BRN Discussion Ongoing

Galaxycar

Regular
This is panning out exactly how I thought it would, shorts are not being closed on market the sales of shares are within the daily normal range, retail are not selling they are used to this bullshit. Now this is and will play out exactly the same as last time guess what, YOU GUESSED IT, Our extemed Director and management have sold all us retail investors out again just like last time.
Where did the 30 million of share go to sophisticated investors. Who are the sophisticated investors the Shorters, the manipulators the ones who have driven the price down for the last three years. Has our directors and management acted in the shareholders interests FUCK NO. the shorters know that retail won’t sell are holding tight. You can see that by the share turnover of the last two days. Now you all watch the shorts close the arvo or next day that these new 30 million dollars worth are issued. Close they will at least 80% of them. Then ask yourself do I really want these directors and CEO in charge of this company that has just screwed every retail investor that holds shares. FUCK NO every director that signed off on this deal should and will be voted against in the next AGM. If you don’t you only have yourself to blame. I know a lot of you have been scratching your heads and even the happy clappers like the Pom is saying WTF IS HAPPENING. I have been saying this was gunna happen for the last three years, now watch it happen fools
 
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Frangipani

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Care to take your mind off the cap raise for a moment and read about a capstone project instead?

Raytheon has been sponsoring an annual engineering contest between universities - held across 4 different regions since 2023/2024* - called the RTX Autonomous Vehicle Competition (AVC).
* for the first couple of years it was held in the Texas Region only

While the competition rules change every year, the underlying concept remains the same: multi-disciplinary student teams are challenged to construct two autonomous vehicles each on a predefined budget (which was US$ 5000 during the last round). Either two aerial ones (UAVs) or both an aerial (UAV) and a ground one (UGV) that will need to communicate with each other and complete their tasks modelled on real world-challenges (eg a search and rescue mission) without any human intervention. This requires collaboration between students across different uni departments such as Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Electrical and Computer Engineering, as well as Computer Science. So team effort over the duration of roughly a year is a must. As is project management. For many of those students, participation in the AVC is actually their Senior Capstone Project.

For competition sponsor Raytheon, collaborating with universities around their company’s major hubs is a great way to find potential new employees. Multiple Raytheon staff are mentoring the competing teams of students (most of whom are in their senior year) throughout the project’s duration. Take Sylvia Traxler, for example, whom you may remember as a visitor to the BrainChip CES 2025 suite alongside two of her colleagues (it was the BrainChip LinkedIn post with their group photo that got deleted shortly after posting). An alumni of the University of South Florida (she is currently also pursuing a Masters in Artificial Intelligence at The University of Texas at Austin), she assisted her alma mater’s 2024/2025 student team as a mentor and saw them win 1st place at the East Coast AVC in April.



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California-based James Cooper is another example of a Raytheon AVC university mentor, in his case assisting California State University Long Beach:

https://www.linkedin.com/posts/mobtek_2025-raytheon-west-coast-autonomous-vehicle-activity-7373316123850657792-MV4b

1762848291794.png



The 2023/2024 Raytheon AVC was basically a game of tag, in which the Unmanned Aerial Vehicles had to detect and track a target - namely their rivals’ ground vehicles - and deliver a water blast of 20 ml to activate a moisture sensor on the competing universities’ ground vehicles, while avoiding to shower their own UGV.

All ground vehicles had ArUco* markers on top, which helped the drones’ computer vision systems to identify them correctly.
* https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/computer-vision/detecting-aruco-markers-with-opencv-and-python-1/


The 2024/25 Raytheon AVC (“Mission Full Send!”) had student teams imagine a scenario of delivering aid to an injured soldier on a battlefield, which required them to first deploy a Scout UAV mapping an area to search for the wounded person and relay the coordinates of the detected landing zone - denoted by a specific ArUco marker - directly to the other UAV resp. UGV, which was then required to deliver a first aid kit to the specified area. All done autonomously without a human in the loop.
(cf. https://www.gmu.edu/news/2025-05/dr...-raytheon-autonomous-vehicle-competition-2025)

Here is a video about the 2025 West Coast finals that took place in June.



