BRN Discussion Ongoing

TECH

Regular
What made you bring them up TECH?


Just the kind of "dark horse" that BrainChip would suddenly partner with..

In answer to the question of our Korean connection/s..

"It's Samsung"
"It's Hyundai"
"It's LG"..

BrainChip Announces partnership/IP deal with Nextchip

"Nextchip?? Who the hell are they??"

Gidday Dingo....first off, thanks for your balanced views over the years.

I received a message on my phone with regards an article about Nextchips and Emotion3D focused on ADAS, in-cabin monitoring etc
I then checked out patents and found nothing, I noted they appear to be analog focused, so I lost interest a little, but was genuine in my
question, had anybody else checked out this Korean company.

Here's another genuine question, is any forum member/s whom live in the Vegas region going to attend the CES event ?

Regards...Tech (y)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Love
  • Fire
Reactions: 12 users

Dhm

Regular

Neuromorphic roadmap: are brain-like processors the future of computing?​

Neuromorphic chips could reduce energy bills for AI developers as well as emit useful cybersecurity signals.
11 December 2023
Picturing the future of computing.


Rethinking chip design: brain-inspired asynchronous neuromorphic devices are gaining momentum as researchers report on progress.

• The future of computing might not look anything like computing as we know it.
• Neuromorphic chips would function much more like brains than the chips we have today.
• Neuromorphic chips and AI could be a combination that takes us much further – without the energy billls.

A flurry of new chips announced recently by Qualcomm, NVIDIA, and AMD has ramped up competition to build the ultimate PC processor. And while the next couple of years are shaping up to be good ones for consumers of laptops and other PC products, the future of computing could end up looking quite different to what we know right now.
Despite all of the advances in chipmaking, which have shrunk feature sizes and packed billions of transistors onto modern devices, the computing architecture remains a familiar one. General-purpose, all-electronic, digital PCs based on binary logic are, at their heart, so-called Von Neumann machines.

Von Neumann machines versus neuromorphic chips​

The basics of a Von Neumann computing machine features a memory store to hold instructions and data; control and logic units; plus input and output devices.
Demonstrated more than half a century ago, the architecture has stood the test of time. However, bottlenecks have emerged – provoked by growing application sizes and exponential amounts of data.

Processing units need to fetch their instructions and data from memory. And while on-chip caches help reduce latency, there’s a disparity between how fast the CPU can run and the rate at which information can be supplied.
What’s more, having to bus data and instructions between the memory and the processor not only affects chip performance, it drains energy too.
Chip designers have loaded up processors with multiple cores, clustered CPUs, and engineered other workarounds to squeeze as much performance as they can from Von Neumann machines. But this complexity adds cost and requires cooling.
It’s often said that the best solutions are the simplest, and today’s chips based on Von Neumann principles are starting to look mighty complicated. There are resource constraints too, made worse by the boom in generative AI, and these could steer the future of computing away from its Von Neumann origins.

Neuromorphic chips and AI – a dream combination?​

Large language models (LLMs) have wowed the business world and enterprise software developers are racing to integrate LLMs developed by OpenAI, Google, Meta, and other big names into their products. And competition for computing resources is fierce.
OpenAI had to pause new subscriptions to its paid-for ChatGPT service as it couldn’t keep up with demand. Google, for the first time, is reportedly spending more on compute than it is on people – as access to high-performance chips becomes imperative to revenue growth.


Writing in a Roadmap for Unconventional Computing with Nanotechnology (available on arXiv and submitted to Nano Futures), experts highlight the fact that the computational need for artificial intelligence is growing at a rate 50 times faster than Moore’s law for electronics.
LLMs feature billions of parameters – essentially a very long list of decimal numbers – which have to be encoded in binary so that processors can interpret whether artificial neurons fire or not in response to their software inputs.
So-called ‘neural engines’ can help accelerate AI performance by hard-coding common instructions, but running LLMs on conventional computing architecture is resource-intensive.
Researchers estimate that data processing and transmission worldwide could be responsible for anywhere between 5 and 15% of global energy consumption. And this forecast was made before ChatGPT existed.
But what if developers could switch from modeling artificial neurons in software to building them directly in hardware instead? Our brains can perform all kinds of supercomputing magic using a few Watts of power (orders of magnitude less than computers) and that’s thanks to physical neural networks and their synaptic connections.


