From their Wikipedia page.
"Synaptics Incorporated is a publicly owned San Jose, California-based developer of human interface (HMI) hardware and software, including touchpads for computer laptops; touch, display driver, and fingerprint biometrics technology for smartphones; and touch, video and far-field voice technology for smart home devices and automotives. Synaptics sells its products to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and display manufacturers"
They sound like a good match for BrainChip, I wonder when the partnership announcement will be?...
Most probably..Hey Dingo , I wonder if Synaptics is all over the Renesas RA8M1 with the Arm cortex M85 for fingerprint biometrics like Mantra Softech are ?
Why am I starting to picture the implementation of fingerprint scanners for entry and push button start up of every new vehicle . This could send some motor vehicle insurance companies to the wall …..
View attachment 50298
I wonder why Fierce Electronics (IOT & wireless) published this article in April of interviews with Nandan Nayampally from Brainchip and Elad Baram of Synaptics:
Silly old Verisilicon (who seem to be rooted in China) use MACs:
Maybe while waiting in the Green Room?..I wonder why Fierce Electronics (IOT & wireless) published this article in April of interviews with Nandan Nayampally from Brainchip and Elad Baram of Synaptics:
https://www.fierceelectronics.com/iot-wireless/how-smart-edge-get
How smart will the edge get?
By Gary Hilson Apr 6, 2023 10:00am
Note: No association is mentioned and we already know what Nandan said, but they may have bumped elbows entering/leaving the interview room.
How about we see some return on 1, 1.5 and 2 heyNope, that’s right - but this is definitely future potential ‘for sure’ as Sean would say![]()
AKD1000 two nodes IP $1 million approx RenesasHow about we see some return on 1, 1.5 and 2 hey
Thanks for that,just reminded myself and I'm sure others of Revenue,AKD1000 two nodes IP $1 million approx Renesas
AKD1000 IP $3.25 million with $750,000 to come MEGACHIPS
Ford EAP AKD1000 IP EAP $50,000 approx;
Valeo EAP AKD1000 IP undisclosed milestone payments
NASA EAP AKD1000 IP $50,000
All verified in announcements and in 4C’s, Half Yearly & Annual Reports. NASA also verified payment in publicly available records.
My opinion only DYOR
FACT FINDER
AKIDA BALLISTA
How about we see some return on 1, 1.5 and 2 hey
Holly Mother of Mercertroud! I think we should be calling you guys #Encyclopedia Fact Finder or Wiki Dio
To shine a light on ARM Helium again:Most probably..
Kind of sick of seeing Helium everywhere..
Is that the one that blows up..
View attachment 50300
Actually, that gif reminds me of something else that happens, when I initially see A.I. in connection with something, but then read it's Helium..
Well at the moment it looks like VVDN's Edge Box will be the first to have a commercial product incorporating the Akida chip.To shine a light on ARM Helium again:
It's a vector extension which extends the instruction-set architecture. That leads to faster and more complex processes. It enables a run without additional accelerator, delivering better results than earlier generations.
This is not the competitor. Of course you can reach even better results with the use of additional accelerators, so it's more a question of AND not OR.
Also the full commercialisation of Helium now gives a good idea about industry timelines, as the extension is in the pipeline since 2019.
In first place each company in the world will favour their inhouse solutions, all are in it for maximum profit, just a natural thing. Secondly stands the aquisition of new technology to the own pipeline. The history of the big tech players is full of it.
The least attractive solution is the use of IP from a start-up.
This is the world Brainchip is living in. For a breakthrough it needs a full commercialised product with Akida inside, which shows real advances to the competition. This could be the initialization of a snowball effect with a big wave starting.
So the remaining question is, who will be the first using not much loved IP as a standard in a commercial product, not as an option.
That's what they're wanting to accomplish, with the VVDN edge box.To shine a light on ARM Helium again:
It's a vector extension which extends the instruction-set architecture. That leads to faster and more complex processes. It enables a run without additional accelerator, delivering better results than earlier generations and keep the costs down.
This is not the competitor. Of course you can reach even better results with the use of additional accelerators, so it's more a question of AND not OR.
Also the full commercialisation of Helium now gives a good idea about industry timelines, as the extension is in the pipeline since 2019.
In first place each company in the world will favour their inhouse solutions, all are in it for maximum profit, just a natural thing. Secondly stands the aquisition of new technology to the own pipeline. The history of the big tech players is full of it.
The least attractive solution is the use of IP from a start-up.
This is the world Brainchip is living in. For a breakthrough it needs a full commercialised product with Akida inside, which shows real advances to the competition. This could be the initialization of a snowball effect with a big wave starting.
So the remaining question is, who will be the first using not much loved IP as a standard in a commercial product, not as an option.
That's the way they go with lots of the partnerships, as the work with IP is only possible for the big players or silicon designers.Well at the moment it looks like VVDN's Edge Box will be the first to have a commercial product incorporating the Akida chip.
I always reckoned that the chip would be a quicker way to market than the IP. It's just a matter of gluing them onto a PCB and loading the model, none of this circuit design, taping out, sample testing ...