IMG_3429.jpeg



It appears another team from California Polytechnic (Cal Poly) State University San Luis Obispo has been participating in the latest Raytheon AVC challenge that seems to have been dubbed "Operation Touchdown", and that one member of the current student team, Computer Engineering Senior Gianni Schiappa (who was an Operations Systems intern with Raytheon this summer) used Akida for the fully autonomous drone system he developed:


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From what Gianni Schiappa writes on LinkedIn, it almost sounds as if the “Raytheon Autonomous Drone and Rover” project were already done and dusted, although Raytheon’s AVC is conceptualised as a two semester-project, culminating in an intermural competition in (Northern hemisphere) spring. Unfortunately, he did not specify a time frame for the project. All I can say is that he was not part of the Cal Poly team that competed in the 2024/2025 AVC West Coast finals in June of this year (and neither was Akida used in their UVA, see https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1933&context=mesp).

However, the accompanying photo he posted - a screenshot taken less than a month ago, possibly a captured still image of a video - appears to depict a competition, not just training. Maybe some fall semester qualifying contest?
Or is it a recent screenshot of a much older photo or video?

Anyway, nice to see Akida being used in more and more university student projects these days. After all, those young engineers will be tomorrow’s workforce and will already have gained first-hand experience in implementing neuromorphic technology by the time they enter the job market as graduates.

But it’s now up to our management to sign deals and make meaningful revenue to enable those future researchers to continue to work with our products in the years to come.
 
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Frangipani

Top 20

View attachment 92924

Follow-up post by Jerry Kuo with another video that is better in showing what the BrainChip booth looks like:


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7für7

Top 20

View attachment 92933

They push and push the boundaries…
Let’s see when the boundaries push back…
karate push GIF
 
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manny100

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  • Cathie Wood says AI in healthcare could deliver massive returns.
  • The investor known for bold bets on disruptive tech called the sector "the sleeper."
  • "It's the most inefficiently priced part of the market," Wood said.
"Wood said that five major technologies — AI, robotics, energy storage, blockchain, and genomics — are each entering their steep growth phase. When one advances, it accelerates the others."
"Now we think it is truly disruptive innovation's time to shine in the market," she added."
 
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Frangipani

Top 20

37BAC063-5D10-48D8-8628-52EE56FB1D14.jpeg
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CA85100C-55A1-498F-824C-D1022CF1FAEA.jpeg
 
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Care to take your mind off the cap raise for a moment and read about a capstone project instead?

Raytheon has been sponsoring an annual engineering contest between universities - held across 4 different regions since 2023/2024* - called the RTX Autonomous Vehicle Competition (AVC).
* for the first couple of years it was held in the Texas Region only

While the competition rules change every year, the underlying concept remains the same: multi-disciplinary student teams are challenged to construct two autonomous vehicles each on a predefined budget (which was US$ 5000 during the last round). Either two aerial ones (UAVs) or both an aerial (UAV) and a ground one (UGV) that will need to communicate with each other and complete their tasks modelled on real world-challenges (eg a search and rescue mission) without any human intervention. This requires collaboration between students across different uni departments such as Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Electrical and Computer Engineering, as well as Computer Science. So team effort over the duration of roughly a year is a must. As is project management. For many of those students, participation in the AVC is actually their Senior Capstone Project.

For competition sponsor Raytheon, collaborating with universities around their company’s major hubs is a great way to find potential new employees. Multiple Raytheon staff are mentoring the competing teams of students (most of whom are in their senior year) throughout the project’s duration. Take Sylvia Traxler, for example, whom you may remember as a visitor to the BrainChip CES 2025 suite alongside two of her colleagues (it was the BrainChip LinkedIn post with their group photo that got deleted shortly after posting). An alumni of the University of South Florida (she is currently also pursuing a Masters in Artificial Intelligence at The University of Texas at Austin), she assisted her alma mater’s 2024/2025 student team as a mentor and saw them win 1st place at the East Coast AVC in April.



View attachment 92925


California-based James Cooper is another example of a Raytheon AVC university mentor, in his case assisting California State University Long Beach:

https://www.linkedin.com/posts/mobtek_2025-raytheon-west-coast-autonomous-vehicle-activity-7373316123850657792-MV4b

View attachment 92926


The 2023/2024 Raytheon AVC was basically a game of tag, in which the Unmanned Aerial Vehicles had to detect and track a target - namely their rivals’ ground vehicles - and deliver a water blast of 20 ml to activate a moisture sensor on the competing universities’ ground vehicles, while avoiding to shower their own UGV.