Rather than having to pay an energy penalty for shuffling computing instructions and data into a different location, calculations can be performed directly in memory. And developers are busy working on a variety of neuromorphic (brain-inspired) chip ideas to enable computing with small energy budgets, which brings a number of benefits.

“It provides hardware security as well, which is very important for artificial intelligence,” comments Jean Anne Incorvia – who holds the Fellow of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) Chair in Computer Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin, US – in the roadmap paper. “Because of the low power requirement, these architectures can be embedded in edge devices that have minimal contact with the cloud and are therefore somewhat insulated from cloud‐borne attacks.”

Neuromorphic chips emit cybersecurity signals​

What’s more, with neuromorphic computing devices consuming potentially tiny amounts of power, hardware attacks become much easier to detect due to the tell-tale increase in energy demand that would follow – something that would be noticeable through side-channel monitoring.
The future of computing could turn out to be one involving magnetic neural network crossbar arrays, redox memristors, 3D nanostructures, biomaterials and more, with designers of neuromorphic devices using brain functionality as a blueprint.
“Communication strength depends on the history of synapse activity, also known as plasticity,” writes Aida Todri‐Sanial – who leads the NanoComputing Research Lab at Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) in The Netherlands. “Short‐term plasticity facilitates computation, while long‐term plasticity is attributed to learning and memory.”


Neuromorphic computing is said to be much more forgiving of switching errors compared with Boolean logic. However, one issue holding back progress is the poor tolerance of device-to-device variations. Conventional chip makers have taken years to optimize their fabrication processes, so the future of computing may not happen overnight.
However, different ways of doing things may help side-step some hurdles. For example, researchers raise the prospect of being able to set model weights using an input waveform rather than having to read through billions of individual parameters.
Also, the more we learn about how the brain functions, the more designers of future computing devices can mimic those features in their architectures.

Giving a new meaning to sleep mode​

“During awake activity, sensory signals are processed through subcortical layers in the cortex and the refined outputs reach the hippocampus,” explains Jennifer Hasler and her collaborators, reflecting on what’s known about how the brain works. “During the sleep cycle, these memory events are replayed to the neocortex where sensory signals cannot disrupt the playback.”
Today, closing your laptop – putting the device to sleep – is mostly about power-saving. But perhaps the future of computing will see chips that utilize sleep more like the brain. With sensory signals blocked from disrupting memory events, sleeping provides a chance to strengthen synapses, encode new concepts, and expand learning mechanisms.
And if these ideas sound far-fetched, it’s worth checking out the computing capabilities of slime mold powered by just a few oat flakes. The future of computing doesn’t have to resemble a modern data center, and thinking differently could dramatically lower those energy bills.

Hi @Bravo, Within the attached video, Intels Mike Davies said “Intels Loihi is the world’s most advanced Neuromorphic chip” I nearly choked on my cornflakes!
 
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: 17 users

cosors

👀
Does the ASX announcements annb0t actually work for us paying TSElers now? Otherwise we've been waiting here forever or have to look back to HC, which can obviously do it better.
:unsure:
At the TLG group we have set up an improvised update thread.
 
  • Like
  • Thinking
Reactions: 5 users

buena suerte :-)

BOB Bank of Brainchip
Hi Moonshot,

Sometimes I prefer to read the interviews, I read the transcript which was available below the interview.
Great suggestion TG...Thanks :)
 
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: 5 users

IloveLamp

Top 20

Screenshot_20231215_074306_LinkedIn.jpg

calculator-kid.gif
 
  • Haha
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: 21 users

TechGirl

Founding Member
  • Haha
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: 15 users
Gidday Dingo....first off, thanks for your balanced views over the years.

I received a message on my phone with regards an article about Nextchips and Emotion3D focused on ADAS, in-cabin monitoring etc
I then checked out patents and found nothing, I noted they appear to be analog focused, so I lost interest a little, but was genuine in my
question, had anybody else checked out this Korean company.

Here's another genuine question, is any forum member/s whom live in the Vegas region going to attend the CES event ?

