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FJ-215

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Yes but more as a explorer than a tech company

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Australian mining company Aziana acquired BrainChip in March 2015.[5] Later, via a reverse merger of the now dormant Aziana[6] in September 2015 BrainChip was put on the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX), and van der Made started commercializing his original idea for artificial intelligence processor hardware.

So was Jensen only exploring in 1993?
Oh....he went public in 1999 and replaced Enron in the S&P 500 2 years later.

I know it's not your work @7für7 but I am getting sick of these useless comparisons to Nvidia.:cry:
 
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This is definitely worth having a closer look at! New smart sensor from Bosch.

Looks like a duck, walks like a duck, talks like a duck?..

But if it had any duck in it, they would be saying, made with real duck? (as in is neuromorphic, but now even that isn't a sure fire way, with company's like Innatera producing chips..)

It says the A.I. is software, but there is also a low power chip, that doesn't wake up the main one, unless needed (also sounds like what we'ld be good at, but we would be the "that" chip?).

The "learning" part and "gesture recognition" (In this case "taps"? which I wouldn't really call "gesture recognition") also sounds like us, but that also sounds a bit more like marketing, or exaggeration of capabilities..

The biggest negative to me, is how much of a "marketing" advantage it would have (especially now) to say it was "neuromorphic" and they've said diddly...

One thing Tony Dawe said, that rung very True, is that if a product came out using Neuromorphic Technology, the company using it, would sing it to the Heavens.
 
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7für7

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So was Jensen only exploring in 1993?
Oh....he went public in 1999 and replaced Enron in the S&P 500 2 years later.

I know it's not your work @7für7 but I am getting sick of these useless comparisons to Nvidia.:cry:

You’re absolutely right! But still better than comparing ourselves with an ancient empire 😂

From my side, no more comparisons. We’re BrainChip, and everything needs to be evaluated individually.
Sure, there are benchmarks and average trajectories out there, but relying too heavily on them isn’t helpful.
In fact, we could just as well outperform them.

There’s always a company with a better growth curve — so why shouldn’t BrainChip be the one to make a historic breakthrough that the entire tech industry can’t live without anymore?
That’s when the share price would go parabolic…

…but please — let it happen before any reverse split or the next capital raise 😭😭😭🙏🙏🙏
 
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Droneshield, has just had its largest ever military contracts announced today, 61.6 million dollars (I'm assuming it's AUD) which is more than its entire 2024 revenue of 57.5 million!

So revenue from military, for us, could be very attractive moving forward..

AKIDA, would make counter drone technology obsolete.

We won't be selling "our" tech to hostile to the West companies, but "everyone" would be looking at developing Intelligent drones..

Once that happens, what happens to "Droneshield"?..
 
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Guzzi62

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Full of faults:

Vision-Based Robotics: Intel’s Loihi chip powers warehouse robots that dynamically adjust paths using real-time sensor fusion (LIDAR + camera), reducing energy consumption by 40%.

No they don't it's a research chip as far as I know?

Wearables: BrainChip’s Akida processor powers fitness trackers and medical wearables, enabling real-time analysis of ECG, glucose levels, and sleep patterns while extending battery life by 10–100x compared to conventional chips.

Really? No wrong!
Yes, epilepsy glasses coming next year, but that's it as far as I know?
 
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7für7

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Droneshield, has just had its largest ever military contracts announced today, 61.6 million dollars (I'm assuming it's AUD) which is more than its entire 2024 revenue of 57.5 million!

So revenue from military, for us, could be very attractive moving forward..

AKIDA, would make counter drone technology obsolete.

We won't be selling "our" tech to hostile to the West companies, but "everyone" would be looking at developing Intelligent drones..

Once that happens, what happens to "Droneshield"?..

I totally agree with you!
Lots of coulds, shoulds, maybes …but there’s one thing you got slightly wrong… just a reminder: BrainChip doesn’t build defense systems .. it’s a pure AI tech company 😂👌

And yeah, let me throw a counter-question your way…What happens to BrainChip if Nvidia, Qualcomm or Apple roll out their own lowpower edge AI brain-super-pico-mega solutions?

It’s true …the trend is clearly heading toward autonomous, intelligent systems, including drones.

