All good down my way BS. Thanks for the reply. Look forward to drinks at the next secret meetingHey Motty...The only thing I think of with High traded volumes and no change in sp is very controlled accumulation! (Very interested party!!)..Maybe buy price set at around 36c...then when it goes to 37/38c they sell a small amount back at 34/35c to keep it flat!?
My thoughts only mate ...hope all is well![]()
I have no desire to get into an argument with you. In 2022 I came across a paper from Researchers at Imperial College London that ignored AKIDA’s existence and dealt only with Loihi. I sent the paper to Brainchip on the basis that whatever it was they were trying to do sounded to me as a lay person as being something AKIDA technology could cover. I eventually received back advice that they were involved with Intel.Hi macro,
unfortunately the content these kind of answer engines provide always needs to be taken with a grain of salt. The answer Perplexity AI gave you proves my point:
I would dismiss Cambridge Consultants, since they do not have a London office!
As their name suggests, they are based in Cambridge (just like Arm, by the way), which is almost 100 km north of London and thus certainly not a Central London location, as stated in the job ad!
View attachment 57236
But apart from getting the geography wrong, there is something else in that chatbot’s answer that irritates me: While it is highly commendable that Cambridge Consultants’ head of semiconductor capability, Dr. Aidong Xu, has recognised the potential and benefits of neuromorphic computing, especially regarding energy savings, I would expect someone described (by Perplexity AI) as being “involved in neuromorphic computing” to be someone working in a neuromorphic lab on either hardware or software, and possibly publishing scientific papers on the topic, rather than someone spruiking the merits of neuromorphic computing without any hands-on experience (at least that’s my impression of Dr. Xu).
But let’s move on:
Perplexity AI made another mistake here, namely listing Dr. Oscar Lee as an Imperial College Researcher. He is, however, from UCL instead!
View attachment 57239
Perplexingly, Perplexity AI completely omitted King’s College London in its list of academic institutions, although is very well-known for the neuromorphic research conducted by Prof. Osvaldo Simeone and Prof. Bipin Rajendran that aims to revolutionise wireless communications.
![]()
![]()
They recently co-authored a paper with researchers from Luxembourg, the UK and France (“Performance Evaluation of Neuromorphic Hardware for Onboard Satellite Communication Applications”), in which they had implemented SNNs on Loihi 2 - it was briefly touched on here on TSE the other day:
https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-409255
An interesting collaboration between these three partner universities - King's, Imperial and UCL - is the London Centre for Nanotechnology (LCN), “a UK-based multidisciplinary enterprise operating at the forefront of science and technology. Our purpose is to solve global problems in information processing, healthcare, energy and the environment through the application of nanoscience and nanotechnology. Founded in 2003, the LCN began as a joint venture between University College London and Imperial College London, based at the Bloomsbury and South Kensington sites; from 2018 King's College London joined the collaboration from its base on The Strand.”
By the way, Perplexity AI also failed to mention Brunel University London as yet another institution being involved in neuromorphic research in the British capital.
Really? Could you please provide us with some evidence to back up your claim?
The two researchers from Imperial College listed above are from the Department of Physics, where they do research on materials for neuromorphic computing and magnetism, but they are not working with neuromorphic chips such as Loihi. So who at Imperial College is, then?
![]()
Twisted magnets make brain-inspired computing more adaptable | Imperial News | Imperial College London
A form of brain-inspired computing that exploits the intrinsic physical properties of a material to reduce energy use is now closer to reality.www.imperial.ac.uk
By the way, I’d assume our mystery employer is a small start-up in stealth mode with specific products in mind, not a university.
Cheers mrgds. I think you may be on the money.Gday @Motty
Its my understanding that many large institutions with millions of shares, whether shorted or not , can cause very large volume days as they are just passing the shares between each other, as they dont pay brokerage fees unlike us plebs, and are just there trying to scrape up all the shares that retail may sell. FWIW
Me too ...All good down my way BS. Thanks for the reply. Look forward to drinks at the next secret meeting![]()
.
COPY and PASTE ON TO YOUTUBE
This is me trying to put a bet on, I was soooo embarrassed when a friend played it back to me.
Be warned a lot of swearing.
I had a terrible day this day, and this just top it off, everybody asks me if the horse won.