Regards...Tech (y)
Cheers TECH, love your work too 👍


Emotion3D partners with Nextchip January 2022.


Emotion 3D partners with BrainChip February 2023.



Emotion3D's stated aim, was to improve their driver monitoring product.

“We are committed to setting the standard in driving safety and user experience through the development of camera-based, in-cabin understanding,” says Florian Seitner, CEO at emotion3D. “In combining our in-cabin analysis software with BrainChip’s on-chip compute, we are able to elevate that standard in a faster, safer and smarter way. This partnership will provide a cascading number of benefits that will continue to disrupt the mobility industry.”

But that partnership only starting February this year, it may be too early for integration, unless it had started prior?


Nextchip demonstrates in cabin monitoring, from just 3 days ago..

 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Fire
  • Love
Reactions: 31 users

IloveLamp

Top 20
  • Like
  • Fire
Reactions: 6 users
Do people here think now, is perhaps the Time, to strongly recommend those we know and love, to invest a decent sum in BrainChip?

Perhaps from their Super?

$17500 will buy you 100000 shares in this Company and on the basis, that it could be lost, or profoundly change their future, could be a good "bet"?...

Many here have already recommended strongly over the years, with good intentions, but ill effect.

I personally encouraged my Brother to buy 50000 shares at 95 cents last year and now he won't listen to me about averaging down 🤔..


Disclosure - I am very heavily invested in BrainChip and bought another 10000 shares yesterday..

I sleep like a baby at night, but if BrainChip doesn't "make it" my future will seriously look a bit like this..

20231215_091111.jpg


Provided someone will be kind enough to let me park this beauty on their property 😬..



However, I will probably still look at it like this..

20231215_091208.jpg
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Haha
  • Fire
Reactions: 39 users
Hi @Bravo, Within the attached video, Intels Mike Davies said “Intels Loihi is the world’s most advanced Neuromorphic chip” I nearly choked on my cornflakes!
Intel has it been rumoured to have Brainchip in it ,
 
  • Thinking
  • Like
Reactions: 6 users

IloveLamp

Top 20
Do people here think now, is perhaps the Time, to strongly recommend those we know and love, to invest a decent sum in BrainChip?

Perhaps from their Super?

$17500 will buy you 100000 shares in this Company and on the basis, that it could be lost, or profoundly change their future, could be a good "bet"?...

Many here have recommended strongly over the years already, with good intentions, but ill effect.

I personally encouraged my Brother to buy 50000 shares at 95 cents last year and now he won't listen to me about averaging down 🤔..


Disclosure - I am very heavily invested in BrainChip and bought another 10000 shares yesterday..

I sleep like a baby at night, but if BrainChip doesn't "make it" my future will seriously look a bit like this..

View attachment 52053

Provided someone will be kind enough to let me park this beauty on their property 😬..



However, I will probably still look at it like this..

View attachment 52054
I have ZERO concerns about brns future. We have far too many green flags for this to lead nowhere.

I like you, have made bum recommendations to people i know and care for to buy at higher prices, but i cautioned it with this....

"Expect the price to go down after you buy, be prepared to wait min of 2 years"

Having said that, i believe we will start to see significant amounts of fruit bearing from these multiple massive partnerships from 1st qtr next year.

My opinion only dyor
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Love
  • Fire
Reactions: 25 users

buena suerte :-)

BOB Bank of Brainchip
Do people here think now, is perhaps the Time, to strongly recommend those we know and love, to invest a decent sum in BrainChip?

Perhaps from their Super?

$17500 will buy you 100000 shares in this Company and on the basis, that it could be lost, or profoundly change their future, could be a good "bet"?...

Many here have already recommended strongly over the years already, with good intentions, but ill effect.

I personally encouraged my Brother to buy 50000 shares at 95 cents last year and now he won't listen to me about averaging down 🤔..


Disclosure - I am very heavily invested in BrainChip and bought another 10000 shares yesterday..

I sleep like a baby at night, but if BrainChip doesn't "make it" my future will seriously look a bit like this..

View attachment 52053

Provided someone will be kind enough to let me park this beauty on their property 😬..



However, I will probably still look at it like this..

