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From biology to business: Neuromorphic computing pathways to intelligent innovation​

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From biology to business: Neuromorphic computing pathways to intelligent innovation

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From algorithms to AI: Promise, power, and the pressing challenges ahead
Large scale datasets and information processing requirements, within complex environments, are continuously reaching unprecedented levels of sophistication, especially in the advent of artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies, pushing the boundaries of fierce competition for available, scalable and adaptable computing resources.

The magnitude of convoluted problems and the complexity of workloads require novel computing approaches that can perform multiplex computational tasks in a speedy, effective, interoperable, cost-effective and energy-efficient manner, along with, being resilient against cyber threats and attacks. At the same time, the wide variety of these workloads is driving the need for multiple compute options that are able to handle such kind of data-intensive and high-performance operations.

Global data centre infrastructure (excluding IT hardware) capital expenditures are expected to exceed $1.7 trillion by 2030. Moreover, $1 trillion worth of data centres would need to be built in the next several years to support the deployment of generative AI capabilities. Data centres and transmission networks are deemed as responsible for the 1% of global energy-related greenhouse gases. The electricity consumed by data centres globally can more than double by 2026 to more than 1,000 TWhs. Continuous advancements in artificial intelligence will result in data centres end up using 4.5% of globally-generated energy by 2030. Since 2017, global electricity usage by data centres has grown by around 12% annually, more than four times the rate of overall electricity consumption. This new reality projects a data and computational resources tetralemma that is branched across four crucial elements: decarbonisation, affordability, accessibility, and reliability.

Groundbreaking innovations in the design of machines and algorithms have opened new doors for integrating fundamental principles of biology, humanities, neuroscience, and cognitive science, towards the development of human-like artificial intelligence.


When computers think like neurons: The rise of neuromorphic technology

Neuromorphic computing, as an emerging computing engineering concept, receives inspiration from biology and more specifically from the architecture and functioning of the complexity of the biological brain. The human brain, with less than 20 Watts of power consumption and approximately 1000 trillion operations per second, is and remains the most complex, efficient and powerful known structure within our world. The human brain magically outperforms state-of-the art supercomputers in terms of energy and volume, making it a more versatile, a more energy-efficient and a more adaptable information processor. By being positioned in the biology and neuroscience, mathematics, and physics, computer science and electronic engineering nexus, neuromorphic computing envisions to lead a new and exciting chapter in computational growth, beyond the physical limitations of Moore’s Law, the observation, made by Gordon Moore in 1965. According to Moore’s Law, the number of transistors on an integrated circuit (and thus computing power) tends to double approximately every two years, while the cost per transistor decreases. This trend has driven rapid growth in computing performance, however it has also created a major challenge: keeping up requires making transistors smaller and more complex, which is becoming harder, more expensive, and closer to physical limits.

Neuromorphic computing endeavours to emulate the human brain's processing capabilities. By mimicking the structure and operation of biological neural networks, neuromorphic computing aims at replicating the human brain’s, efficiency, adaptability, synaptic plasticity, and learning capabilities, with calculations being performed directly in the memory.

Neuromorphic computing systems use electronic circuits to simulate neurons and synapses, enabling them to process information in ways that are fundamentally different from traditional computers. This parallel processing of data ensures enhanced performance and energy efficiency.

This technological advancement of the next generation of computing becomes crucial because it also enriches our understanding of the brain and cognition, while at the same time it allows for further innovations towards the development of ultra-low power cognitive computing systems. In the future, low-power devices (e.g. smartphones, IoT sensors) will highly likely be able to run powerful AI models, enabling on-the-edge-computing, while gradually reducing current dependencies on cloud resources.

Neuromorphic computing systems can learn from their environment, adapt to changes, and use event-driven processing, improving their performance over time through mechanisms such as synaptic plasticity. The ability to learn and adapt, results in the development of more sophisticated, capable, adaptive and contextual artificial intelligence systems with significant advancements in pattern recognition, autonomous decision making and real-time processing of various events, especially when conditions become unpredictable or variable.


