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Is this ''Did a Merc'' part 2 from TATA?

Concept car for sure, but runs primarily on ''voice commands''. Hmmm 🤔



Car is ugly, but who cares as long as people buy them haha

If you ever watched Red Dwarf it’s the sort of car that when I saw it I expected Kryten would get out and start serving drinks or begin polishing the bonnet. 😂🤣😂

FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
 
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AusEire

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BaconLover

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If you ever watched Red Dwarf it’s the sort of car that when I saw it I expected Kryten would get out and start serving drinks or begin polishing the bonnet. 😂🤣😂

FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
I had to google that one lol
 
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Tony Coles

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Is this ''Did a Merc'' part 2 from TATA?

Concept car for sure, but runs primarily on ''voice commands''. Hmmm 🤔



Car is ugly, but who cares as long as people buy them haha

If it’s got AKIDA BALLISTA in it, then I love it.
 
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Diogenese

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I have mentioned previously even over at the other place that Brainchip had it all to play for and were hitting their straps at just the right time in the history of technology development.

The following fairly light weight article spells out in a straight forward way the real life opportunity ahead.

Knowing this and being deeply involved in the industry with an insiders view of this real life opportunity if I were the CEO of Brainchip just like Sean Hehir I too would be having a few sleepless nights concerned that I crossed every 't' and dotted every 'i' and did not squander this once in a lifetime opportunity I had been given to dominate the ML/Ai market and have the Brainchip technology become the default standard:

Why semiconductors are about to be a trillion-dollar industry​

Ondrej Burkacky and Nikolaus Lehmann - 12h ago
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© Provided by TechRadar

View attachment 5515
The semiconductor industry has hit the headlines over the past year—and not always in a good way. Supply-chain problems led to supply shortages, which led to bottlenecks in the production of everything from cars to computers, and prompted some large technology and auto companies to move design in-house. Consumers who had never given these tiny chips much thought came to realize just how critical they are, not only to the smooth functioning of the global economy, but to their own lives.


In many ways, we live in a world built on chips—and this dependency will continue to rise. We estimate 6 to 8 percent growth per year to 2030, given such trends as remote working, the growth of artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML), and rising demand for electric vehicles. Considering that global sales reached $600 billion in 2021, that would make semiconductors a trillion-dollar industry by the turn of the decade.
That’s a lot of opportunity, for those ready to seize it. To do so, semiconductor manufacturing and design companies need to ask: Where is the market headed? Where is demand coming from? By analyzing specific market segments, we estimate that about 70 percent of growth is predicted to be driven by just three industries: automotive, computation & data storage, and wireless.
Automotive is likely to grow fastest. Demand in this sector could triple by 2030, because the development of autonomous driving, e-mobility, and electrification all require ever more semiconductors. Already, many cars are essentially computers on wheels; that trend will only deepen. Automotive accounted for 8 percent of semiconductor demand in 2021; that could be 13 to 15 percent of demand by the end of the decade. On that basis, it would be responsible for as much as 20 percent of industry expansion.

Shift to remote work​

Over the course of the pandemic, there was a shift to remote work and the associated greater need for connectivity. Consumer demand also rose for personal computers, servers, and equipment for wired communications. All of these technologies depend on semiconductors; none of them are going away. We estimate demand growth of 4 to 6 percent in the computation and data-storage market, fueled by demand for servers to support applications such as AI and cloud computing. In the wireless segment, smartphones will likely account for the majority of expansion, amid a shift from lower-tier to mid-tier segments in emerging markets and backed by growth in 5G.
The task, then, for industry leaders is to expand capacity and to focus on their own operations, such as R&D, factories, and sourcing, to get and stay competitive. That is particularly important in the semiconductor industry, where the top 20 percent of companies captured most of the profits. We believe that strong growth is possible for all semiconductor companies, regardless of size. Although the largest companies generated the greatest economic profit, there were also small, niche players with high operating margins.
To become leaders in profitable segments, strategies include leveraging programmatic M&A and partnerships, building agility, and pursuing new technologies and innovations. Specifically, AI/ML can generate huge business value for semiconductor companies at every step of their operations, from research and chip design to production through sales. The effective use of AI/MI could cut manufacturing costs 17 percent, and R&D as much as 32 percent.

Generating value through AI/ML​

But in a 2021 survey, only about 30 percent of respondents said that they are already generating value through AI/ML. By scaling up sooner rather than later, companies can reap the full value of these technologies; at the moment, the industry is also earning about 10 percent of AI/ML’s full potential. Compound semiconductors are another area to explore; these use silicon carbide and gallium nitride, which are particularly well suited for applications requiring both high power and frequency.
Certainly, decision-makers still need to worry about short-term volatility due to supply–demand mismatches, and of course they are concerned about the global economic and geopolitical outlook. Even so, the outlook is bright, simply because more people want the things that need semiconductors to function: digitization is likely to continue in the post-COVID-19 world. Making the right strategic decisions now could well define leadership for the long term.

My opinion only DYOR
FF

AKIDA BALLISTA
Does this mean that all the CEOs and HR personnel who got their KPI bonuses for right-sizing, out-sourcing, trimming the dead wood, just-in-timing, and redefining the core business in the 80s and 90s now have to pay the bonus back?
 
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Deleted member 118

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Interesting to see Magik Eye playing around with gaming and in a later video Driver Monitoring
The 2nd model is due out any day now and does any one know of any devices this version is currently inside?
 
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Dallas

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Diogenese

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1651665391643.png
 
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Sirod69

bavarian girl ;-)
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Sirod69

bavarian girl ;-)
 
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stockduck

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Sorry, if posted before......but it get`s me a little nervous. What is about you, when you think about the sentence"....maybe a new big customer in the telecommunication sector is coming on board...."

and listen also to this new productpresentation video from Boston Dynamics for spot .... and AT&T,....did I hear it right?
go to minute 6:38 and 7:42.



That confuses me a lot (thanks fo Dallas to get me searching)
 
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Townyj

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Sorry, if posted before......but it get`s me a little nervous. What is about you, when you think about the sentence"....maybe a new big customer in the telecommunication sector is coming on board...."

and listen also to this new productpresentation video from Boston Dynamics for spot .... and AT&T,....did I hear it right?
go to minute 6:38 and 7:42.



That confuses me a lot (thanks fo Dallas to get me searching)

Have listen to the time stamps you mentioned. Sounds like they are still using old school deep learning methods. I think they are also muddying the term “edge computing” where they say it’s in the edge but it’s not really true edge like AKIDA.
 
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IloveLamp

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Isn't Toyota just a fun word to say.........? T-o-y-o-t-a!..........Toy......yo.....ta.......
 
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MDhere

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ok before i get too excited all on my own has anyone seen this interview! i will listen to it again and note the bits that i REALLY REALLY REALLY LIKED ! :)

Watch "Elon Musk: A future worth getting excited about | TED | Tesla Texas Gigafactory interview" on YouTube


sorry if posted already but I've just had time to watch catch up a bit on things

i will be back with what i found interesting. is it just me but i feel it won't be too lon now

but let me add the 1st 30 mins is interesting but at 32min mark it starts getting a little weird with the talk of brain wires in heads lol The guy is clever but at times way too much talking of too much waffling a bit like what im doing right now 🤣🤣
 
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alwaysgreen

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Dhm

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