View attachment 52054
"Many here have recommended strongly over the years already, with good intentions, but ill effect."(DB)

Absolutely on the above DB 😭😭

One friend in at 97c another at $1.14 ouch! But a couple at around 30/40 cents

I have also sent them my little calculations on Averaging down....'So if you invest this amount again then that will give x amount of shares divided by'...............etc etc :) One has done so! and averaged down from 97c to 35c :)

I also bought another 100,000 last December at 62c ...ouch ouch!!

I have absolute confidence that BRN will change my fortunes..In a big way!!! $$$$$$$$$$$$$$ :)

Good luck to all

🙏🙏 2024 🙏🙏
 
  • Like
  • Love
  • Fire
Reactions: 45 users
Do people here think now, is perhaps the Time, to strongly recommend those we know and love, to invest a decent sum in BrainChip?

Perhaps from their Super?

$17500 will buy you 100000 shares in this Company and on the basis, that it could be lost, or profoundly change their future, could be a good "bet"?...

Many here have already recommended strongly over the years, with good intentions, but ill effect.

I personally encouraged my Brother to buy 50000 shares at 95 cents last year and now he won't listen to me about averaging down 🤔..


Disclosure - I am very heavily invested in BrainChip and bought another 10000 shares yesterday..

I sleep like a baby at night, but if BrainChip doesn't "make it" my future will seriously look a bit like this..

View attachment 52053

Provided someone will be kind enough to let me park this beauty on their property 😬..



However, I will probably still look at it like this..

View attachment 52054
Good luck brother. I hope it works out well for you.

IMO if you believe in the company and are prepared to risk whatever capital you invest then this price is as good as any to take..

Back yourself in..

If recommending it Id suggest that you caveat to them that this could go to zero and only risk the capital you are willing to lose. And its on you whether you invest or not..

My opinion.. There's nothing in that chart that says FOMO is required here. It says more time required, larger longer base, and atleast some signs that the sellers are diminishing.. I won't buy back in as a long-term hold unless the chart gets better.. 25c plus at this stage to even consider it..

That's current key resistance and above that is where you may get more confidence that the trend is shifting. IMO
 
  • Like
  • Love
  • Fire
Reactions: 8 users
Good luck brother. I hope it works out well for you.

IMO if you believe in the company and are prepared to risk whatever capital you invest then this price is as good as any to take..

Back yourself in..

If recommending it Id suggest that you caveat to them that this could go to zero and only risk the capital you are willing to lose. And its on you whether you invest or not..

My opinion.. There's nothing in that chart that says FOMO is required here. It says more time required, larger longer base, and atleast some signs that the sellers are diminishing.. I won't buy back in as a long-term hold unless the chart gets better.. 25c plus at this stage to even consider it..

That's current key resistance and above that is where you may get more confidence that the trend is shifting. IMO
I think I may have suggested in 2022 or at some stage in 2023 what to look for from a technical perspective. And none of those conditions are yet to be met.

All you need to do is look at the chart history and look at what it looks like before making a good run. What do the preceding months and months look like before that move and note the time it takes to build into it.

You all know the FA to death..

Don't worry if you miss buying at 17c, 15c etc etc.. Wait for the trend to turn and then buy. That might even be 35-40c.. If this company makes 80-100mill in revenue in a few years assuming high profit like a PME-type at 50% nett profit, the market cap will be $9-10bill. So 30-40c is still a massive bargain..
 
  • Like
Reactions: 9 users
The Akida™ Edge Box—expected to begin pre-sales on January 15th, 2024


1702598861872.png



BrainChip Previews Industry’s First Edge Box Powered by Neuromorphic AI IP​



Laguna Hills, Calif. – December 14, 2023 – BrainChip Holdings Ltd (ASX: BRN, OTCQX: BRCHF, ADR: BCHPY), the world’s first commercial producer of ultra-low power, fully digital, event-based, neuromorphic AI IP, today released previews of the industry’s first Edge box based on neuromorphic technology built in collaboration with VVDN Technologies, a premier electronics and manufacturing company.

The Akida™ Edge Box—expected to begin pre-sales on January 15th, 2024—powers AI applications in challenging environments where performance and efficiency are essential. The device will be demonstrated for the first time at CES 2024, January 9-12 in Las Vegas.