When brains meet machines: How neuromorphic computing could reshape industries

As an emerging technology, neuromorphic computing is considered as a critical enabler within potential business applications and use cases across various industries. In the era of artificial intelligence and machine learning, neuromorphic computing can contribute to optimal performance of deep learning tasks, allowing for the deployment of computer vision and sophisticated natural language processing capabilities. Such kind of tasks require the processing of vast amounts of data at high speeds and the analysis of complex data in real-time for more informed decision making.

Within the field of financial services and capital markets, indicative use cases of neuromorphic include large and complex financial data analysis and processing, fraud detection (neuromorphic-based anomaly detection systems for transaction patterns, hidden correlations and inconsistencies and customer data analysis), risk assessment and evaluation (enhanced by a combination of neuromorphic computing and machine learning for better and accurate precision), optimisation of trading methodologies (via potential synergies between intelligent neuromorphic computing and advanced machine learning algorithms) especially in times of financial market volatility, real-time trading decision-making and anomaly detection in markets, all contributing to financial security and encouraging of sustainable practices. Within financial services and capital markets, an integration of intelligent neuromorphic computing capabilities with machine learning algorithms can potentially lead to robust systems for processing and analysing complex and vast patterns in data, ensuring enhanced precision, scalability, delivery of highly personalized services (e.g. investment advice, loan products, financial planning) and flexibility of financial applications, towards achieving customer satisfaction and loyalty.

Other indicative neuromorphic computing applications include smart vision sensors, speech and image processing, myoelectric prosthetics limbs and control, wearable healthcare systems and computational electronic skin (e-skin), gesture control applications (smart home devices, offices, factories), autonomous and near-human touch sensitive robots, self-driving vehicles and drones.

All these applications showcase that machines require greater adaptability to perform complex tasks by processing sensor information in real-time and making autonomous decisions by continuously learning from their environments. This means that in the future users will be able to interact with computers in more human-like, immersive virtual and augmented reality ways.


Shaping the future: Why business leaders need to pay attention to neuromorphic computing

Discussing neuromorphic computing in business context, goes beyond how computers are actually being designed and used. It is really all about acknowledging and understanding that our ongoing relationship with technology is reshaped and redefined, especially in light of the energy-related and physical limitations posed by traditional computing technologies.

Business leaders need to start thinking strategically in terms of understanding the applications and the anticipated transformative impact of neuromorphic computing by appreciating these upcoming changes, the opportunities for multidisciplinary innovation, the iterative small-scale experimentations and the mobilisation of strategic preparedness and investments. Emerging applications, such as brain-machine interfaces, bioinformatics and neuromorphic chips in IoT devices, pave the way towards a new era of computational innovations.

Businesses need to ensure that they will be fit-for-purpose in terms of maintaining a transient advantage within the future world of computing, along with, reducing their environmental footprints in alignment to their sustainability goals and decarbonisation/net-zero endeavours.

It is critical for business leaders to stay informed about these technological advancements, invest in dedicated neuromorphic computing R&D and consider strategic partnerships with tech companies, neuromorphic chip developers (e.g. Loihi by Intel Lab, TrueNorth by IBM, Akida by BrainChip), universities and research institutions, in order to access cutting-edge neuromorphic computing capabilities, hardware, algorithms and talent.

Boards of directors need to start asking the right questions and be prepared to lead the way as the technology matures, by thinking and answering important ethical, societal, economic, and governance questions, especially in relation to data governance, privacy concerns (gathering, storing and processing private information) and mitigation of bias (ensuring accuracy of data analysis, explainability of outcomes/recommendations and detection of bias in machine learning algorithms and data used for training purposes).

Neuromorphic computing allows us to get a glimpse into the future where machines can think and learn in ways that are more human-like compared to traditional computers, offering challenging but promising avenues towards developing the next generation of intelligent large-scale, accessible, reliable, and energy-efficient computing systems.

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Dimitrios Salampasis
Dimitrios Salampasis
Assoc. Professor, Emerging Technologies & FinTech
Swinburne University of Technology
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Melbourne
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Guzzi62

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Slightly off-topic, but I found the video very interesting and thought some here might as well.

How to make a TSMC fab in Arizona.

They can "only" make 4&5nm chips there, 2nm is reserved for Taiwan for likely mostly geopolitical reasons.

 
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stockduck

Regular
Is our Vice President of Sales connected to verizon? I don`t get it...because of some email adresses.