But… DroneShield is evolving too.
If they start integrating Akida to make their systems smarter, they’re not being replaced ..they’re becoming a potential customer!! 🤞🤞
 
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I totally agree with you!
Lots of coulds, shoulds, maybes …but there’s one thing you got slightly wrong… just a reminder: BrainChip doesn’t build defense systems .. it’s a pure AI tech company 😂👌

And yeah, let me throw a counter-question your way…What happens to BrainChip if Nvidia, Qualcomm or Apple roll out their own lowpower edge AI brain-super-pico-mega solutions?

It’s true …the trend is clearly heading toward autonomous, intelligent systems, including drones.

But… DroneShield is evolving too.
If they start integrating Akida to make their systems smarter, they’re not being replaced ..they’re becoming a potential customer!! 🤞🤞
Anduril are though and hopefully we're involved with them.

Of course other companies are trying to do the same..

My understanding, is that Dronesheild's tech, messes with the controls and guidance systems etc, by pointing various beam type technologies at them.

Making these "beam guns" more intelligent, isn't going to do much, when the Drones themselves, are giving the operators of them "the finger"...
 
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7für7

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Anduril are though and hopefully we're involved with them.

Of course other companies are trying to do the same..

My understanding, is that Dronesheild's tech, messes with the controls and guidance systems etc, by pointing various beam type technologies at them.

Making these "beam guns" more intelligent, isn't going to do much, when the Drones themselves, are giving the operators of them "the finger"...

Totally… if drones are smart enough to flip you off, you better have something smarter than a fancy beam gun. 😄

That’s where Akida shines: real-time learning, no lag, no cloud … just pure brain-on-chip.

Otherwise… you’ll be waving back right before they land. 😅
 
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Full of faults:

Vision-Based Robotics: Intel’s Loihi chip powers warehouse robots that dynamically adjust paths using real-time sensor fusion (LIDAR + camera), reducing energy consumption by 40%.

No they don't it's a research chip as far as I know?

Wearables: BrainChip’s Akida processor powers fitness trackers and medical wearables, enabling real-time analysis of ECG, glucose levels, and sleep patterns while extending battery life by 10–100x compared to conventional chips.

Really? No wrong!
Yes, epilepsy glasses coming next year, but that's it as far as I know?
Agreed. Full of holes. Tata were working on the ecg thing but still in research mode. Not a lot of fact checking going on. Maybe they use chatgpt or something as research. I noticed they mentioned heat problems but couldn't highlight the fact that Brainchip fixes that problem.
 
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HopalongPetrovski

I'm Spartacus!
Hi Folks.
Just curious if anyone has had communication with the new investor relations mob?
I sent them a request for some info on the day they were announced and did receive an acknowledgment of my email a week or so later but bupkis since then.
Anyone else have anything positive to report about them?
 
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equanimous

Norse clairvoyant shapeshifter goddess
Hi Folks.
Just curious if anyone has had communication with the new investor relations mob?
I sent them a request for some info on the day they were announced and did receive an acknowledgment of my email a week or so later but bupkis since then.
Anyone else have anything positive to report about them?
Its a bit like this guy only Trevor needs AGI to reply to all single senders.

1750836767954.png

“The 55,000 letters that were delivered to the customer in Twinsburg, Ohio, is not something we see often, said spokeswoman Naddia Dhalai. “However, the Postal Service is committed to providing the best customer service so every piece of mail we receive will be delivered to our customers.
 
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Rach2512

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Esq.111

Fascinatingly Intuitive.
View attachment 87603

Evening Rach2512 & Fellow Chippers,

Just to add to your above post.

2022 Income.
¥1,810,000,000,000.00 = AU$19,197,946,000.00

2022 Net .
¥314,000,000,000 = AU$3,616,850,600.



77,500 employees globaly , not to be trifled with.

* had a chuckle when i saw the original founders name.


Regards,
Esq
 
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Rach2512

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Frangipani

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Predictive maintenance in the energy infrastructure sector is an important use case, where neuromorphic technology can help improve existing systems.

Researchers from WSU’s International Centre for Neuromorphic Systems (ICNS) just announced they’ve developed a PoC on an ANYmal industrial inspection robot (manufactured by Swiss company ANYbotics, founded in 2016 as a spin-off from ETH Zürich’s research in quadrupedal robotics) “by pairing a custom ultrasonic microphone array with neuromorphic signal processing”.

The same payload is slated to fly on drones soon, “enabling kilometre-scale inspections of transmission corridors and pipelines. This milestone is the first step toward a fully automated, drone-based inspection system for long-distance energy infrastructure.”



