Good post Doz. He says there are discussions ( with Brainchip) but I can't go into that.
That says it all.
We can only guess how many 'discussions' Brainchip is having with other companies.
There would be a lot. Sean in his video interviews of late is not shy about talking up the number of engagements in progress.
Hi Manny,
I’m not convinced that Weebit is really “in like Flynn” with BrainChip.
In fact, in the podcast I linked below dated
27 October 2025, Weebit specifically touched on neuromorphic computing.
While Weebit was generally positive about neuromorphic computing's long-term potential, they clearly characterised it as still being largely in the research phase, suggesting it’s several years away from meaningful commercial adoption.
Mark Makenis agrees as well that neurmorphic computing is a few more years away from commercialization than near-memory compute (in other word's Weebit's offering).
For clarity, I’ve linked directly to the relevant video so people can hear it for themselves, rather than relying on my interpretation only.
At 8 mins, Erin Briman says something along the lines of "In a few years time the future is neuromorphic computing really mimicking the brain, but that is still in research and it's gonna take a few years from now too mature."
Why did he say it's in research still? If we are working so closely with Weebit wouldn't they know we're not at research phase, because anyone close would know we are commercial now?
This isn’t my opinion. It’s what was actually said. So please don't shoot the messenger down.
Separately, Weebit has also announced a collaboration with the NEMO Consortium, which appears to be targeting similar use cases and applications to those BrainChip is pursuing. According to the NEMO website, they are developing analog neuromorphic cores (as distinct from BrainChip’s digital approach), based on IP from Professor Shahar Kvatinsky at Technion.
Before anyone jumps down my throat, I’d encourage people to check the facts. I haven’t invented this. It's publicly available information. Whether people like it or not, this is simply what’s been stated by the parties involved.
I’ve said this before, I believe in the technology. But belief doesn’t mean switching off your critical thinking.