"https: //rocketreach.co/steve-thorne-email_82456835"

Could be nothing.
 
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7für7

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Is our Vice President of Sales connected to verizon? I don`t get it...because of some email adresses.

"https: //rocketreach.co/steve-thorne-email_82456835"

Could be nothing.
Most likely that’s just a private @verizon.net email address. In the US many people use Verizon, Comcast, AT&T etc. as their personal providers …RocketReach often pulls those into its listings. Officially, Steve Thorne is VP of Sales at BrainChip, and there’s no evidence of any business link to Verizon. I also couldn’t find any hint on LinkedIn
 
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As we were up 7% yesterday I’m guessing we will drop 5% today 😂
 
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AARONASX

Holding onto what I've got
Slightly off-topic, but I found the video very interesting and thought some here might as well.

How to make a TSMC fab in Arizona.

They can "only" make 4&5nm chips there, 2nm is reserved for Taiwan for likely mostly geopolitical reasons.


you'll enjoy this one also

 
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7für7

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Labsy

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So my baseless, uneducated guess for the current price hike is that it is either a manipulated pump to possibly 24 cents or some inside knowledge on Mercedes release... In which case it will hit 3 dollars. Let's see what it looks like this time next week. Have a good weekend chippers.
 
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7für7

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So my baseless, uneducated guess for the current price hike is that it is either a manipulated pump to possibly 24 cents or some inside knowledge on Mercedes release... In which case it will hit 3 dollars. Let's see what it looks like this time next week. Have a good weekend chippers.
Not sure about that… looks more like going back to 20,5… 21 …

WOHOOOOOOO

Rollercoaster Spdbw GIF by SPD Landtagsfraktion Baden-Württemberg
 
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MDhere

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Not sure about that… looks more like going back to 20,5… 21 …

WOHOOOOOOO

Rollercoaster Spdbw GIF by SPD Landtagsfraktion Baden-Württemberg
I am really not sure how you get that assumption when there are substantial buys probably covering for the weekend in lead up to whatever is around the corner. But it may be one of your jokes which I never quite get.. I am gathering it is one of those.
 
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7für7

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Just as a closing note… I’ve often said that I see all the other partnerships as more promising than always clinging to Mercedes – at least in the long run. And the back-and-forth in the comments from Mercedes’ side… just say no, or ‘not planned at the moment,’ or whatever, instead of making a mystery out of it. Totally overblown in my opinion. DYOR 🙌
 
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7für7

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I am really not sure how you get that assumption when there are substantial buys probably covering for the weekend in lead up to whatever is around the corner. But it may be one of your jokes which I never quite get.. I am gathering it is one of those.
Don’t take everything so serious…I don’t have insight into the ordebooks.. I just see when it goes down to 21,8… that’s all… it’s a running gag meanwhile…

Edit 21.5 now.. 🤷🏻‍♂️ as I said I just see the current movement and not the buy orders ..

It’s interesting that my factual posts are always ignored and hardly noticed, and then later someone—probably one of those who ignore me—reposts it as their own and suddenly gets 2,000 likes. Doesn’t bother me… I’m fine with the few people who understand my humor and at least acknowledge my factual posts. What annoys me is when someone immediately comments on my nonsense fun posts out of boredom, while staying completely silent on my serious ones. If you keep out of my factual posts, then please stay out of my nonsense posts as well. Thanks.
 
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So my baseless, uneducated guess for the current price hike is that it is either a manipulated pump to possibly 24 cents or some inside knowledge on Mercedes release... In which case it will hit 3 dollars. Let's see what it looks like this time next week. Have a good weekend chippers.
Maybe this is where Sean comes out with an IP license agreement worth $9 million 🙏
 
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I just heard that someone I’ve had on ignore for years wrote an essay about me. Thank you.
An essay. That’s too much effort for your contribution. I heard it was a simple limerick. Here it is in case you missed it.

There was once an odd fellow named Slade.

Put a bet on BRN and thought he would get paid.

And the end of the race, it couldn’t even manage third place.

For now it is Tooheys for poor Slade. Not even enough Thai Baht left to get laid.
 
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MDhere

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An essay. That’s too much effort for your contribution. I heard it was a simple limerick. Here it is in case you missed it.