284B9457-0517-4987-927D-FBD177984AEB.jpeg



By the way, wouldn’t you have thought that André van Schaik coming onto the BrainChip Scientific Advisory Board last August (who then moved to the UK in April to set up another International Centre for Neuromorphic Systems at the University of Manchester, where he now holds the Furber Chair of Neuromorphic Systems Engineering) would have resulted in some kind of formal collaboration between BrainChip and ICNS?

But so far crickets…

And then of course there is Optera Solutions (www.optera.au), the start-up that was spun out off ICNS last year to commercialise the event-based sensing technology developed at WSU. Optera’s initial focus is to provide neuromorphic solutions to the space and defence sector. They were selected to join the sixth-month Thales Space Business Catalyst Program in Toulouse (from September 2024).

André van Schaik is co-founder and CTO of Optera. I wonder what our chances are to partner with them?



Some more background info about ultrasonic leak detection in general:


When leaks occur in pressurized systems — such as compressed air or gas systems — the leak will emit a sound at a frequency above that which can be detected by the human ear. Ultrasonic leak detection uses advanced sound emission technology to identify and locate these leaks, which is accomplished by detecting the high-frequency vibration that occurs in the air or the medium at the source of the leak.

Ultrasonic leak testing is extremely useful in support of predictive maintenance operations, since these often-tiny leaks are indicative of larger operational issues to come, including drops in efficiency as well as safety issues and whole-system shutdowns.

Ultrasonic maintenance can take many forms and can be applied to several types of equipment. Most frequently, ultrasonic technology will be used for compressed air leak detection, gas leak detection and vacuum leak detection. It can also be used for bearings and pumps.

  • Inspection of complex air and gas pipework systems: Compressed air is a critical need in keeping a facility operational. Many facilities also require the availability of other compressed gases. These key needs are delivered from a central location throughout the facility via a complex network of pipes. A leak anywhere in the system can mean a drop in pressure that will affect equipment performance and increase energy usage — and costs. Ultrasonic leak detection is the fastest and most reliable way to identify even the smallest leak in a system — which can later become a major problem.
  • Safety improvements: When compressed air is leaking, loss of efficiency is the primary concern. However, when hazardous or dangerous gases are leaking from a system, safety quickly becomes the main concern. These leaks must be detected and acted upon more quickly since they can put operators and other personnel in immediate and grave danger.
  • Bearings and pumps: These types of rotating equipment have distinctive acoustic signatures in terms of frequency and vibration of the surrounding air. Regular checks with ultrasonic inspection equipment can reveal the underpinnings of problems, for example, if the equipment is operating above an acceptable maximum of rotation, or if current operation conditions differ significantly from historical average conditions.
  • Integration of ultrasonic inspection equipment and today’s manufacturing technology: While ultrasonic leak detection has been available for quite some time, it can now be integrated into maintenance technology systems for more automated, efficient, and effective operation.
Processes that were previously completed manually — testing, documentation, prioritization, and maintenance ticketing — can now be completed automatically, with results from numerous testing points being constantly fed into a central data and analytics system. This results in increased maintenance efficiency and effectiveness.”
 
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Rach2512

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Another press release today from HaiLa, could there be a collaboration, I wouldn't have a clue, but you smart cookies maybe be able to see a connection perhaps? 🤔


 
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Frangipani

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Its a bit like this guy only Trevor needs AGI to reply to all single senders.

View attachment 87601
“The 55,000 letters that were delivered to the customer in Twinsburg, Ohio, is not something we see often, said spokeswoman Naddia Dhalai. “However, the Postal Service is committed to providing the best customer service so every piece of mail we receive will be delivered to our customers.

Reminds me of this guy, who had merely wanted to apply for an online tax account passcode:


WORLD
7 Nov 2024

German receives 1700 identical letters from taxman​

1:10 pm on 7 November 2024

Close up view of a packet of opened envelopes

Photo: 123RF

Most people dread a letter from the tax office. So spare a thought for the German man who got 1700 of them.

In an administrative meltdown worthy of a Franz Kafka novel, the mountain of tax correspondence arrived at his front door in 10 boxes, a local newspaper reported.

Germany's finance ministry apologised on Wednesday for the "technical error" that threw the man from Quickborn in northern Germany. "The finance ministry has contacted the taxpayer and apologised," said a ministry spokeswoman.
The ministry offered to take the letters - which were all identical - off the man's hands and destroy them, but he declined the offer as unnecessary, she said.

