BRN Discussion Ongoing

sb182

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He's pissed off, arrogant and desperate by the sounds of things.
Yep, sounds just like our CEO Sean.
 
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schuey

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"A company is not obligated to retell the entire origin story of its technology, complete with the names of every former contributor, every time it announces a new partnership"


So where does this leave our founders???

Are you saying.......Fk them????

And our current CTO seems to disagree with your view! Do you want to crush him as well????
Hi FJ

Is understandable that Olivier may want to market his skills.

Especially via LinkedIn which is a business / individual networking site not so much just a job board site equivalent.

As someone said earlier, we don't know why he's out of BC but generally there's 3 reasons someone no longer works somewhere.

"Own" choice to move on, role is made redundant or dismissed by the company due to breach of terms of employment in some form.

Me personally, when anyone is enjoyed by a business, you're there to fulfil a role and "you get paid" accordingly for that performance.

Once you leave, that's it, you've moved on.

He has recognition through the patents as inventor, through published papers etc.

Can always market or highlight that body of work as part of his accomplishments via LinkedIn and would presume he does.

Fine, comment on a post celebrating a win, that he had a hand in, for the company, but maybe be a little more humble about it rather than passive aggressive and trying to call out the company.

Would all of those people that he and Rudy would have cited or referenced in their work towards nventing Pleiades / Centaurus / TENNs etc expect they should also get accolades or mentions on a success they possibly provided some element of inspiration too?

There's a line somewhere.
 
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Diogenese

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I was just doing some research via Grok regarding the ForwardEdge selection of BrainChip and I loved this for some perspective of the significance:

Lockheed Martin is the world's largest defense contractor (by revenue and influence), so anything it does in trusted U.S. microelectronics, edge AI, or neuromorphic computing gets watched closely by peers (Northrop Grumman, Raytheon (RTX), Boeing, General Dynamics, BAE Systems, and L3Harris).

When Lockheed's ForwardEdge publicly selects a neuromorphic partner like BrainChip for cognitive RF and signal processing in contested environments, it's a clear signal that this tech is passing rigorous defense-grade evaluation (DMEA Trusted IC compliance, low-power edge needs, etc.).

Lockheed's selection of BrainChip is like a "seal of approval" from the biggest player.
... not to mention some amazing results that a little company called IBM has achieved by combining its software with an Akida coprocessor or 10.
 
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