There was once an odd fellow named Slade.

Put a bet on BRN and thought he would get paid.

And the end of the race, it couldn’t even manage third place.

For now it is Tooheys for poor Slade. Not even enough Thai Baht left to get laid.
I think Slade has enough for a few Singha beers though :)
 
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Not sure about that… looks more like going back to 20,5… 21 …

WOHOOOOOOO

Rollercoaster Spdbw GIF by SPD Landtagsfraktion Baden-Württemberg


There's always cash term deposits.
 
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Appears new job advertised last couple of days.


Senior Product Manager​

BrainChip Laguna Hills, CA
2 days ago 76 applicants​


We are seeking a technically proficient Senior Product Manager to lead the evolution of BrainChip’s Akida™ platform – our ultra-low power, event-based neuromorphic processor IP. This role is not about marketing collateral; it’s about shaping the future of edge AI with real product leadership. You will drive end-to-end product lifecycle execution, from early-stage discovery and requirements definition to cross-functional delivery and iterative refinement.



The ideal candidate has a deep technical background (e.g., in semiconductors, edge computing, or embedded AI), but is equally comfortable translating complex ideas into product plans, business cases, and discussions with non-technical stakeholders.



This is a hybrid role and is required in our Laguna Hills, CA office 3 days a week.



Key Responsibilities

  • Own the product lifecycle from concept through end-of-life for a portfolio that includes:
  • AI IP cores
  • Neuromorphic model libraries
  • Development kits
  • Edge AI hardware systems (SoCs, silicon, and evaluation boards)
  • Author detailed and technically sound Product Requirement Documents (PRDs) to drive software, silicon, and model development roadmaps.
  • Partner with engineering using Agile practices to scope, prioritize, and deliver neural model features, hardware improvements, and developer tooling.
  • Develop strong market and technical perspectives to guide trade-off decisions in architecture, performance, and time-to-market.
  • Create, maintain, and refine business cases that span technical viability, market readiness, financial return, and ecosystem integration.
  • Collaborate cross-functionally with engineering, business development, architecture, and executive leadership to ensure product alignment and delivery.
  • Support strategic product planning by engaging in industry standards efforts, customer conversations, and competitive landscape analysis.
  • Contribute to the ongoing expansion of BrainChip’s future product pipeline with a balance of technical rigor and market insight.


Required Qualifications

Education:


  • Bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, or related technical discipline
  • MBA or Master’s in Management/Technology preferred


Experience:

  • 5–10 years in product management or technical product leadership in semiconductors, embedded AI, or edge computing
  • Proven experience writing technical PRDs and collaborating deeply with hardware/software engineering teams
  • Solid understanding of edge AI/ML infrastructure, AI inference workloads, IP blocks, and model deployment pipelines
  • Familiarity with neuromorphic computing or event-based processing is a strong plus
  • Experience working with developer ecosystems, SDKs, and AI model optimization tools (e.g., TensorFlow, PyTorch, MetaTF)


Skills & Attributes

  • Highly technical yet an excellent communicator with both engineers and executives
  • Strategic thinker with a bias for execution
  • Proficient in Agile and product development workflows
  • Skilled in market discovery, competitive analysis, and creating compelling value propositions
  • Comfortable navigating ambiguity and shaping product strategy in a fast-paced, innovation-driven environment
  • Driven by curiosity, resilience, and the ability to learn on the fly


We are not looking for a generalist product marketer. We need a technical product strategist, a doer and thinker who wants to be part of something fundamentally new and transformative.



Apply now to help define the next generation of intelligent computing.
 
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Senior product manager 3 days a week ?. I hope there are other's to share the work load
 
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FF.

Yes similar to what DeGirum is offering only they use the VVDN Edge Box which runs 2 x AKD1000 whereas AKIDA Cloud runs AKIDA 2.0.

In essence Brainchip with DeGirum are able to offer a vast number of IP options commencing with 1 node of AKD 1000 up to 160 nodes at DeGirum and 1 node of AKIDA 2.0 up to 256 nodes (at least) in the Brainchip AKIDA Cloud.

Those who harp on about what product does Brainchip have for sale well with DeGirum and AKIDA Cloud they now have more than 416 AKIDA technology IP options available for testing and purchase.
 
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