All ground vehicles had ArUco* markers on top, which helped the drones’ computer vision systems to identify them correctly.
* https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/computer-vision/detecting-aruco-markers-with-opencv-and-python-1/


The 2024/25 Raytheon AVC (“Mission Full Send!”) had student teams imagine a scenario of delivering aid to an injured soldier on a battlefield, which required them to first deploy a Scout UAV mapping an area to search for the wounded person and relay the coordinates of the detected landing zone - denoted by a specific ArUco marker - directly to the other UAV resp. UGV, which was then required to deliver a first aid kit to the specified area. All done autonomously without a human in the loop.
(cf. https://www.gmu.edu/news/2025-05/dr...-raytheon-autonomous-vehicle-competition-2025)

Here is a video about the 2025 West Coast finals that took place in June.



View attachment 92928


It appears another team from California Polytechnic (Cal Poly) State University San Luis Obispo has been participating in the latest Raytheon AVC challenge that seems to have been dubbed "Operation Touchdown", and that one member of the current student team, Computer Engineering Senior Gianni Schiappa (who was an Operations Systems intern with Raytheon this summer) used Akida for the fully autonomous drone system he developed:


View attachment 92927


View attachment 92929


View attachment 92930



View attachment 92931



From what Gianni Schiappa writes on LinkedIn, it almost sounds as if the “Raytheon Autonomous Drone and Rover” project were already done and dusted, although Raytheon’s AVC is conceptualised as a two semester-project, culminating in an intermural competition in (Northern hemisphere) spring. Unfortunately, he did not specify a time frame for the project. All I can say is that he was not part of the Cal Poly team that competed in the 2024/2025 AVC West Coast finals in June of this year (and neither was Akida used in their UVA, see https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1933&context=mesp).

However, the accompanying photo he posted - a screenshot taken less than a month ago, possibly a captured still image of a video - appears to depict a competition, not just training. Maybe some fall semester qualifying contest?
Or is it a recent screenshot of a much older photo or video?

Anyway, nice to see Akida being used in more and more university student projects these days. After all, those young engineers will be tomorrow’s workforce and will already have gained first-hand experience in implementing neuromorphic technology by the time they enter the job market as graduates.

But it’s now up to our management to sign deals and make meaningful revenue to enable those future researchers to continue to work with our products in the years to come.


This is amazing!!!!!!! Thank you for bringing this good news to our attention!!!
 
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The Pope

Regular
This is panning out exactly how I thought it would, shorts are not being closed on market the sales of shares are within the daily normal range, retail are not selling they are used to this bullshit. Now this is and will play out exactly the same as last time guess what, YOU GUESSED IT, Our extemed Director and management have sold all us retail investors out again just like last time.
Where did the 30 million of share go to sophisticated investors. Who are the sophisticated investors the Shorters, the manipulators the ones who have driven the price down for the last three years. Has our directors and management acted in the shareholders interests FUCK NO. the shorters know that retail won’t sell are holding tight. You can see that by the share turnover of the last two days. Now you all watch the shorts close the arvo or next day that these new 30 million dollars worth are issued. Close they will at least 80% of them. Then ask yourself do I really want these directors and CEO in charge of this company that has just screwed every retail investor that holds shares. FUCK NO every director that signed off on this deal should and will be voted against in the next AGM. If you don’t you only have yourself to blame. I know a lot of you have been scratching your heads and even the happy clappers like the Pom is saying WTF IS HAPPENING. I have been saying this was gunna happen for the last three years, now watch it happen fools
Sounds like you need to sell all your BRN shares and move on. You are going to get several ulcers if you don’t. Wishing you all the best.
 
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Galaxycar

Regular
Where’s the fun in that, won’t get to help vote a few directors out, Sometime I wonder pope , is the blind leading the blind here, you blokes cant see the forest for the trees, bunch of lemmings, I would love to see how much your in the red with such a nieve outlook. Seriously Hehir has both hands on your shoulders and you just sit there and say it’ll only hurt a little longer.
 
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Galaxycar

Regular
Just watch those sho
Where’s the fun in that, won’t get to help vote a few directors out, Sometime I wonder pope , is the blind leading the blind here, you blokes can see the forest for the trees, bunch of lemmings, I would love to see how much your in the red with such a nieve outlook. Seriously Hehir has both hands on your shoulders and you just sit there and say it’ll only hurt a little longer.
Just watch those shorts close with the issue of these new shares to them, within days, then you’ll say fuck maybe he was right, they are fleecing retail investors of millions. Management have done nothing but assist the shorters make money at the expence of retail investors bunch of parasites.
 
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