Europe's biggest economy may be at the forefront of many advanced industries but has long suffered from notoriously outdated bureaucratic quirks.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz's coalition government has repeatedly pledged to cut red tape and moved to offer certain administrative processes online.
Even Scholz has admitted to being baffled by German bureaucracy, complaining in 2022 that he had to apply in person for his passport and ID card rather than online.

As recently as 2021, it emerged that some 1600 fax machines were still lurking in the German parliament as the government announced it was finally planning to get rid of them.



Below video (in German) explains that the IT glitch was due to the gentleman applying for his online tax account passcode during the night daylight savings time ended and somehow the application apparently got stuck in a time loop…

The video also explains what happened to those surplus letters: they ended up in that taxpayer’s pellet stove! 🤣

www.facebook.com/brisant/videos/schock-am-briefkasten-mann-bekommt-1700-briefe-vom-finanzamt/1089613866132806/
 
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manny100

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Another press release today from HaiLa, could there be a collaboration, I wouldn't have a clue, but you smart cookies maybe be able to see a connection perhaps? 🤔


As you pointed out HaiLa showcased their partnership with Energous wireless power solutions on 24th June 2025 for low powered communications.
Brainchip, HaiLa and Energous are all participating at Sensors Converge which commenced yesterday.

Bringing Energous into the mix alongside BrainChip and HaiLa Technologies would create a next-gen blueprint for self-sustaining AI systems:

  • Compute: BrainChip’s Akida delivers brain-like processing at ultra-low power, enabling intelligent decision-making at the edge without constant cloud access.
  • Communication: HaiLa’s passive backscatter tech communicates data by reflecting ambient Wi-Fi, slashing power consumption for wireless transmission.
  • Power: Energous’ PowerBridge and RF-based wireless charging would keep devices operational indefinitely without manual recharging or battery swaps.
    Put them together and you’ve got a sensor, drone, or wearable that:
    • Analyzes its environment locally
    • Transmits critical data efficiently
    • Recharges wirelessly from the air around it.
      Together they could change smart cities, health monitoring, battlefield surveillance, and environmental sensing—scaling networks in places where traditional maintenance is impossible.
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
Evening Rach2512 & Fellow Chippers,

Just to add to your above post.

2022 Income.
¥1,810,000,000,000.00 = AU$19,197,946,000.00

2022 Net .
¥314,000,000,000 = AU$3,616,850,600.



77,500 employees globaly , not to be trifled with.

* had a chuckle when i saw the original founders name.


Regards,
Esq
9. Apr. 2025

Murata Machinery Ltd. Earns Intel’s 2025 EPIC Supplier Award

Murata Machinery Ltd. is one of only 37 Intel EPIC Supplier Award recipients in all of Intel’s global supply chain.

Murata Machinery Ltd. is proud to announce that it has earned the exclusive Intel EPIC Supplier Award for 2025. This award recognizes the top performers in the Intel supply chain for their world-class commitment to continuous improvement and performance excellence over the past year.

“Congratulations to Murata Machinery Ltd. on receiving the Intel EPIC Supplier Award, Intel’s highest supplier recognition,” said Frank Sanders, corporate vice president and general manager of Global Supply Chain Operations at Intel. “Their unwavering commitment to quality, drive for excellence, and dedication to technology innovation make them vital to our success. We greatly appreciate their collaboration and continued focus on results.”

“As one of a select few companies awarded the Intel EPIC Supplier Award in 2025, Murata Machinery Ltd. is truly one of the best suppliers in the semiconductor industry,” said Dave Bloss, corporate vice president and general manager of Global Sourcing for Equipment & Materials at Intel. “Their customer orientation and commitment to superior performance is a testament to their dedication and serves as a global benchmark for others to follow.”

The Intel EPIC Supplier Award recognizes the top performers in the Intel supply chain for their dedication to “EPIC” performance—Excellence, Partnership, Inclusion and Continuous Improvement. Of the thousands of Intel suppliers around the world, only a few hundred qualify to participate in the EPIC Supplier Program.

To qualify for the Intel EPIC Supplier Award, suppliers must exceed the highest expectations and achieve aggressive strategic objectives aligned to Intel’s priorities.


Get more information about the Intel EPIC Supplier Awards

Find the latest at the Intel Newsroom

Visit the Intel EPIC Supplier Awards page
 
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