I have no idea, but probably did, known the day I had.![]()
I think it's FF's porn star nameTom .................... ? ......................is that a acronym FF?
Spot on.Hey Motty...The only thing I think of with High traded volumes and no change in sp is very controlled accumulation! (Very interested party!!)..Maybe buy price set at around 36c...then when it goes to 37/38c they sell a small amount back at 34/35c to keep it flat!?
My thoughts only mate ...hope all is well![]()
I'm crying that is sooo funny..![]()
Here is something else you might like to check:Hi macro,
unfortunately the content these kind of answer engines provide always needs to be taken with a grain of salt. The answer Perplexity AI gave you proves my point:
I would dismiss Cambridge Consultants, since they do not have a London office!
As their name suggests, they are based in Cambridge (just like Arm, by the way), which is almost 100 km north of London and thus certainly not a Central London location, as stated in the job ad!
View attachment 57236
But apart from getting the geography wrong, there is something else in that chatbot’s answer that irritates me: While it is highly commendable that Cambridge Consultants’ head of semiconductor capability, Dr. Aidong Xu, has recognised the potential and benefits of neuromorphic computing, especially regarding energy savings, I would expect someone described (by Perplexity AI) as being “involved in neuromorphic computing” to be someone working in a neuromorphic lab on either hardware or software, and possibly publishing scientific papers on the topic, rather than someone spruiking the merits of neuromorphic computing without any hands-on experience (at least that’s my impression of Dr. Xu).
But let’s move on:
Perplexity AI made another mistake here, namely listing Dr. Oscar Lee as an Imperial College Researcher. He is, however, from UCL instead!
View attachment 57239
Perplexingly, Perplexity AI completely omitted King’s College London in its list of academic institutions, although is very well-known for the neuromorphic research conducted by Prof. Osvaldo Simeone and Prof. Bipin Rajendran that aims to revolutionise wireless communications.
![]()
![]()
They recently co-authored a paper with researchers from Luxembourg, the UK and France (“Performance Evaluation of Neuromorphic Hardware for Onboard Satellite Communication Applications”), in which they had implemented SNNs on Loihi 2 - it was briefly touched on here on TSE the other day:
https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-409255
An interesting collaboration between these three partner universities - King's, Imperial and UCL - is the London Centre for Nanotechnology (LCN), “a UK-based multidisciplinary enterprise operating at the forefront of science and technology. Our purpose is to solve global problems in information processing, healthcare, energy and the environment through the application of nanoscience and nanotechnology. Founded in 2003, the LCN began as a joint venture between University College London and Imperial College London, based at the Bloomsbury and South Kensington sites; from 2018 King's College London joined the collaboration from its base on The Strand.”
By the way, Perplexity AI also failed to mention Brunel University London as yet another institution being involved in neuromorphic research in the British capital.
Really? Could you please provide us with some evidence to back up your claim?
The two researchers from Imperial College listed above are from the Department of Physics, where they do research on materials for neuromorphic computing and magnetism, but they are not working with neuromorphic chips such as Loihi. So who at Imperial College is, then?
![]()
Twisted magnets make brain-inspired computing more adaptable | Imperial News | Imperial College London
A form of brain-inspired computing that exploits the intrinsic physical properties of a material to reduce energy use is now closer to reality.www.imperial.ac.uk
By the way, I’d assume our mystery employer is a small start-up in stealth mode with specific products in mind, not a university.
When we see the next Top 20 listSpot on.
When do we see the next Top 20 list?Hey Motty...The only thing I think of with High traded volumes and no change in sp is very controlled accumulation! (Very interested party!!)..Maybe buy price set at around 36c...then when it goes to 37/38c they sell a small amount back at 34/35c to keep it flat!?
My thoughts only mate ...hope all is well![]()
This is the most recent from end of Jan 2024..... Next one maybe a couple of months away!?When we see the next Top 20 list
When do we see the next Top 20 list?
.
COPY and PASTE ON TO YOUTUBE
This is me trying to put a bet on, I was soooo embarrassed when a friend played it back to me.
Be warned a lot of swearing.
I had a terrible day this day, and this just top it off, everybody asks me if the horse won.
I have no idea, but probably did, known the day I had.![]()
This is one of my all time favourites.....I'm crying that is sooo funny..![]()