BRN Discussion Ongoing

The sell side looking very skinny 🤪
 
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MegaportX

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FF appears to be off duty today. Hope he's enjoying the sunny spring weather.
 
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yogi

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Damn have to dream for another day :p
:p:ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:
 
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Diogenese

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Last week there was a seminar discussing the way forward for the Australian semicondutor industry.




Dr Cathy Foley on turning the lucky country into a smart nation

28 Oct 2024 - Australia's Chief Scientist, Dr Cathy Foley, AO PSM, presents at the Semiconductor Australia 2024 conference. She highlights Australia’s strengths in tech development and outlines a vision for a sustainable economy led by innovation.

  • Insights from Dr Foley's research, reflecting on early challenges in semiconductor development and how they influenced her career.
  • The rapid evolution of technology, and Australia's potential to lead in advanced manufacturing, particularly in the digital and quantum sectors. Dr Foley notes the importance of semiconductors, quantum tech and photonics in future-proofing the economy.
  • The need to diversify away from reliance on fossil fuels and primary materials to a more circular economy driven by innovation and sustainability.
  • Australia’s existing strengths in research and development, and key achievements in digital and quantum technologies.
  • Government initiatives and funding — such as the National Reconstruction Fund — are critical drivers for fostering innovation and supporting high-tech industries.
  • The importance of a national strategy that includes collaboration between states, territories and industry to establish a strong and sustainable technology sector.

The seminar was organized by BluGlass who have developed a "low" temperature method for plasma chemical vapour deposition.

The BluGlass CeO's comments on the fact that only 0.03% of ASX companies are in the semiconductor sector are something we should keep in mind, not that it is a surprise to us, but it shows the small pool of investors we can expect to attract. We are very much a niche on the ASX. perhaps we should try a reverse of the dot.com boom and call ourselves BrainChip Mining.

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AARONASX

Holding onto what I've got
Google might be one we need to watch a little closer?


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rayzor

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So Melbourne Cup tomorrow.
Do I go Okita Soushi (IRE) ( horse) or Warp Speed ( Akira Sugawara) Jockey
 
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Frangipani

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Two 4th year B.Sc. students at Cal Poly, SLO - Kayla Del Rosario and Gibson Puckett - worked on their summer intern project, which they titled “Developing a CubeSat Payload Interface Board for Neuromorphic Processing and Distributed Computing”, at the NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, CA with Axient, a company headquartered in Huntsville, AL that describes itself as a “key player in the defense, aerospace and cyberspace markets.” (https://axientcorp.com/about-us/).
According to his LinkedIn profile, Gibson Puckett has been an intern with Axient since June 2023.

One of the presentation slides of an August talk about their joint summer intern project (the platform they developed is “intended for weather balloon suborbital testing and LEO technology demonstration”), shows the Akida PCIe Board as an example for a neuromorphic co-processor:


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Slade

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Two 4th year B.Sc. students at Cal Poly, SLO - Kayla Del Rosario and Gibson Puckett - worked on their summer intern project, which they titled “Developing a CubeSat Payload Interface Board for Neuromorphic Processing and Distributed Computing”, at the NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, CA with Axient, a company headquartered in Huntsville, AL that describes itself as a “key player in the defense, aerospace and cyberspace markets.” (https://axientcorp.com/about-us/).
According to his LinkedIn profile, Gibson Puckett has been an intern with Axient since June 2023.

One of the presentation slides of an August talk about their joint summer intern project (the platform they developed is “intended for weather balloon suborbital testing and LEO technology demonstration”), shows the Akida PCIe Board as an example for a neuromorphic co-processor:


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Nice. But perhaps next time just keep it to one sentence and a link.
 
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CHIPS

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Nice. But perhaps next time just keep it to one sentence and a link.

That's not nice of YOU! If you do not want to read long posts, ignore them and scroll on. I can't remember having seen you thanking somebody for the work put into such investigation.
 
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Frangipani

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Nice. But perhaps next time just keep it to one sentence and a link.

The way I present my research is none of your business. Just scroll past my posts or put me on ignore if you don't want to read it.
 
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JoMo68

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Guzzi62

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Two 4th year B.Sc. students at Cal Poly, SLO - Kayla Del Rosario and Gibson Puckett - worked on their summer intern project, which they titled “Developing a CubeSat Payload Interface Board for Neuromorphic Processing and Distributed Computing”, at the NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, CA with Axient, a company headquartered in Huntsville, AL that describes itself as a “key player in the defense, aerospace and cyberspace markets.” (https://axientcorp.com/about-us/).
According to his LinkedIn profile, Gibson Puckett has been an intern with Axient since June 2023.

One of the presentation slides of an August talk about their joint summer intern project (the platform they developed is “intended for weather balloon suborbital testing and LEO technology demonstration”), shows the Akida PCIe Board as an example for a neuromorphic co-processor:


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Excellent, thank you.
 
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Slade

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That's not nice of YOU! If you do not want to read long posts, ignore them and scroll on. I can't remember having seen you thanking somebody for the work put into such investigation.
You must be new here.
 
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Aaron

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Slade

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The way I present my research is none of your business. Just scroll past my posts or put me on ignore if you don't want to read it.
I’m only offering advice that I think would improve the site.
 
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Slade

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Guzzi62

Regular
Sep 30, 2024
In his TEDx talk "Energy-efficient Neuromorphic Computing", Jörg Conradt delves into the intriguing question of how our brains process information, i.e., how we interpret what we see, hear, smell, and touch, and how these processes differ from how computers operate today. Jörg Conradt, an Associate Professor in the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at KTH, is a leading researcher in neuro-inspired computation and systems. With a PhD from ETH Zurich, Jörg is deeply fascinated with how brains process sensor information and form a consolidated understanding of the world around us. Before KTH, he was a Junior Professor at Technische Universität München, where he co-founded the Elite Master Program in NeuroEngineering. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community.

 
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uiux

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Nice. But perhaps next time just keep it to one sentence and a link.


@Frangipani maybe also take out all of the big words for the simpletons to keep up
 
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