Designed for vision-based AI workloads, the compact Akida Edge box is intended for video analytics, facial recognition, and object detection, and can extend intelligent processing capabilities that integrate inputs from various other sensors. This device is compact, powerful, and enables cost-effective, scalable AI solutions at the Edge.

BrainChip’s event-based neural processing, which closely mimics the learning ability of the human brain, delivers essential performance within an energy-efficient, portable form factor, while offering cost-effectiveness surpassing market standards for edge AI computing appliances. BrainChip’s Akida neuromorphic processors are capable of on-chip learning that enables customization and personalization on device without support from the cloud, enhancing privacy and security while also reducing training overhead, which is a growing cost for AI services.

“BrainChip’s neuromorphic technology gives the Akida Edge box the ‘edge’ in demanding markets such as industrial, manufacturing, warehouse, high-volume retail, and medical care,” said Sean Hehir, CEO of BrainChip. “We are excited to partner with an industry leader like VVDN technologies to bring groundbreaking technology to the market.”

“There is a strong demand for cost-effective, flexible edge AI computation across many industries,” said Puneet Agarwal, Co-Founder and CEO, VVDN Technologies. “VVDN is excited to offer OEMs its experience and expertise in bringing the advanced, transformative technology integrations that meet market needs and eventually help them with faster time to market.”

BrainChip’s Akida Edge Box is suitable for environments that require cost-effective and low-latency AI processing. In security and surveillance, it can automatically detect and report intrusion, identify individuals in restricted areas, and perform behavior analysis to recognize suspicious behaviors or potential threats.

In retail and warehousing, it can assist in inventory management and loss prevention by identifying when shelves are empty, when restocking is needed, and when merchandise is removed without authorization. Behavior analysis capabilities can also help retailers understand how customers interact with products and store layouts to maximize profitability.

The Akida Edge Box brings AI to industrial settings for visual detection applications such as quality inspection, identifying defects or irregularities in products, and integration with factory robotic systems for precise object manipulation. It can be used to enhance plant and worker safety, identify whether workers are using proper safety gear, following protocols and proper workflows, and identify malfunctions in assembly lines.

Healthcare applications include patient monitoring, such as noting a patient’s physical movements to ensure safety and provide alerts for falls or unusual behavior. In rehabilitation facilities it can track and analyze patient movements to aid in physical therapy. In elder care settings it can be used to detect falls or other situations that require staff assistance or intervention.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Love
  • Fire
Reactions: 98 users
  • Like
  • Fire
  • Love
Reactions: 28 users

HopalongPetrovski

I'm Spartacus!
Do people here think now, is perhaps the Time, to strongly recommend those we know and love, to invest a decent sum in BrainChip?

Perhaps from their Super?

$17500 will buy you 100000 shares in this Company and on the basis, that it could be lost, or profoundly change their future, could be a good "bet"?...

Many here have already recommended strongly over the years, with good intentions, but ill effect.

I personally encouraged my Brother to buy 50000 shares at 95 cents last year and now he won't listen to me about averaging down 🤔..


Disclosure - I am very heavily invested in BrainChip and bought another 10000 shares yesterday..

I sleep like a baby at night, but if BrainChip doesn't "make it" my future will seriously look a bit like this..

View attachment 52053

Provided someone will be kind enough to let me park this beauty on their property 😬..



However, I will probably still look at it like this..

View attachment 52054
Having been proven wrong and surprised at how long it has taken BrainChip to achieve traction and much meaningful revenue to date, I am now loath to recommend it to others.
I am happy to talk it up and express my ongoing support for the tech and the Company strategy which makes sense to me and which I endorse.
But, having done so, and backed it in myself numerous times over the past few years, I always include the caveat of DYOR, only invest what is losable, have a longish term time frame (5 years) etc, etc.
Unfortunately I have learnt that most of my friends don't tend to actually do any of the above in any meaningful way and have no real understanding of the machinations of the ASX.
Instead they react much as one would do, to a tip on a horse at the races.
Expecting relatively instant gratification (a few months to a year or so) and given our share price decline over the past 12-18 months, they are mostly left disappointed.
So these days I do not bring up the topic and only engage if I think the person is both serious and diligent enough to do sufficient research to actually make up their own mind and decide for themselves whether such an investment is right for them.
I'm still in and still a believer but have diversified my portfolio somewhat as the world has changed dramatically over the past few years leading me to adopt a more prudent and defensive posture.
Whilst it has been shown that my expectations of a faster and more generalised uptake of the Akida solution was incorrect I certainly did not foresee the actuality and consequences of a global pandemic nor Putin's aggressive push into the Ukraine.
So, I have tempered my expectations and exposure somewhat at this time.......
Of course, whilst no one expects the Spanish Inquisition, I still remain in expectation of jaw dropping and chart bursting announcements to be revealed any and every day.
But 8 years plus in, I find my enthusiasm at present, somewhat curbed.
Bring It, BrainChip!
GLTAH
 
