So it’s not going to be the GR765, then, but a completely new SoC, the GR801.
As predicted, Jörg Conradt’s lab at KTH Stockholm will be collaborating:
He better practice spelling and saying “Akida” correctly ASAP!
https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-449511
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Sandi Habinc |
The link does not lead to this paper and I cannot find it there. Can you please help.
Hi CHIPS,
FYI: it’s the same paper I had already posted about on Wednesday:
https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-456495
You may want to try the link I had shared then (a slightly different one)
although the www.arxiv.org link @Fullmoonfever provided actually works fine for me.
Alternatively, you’ll find screenshots of the whole paper in my post.
Schönes Wochenende
Frangipani
Mitch Stevison, CEO of Frontgrade Technologies (the US parent company of Sweden-based Frontgrade Gaisler) is very much looking forward to attending the upcoming 40th Space Symposium (https://www.spacesymposium.org/) in Colorado Springs (April 7-10), organised by the Space Foundation (https://www.spacefoundation.org/).
In an interview uploaded to YouTube two days ago (my transcription is lightly edited for easier readability, eg. without filler words such as “erm”, “you know”, word repetitions etc), Mitch Stevison refers to the annual Space Symposium as “our biggest show of the year” and “the space ecosystem’s most meaningful cong [gets interrupted by the interviewer]”.
Asked about what he is most excited to see, he replies “I am always one that wants to listen to what the operational leaders are saying”, adding that the defence sector still makes up two thirds of Frontgrade Technologies’ business.
Relating to national security, Stevison tells the podcast episode’s listeners that “I’m always most interested in what is on the mind as the priorities from those leaders, from government that will speak at the conference. And then there’s always things that you just walk around and you see both from a competitive standpoint and from a technology standpoint that is interesting. Because the other thing we haven’t talked about here today is: partnership is key in whatever happens in the future of space. No one company is gonna be the solution set that is going to drive us to be what we need to be in space with respect to national security or even our commercial capabilities that every part of the ecosystem today demands that space is there at every moment of every day, whether it’s communications or GPS or anything else of that nature.”
From the perspective of the Frontgrade CEO, the upcoming Space Symposium is simply THE place to be: “There is nowhere else that we go, that I can literally touch every customer we have in a matter of two or three days. Everybody is there. You know, we support the European Space Agency from our facility in Sweden. They are a great partner for us in developing capabilities that we couldn’t develop ourselves. They’re gonna be there, so the Director of the European Space Agency. You’ll see leaders from NASA.”
He then shares that he was initially a little concerned about some of the Trump administration’s governmental directives about not travelling that could potentially result in fewer government officials showing up this year, but he recently talked to Space Foundation’s CEO Heather Pringle (a retired US Air Force major general who last served as the Commander of the AFLR) who reassured him that “the Space Operations Command had made this mission [attending Space Symposium 2025] essential for their employees (https://www.spoc.spaceforce.mil/About-Us/About-Space-Operations-Command) and gave him “very high confidence that this would be one of the most well-attended Space Symposiums ever” despite those recent governmental directives.
Listen from 29:54 min
Excellent interview.
Mitch Stevison | Frontgrade
Dr. J. Mitch Stevison serves as President and Chief Executive Officer of Frontgrade Technologies. In this role, Mitch leads the company with the assistance of the senior leadership team.www.frontgrade.com
I'm tipping Trump and his mates will make squillions from this market situation that he has created. Hope he enjoyed his round of golf today.
Nancy Pelosi on tariffs, in 1996, before she turned into the lizard woman..
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(I'm pretty sure
short term pain, long term gainI'm tipping Trump and his mates will make squillions from this market situation that he has created. Hope he enjoyed his round of golf today.
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On the Importance of Talent and Expertise in Innovation When developing… | Olivier Coenen
On the Importance of Talent and Expertise in Innovation When developing pioneering technologies, intellectual property (IP) often appears as a clear path toward innovation and competitive advantage. At my previous startup, Qelzal Corporation, our VC investors recognized the potential of our...www.linkedin.com
Interesting.Another video clip from our booth at Embedded World 2025, slightly different from the one already posted last month:
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#edgeimpulse #edgeai #edgeaireport #embeddedworld | Wevolver
BrainChip sponsors the 2025 State of Edge AI Technology report, a comprehensive guide on the latest trends, developments, and insights in edge AI. Here, Alf Kuchenbuch, VP of Sales, and Dr. M Anthony Lewis, CTO of BrainChip , showed a glimpse of the many capabilities of Akida 2.0. Get the...www.linkedin.com
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„[Our Generation 2 IP] It’s all implemented in our box that we have here. It’s running on an FPGA, and so our customers can actually try it out in reality here, in real hardware, and the next step may or may not be to put this into a chip.”
Good eye @MDhereInteresting.
And the camera appears to be the Prophesee camera propped on top of the box.
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Yeah..?