ousted Phoenix-like mate, who in contrast has never felt it a necessity to change his four-word-username (except for replacing an r with an R at the time of the Great Migration to this forum here). Now being (forcefully) retired from TSE, the latter appears to have found a new hobby (or has more likely resumed an old one): he enjoys making up endearing nicknames for select contributors here, including me - how sweet of him. (In case your sarcasm detector is faulty: I couldn’t care less.)

BaconLover aka Deadrise and I may be worlds apart in many of our beliefs (or what I consider conspiracy theories on his part), but we both happen to suspect the same(j) person hiding behind TomAndJerry. But then again, what would Ms FancyPants know? 🤣
 
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I am somewhat surprised so many of you believe it is actually BaconLover playing cat and mouse over on HC.

As I see it, the real BaconLover seems to be rather amused by that assumption; at least he appeared to be, when some HC posters made that claim a while ago (I haven’t been following it that closely since…), though, at the same time he also voiced his disappointment over being mistaken for someone else he deems way less intelligent than himself. So perhaps I can brighten his day a little (as he evidently continues to read the BRN threads in this forum) and hand him a cool pack for his bruised ego by reassuring him that not everyone suspects BaconLover and TomAndJerry to be the same person.

So here comes my theory: After getting himself banned from TSE just over two months ago, the poster with the self-professed penchant for salt-cured pork decided to rise from the dead in that place that shall not be named, where he is now reunited with his equally ousted Phoenix-like mate, who in contrast has never felt it a necessity to change his four-word-username (except for replacing an r with an R at the time of the Great Migration to this forum here). Now being (forcefully) retired from TSE, the latter appears to have found a new hobby (or has more likely resumed an old one): he enjoys making up endearing nicknames for select contributors here, including me - how sweet of him. (In case your sarcasm detector is faulty: I couldn’t care less.)

BaconLover aka Deadrise and I may be worlds apart in many of our beliefs (or what I consider conspiracy theories on his part), but we both happen to suspect the same(j) person hiding behind TomAndJerry. But then again, what would Ms FancyPants know? 🤣
1701857896144.gif
 
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Tothemoon24

Top 20
Sean has mentioned that there’s interest in our IP from the hearing aid world .
Perhaps a dot can be drawn from the below article

18 th August

Intel’s Strategic Positioning​

Intel’s CEO, Pat Gelsinger, highlighted the company’s focus on a “beneficial total cost of ownership (TCO) at every node on the AI continuum.” It implies that Intel isn’t just chasing high-end AI applications. It is looking at the entire spectrum — from high-powered data centers processing vast amounts of data to low-power devices like hearing aids. This broad focus is emblematic of a company that sees AI’s potential to revolutionize every piece of tech we use. That means better user experiences for the device user and many new use cases for the enterprise that looks to use intelligent endpoints to revolutionize its business.

The democratization of AI, as Gelsinger puts it, will eventually make AI ubiquitous. This strategy contrasts with an approach where AI is seen as a premium or niche feature. For example, some higher-end premium smartphones now feature AI-enhanced cameras for photography, something lower-end phones do not yet offer. Another example is advanced driver assistance available on many premium cars. This feature has been shown to improve safe driving and help avoid accidents but is not yet available on more basic models. Instead, Intel aims for AI to be a default, standard component across devices and applications. It will create a somewhat level playing field for device OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) and the applications that utilize these devices for data capture and transmit.



 
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Easytiger

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Tothemoon24

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IMG_7906.jpeg
I'm stoked to wrap up this exhilarating year by attending the 13th edition of the European CubeSat Symposium here in Leuven, Belgium 🇧🇪. On Monday, I'll take the stage as the second speaker to discuss how we make and keep space accessible to all.

During the talk, I'll pose a burning question: "How does Artificial Intelligence in space differ from here on Earth?" 🤔 By diving deep into this challenge, we can empower every AI engineer to design, train, and deploy neural networks in orbit more effectively. Let's work together to leverage the power of AI and shape the new space industry. 🚀 I can't wait to see you there!
 
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Easytiger

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They were told what they needed to hear
I think it's more just them accepting, that we are simply too close to significant Company progress, to risk such a large short position at these levels.

I think they've known that for a while, but they simply could not get the volume, required to cover.

The huge volume that went through, after the LDA announcement, provided much welcome relief to them, in my opinion.

A wasted opportunity for us..
 
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Easytiger

Regular
I think it's more just them accepting, that we are simply too close to significant Company progress, to risk such a large short position at these levels.

I think they've known that for a while, but they simply could not get the volume, required to cover.

The huge volume that went through, after the LDA announcement, provided much welcome relief to them, in my opinion.

A wasted opportunity for us..
What Morpheus said to Neo. When Neo said to Morpheous that the Oracle had told him that he was not the one. Is Sean the one?
 
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