  • Like
  • Love
  • Fire
Reactions: 49 users

Wags

Regular
Having been proven wrong and surprised at how long it has taken BrainChip to achieve traction and much meaningful revenue to date, I am now loath to recommend it to others.
I am happy to talk it up and express my ongoing support for the tech and the Company strategy which makes sense to me and which I endorse.
But, having done so, and backed it in myself numerous times over the past few years, I always include the caveat of DYOR, only invest what is losable, have a longish term time frame (5 years) etc, etc.
Unfortunately I have learnt that most of my friends don't tend to actually do any of the above in any meaningful way and have no real understanding of the machinations of the ASX.
Instead they react much as one would do, to a tip on a horse at the races.
Expecting relatively instant gratification (a few months to a year or so) and given our share price decline over the past 12-18 months, they are mostly left disappointed.
So these days I do not bring up the topic and only engage if I think the person is both serious and diligent enough to do sufficient research to actually make up their own mind and decide for themselves whether such an investment is right for them.
I'm still in and still a believer but have diversified my portfolio somewhat as the world has changed dramatically over the past few years leading me to adopt a more prudent and defensive posture.
Whilst it has been shown that my expectations of a faster and more generalised uptake of the Akida solution was incorrect I certainly did not foresee the actuality and consequences of a global pandemic nor Putin's aggressive push into the Ukraine.
So, I have tempered my expectations and exposure somewhat at this time.......
Of course, whilst no one expects the Spanish Inquisition, I still remain in expectation of jaw dropping and chart bursting announcements to be revealed any and every day.
But 8 years plus in, I find my enthusiasm at present, somewhat curbed.
Bring It, BrainChip!
GLTAH
I think along the same lines Hoppy.
These days I just remind myself that at some point soonish, I feel, one of these many smoke signals will develop a flame, and then, it will spread like wildfire.
Im looking forward to a deckchair, Vino, and enjoying the show.

In the meantime, emotions roll as we watch the trailer.

Enjoy the holiday season Brner's, safety and good health to all. (Merry Xmas gets a YES from me)
Macca🥳
 
  • Like
  • Love
  • Fire
Reactions: 38 users
I think I may have suggested in 2022 or at some stage in 2023 what to look for from a technical perspective. And none of those conditions are yet to be met.

All you need to do is look at the chart history and look at what it looks like before making a good run. What do the preceding months and months look like before that move and note the time it takes to build into it.

You all know the FA to death..

Don't worry if you miss buying at 17c, 15c etc etc.. Wait for the trend to turn and then buy. That might even be 35-40c.. If this company makes 80-100mill in revenue in a few years assuming high profit like a PME-type at 50% nett profit, the market cap will be $9-10bill. So 30-40c is still a massive bargain.
"If this company makes 80-100mill in revenue in a few years assuming high profit like a PME-type at 50% nett profit, the market cap will be $9-10bill. So 30-40c is still a massive bargain"


I see the possibility of a much higher market capitalisation, when you consider profit margins on BrainChip's IP business model, are going to be in the region of 80 to 90% (being closer to 90 or slightly above).

Income, when it begins to flow will continue to increase over time, whereas costs, will remain "relatively" static (the Company will still grow).


The market was in much headier times, but AfterPay at one time had a market capitalisation of 33 billion dollars, with 500 million in revenue, but 550 million dollars in costs!

They were of course, also the "Market Darling" of the ASX at the time..

No chance of a Company as boring as BrainChip being that I guess 🙄..

I mean come on, they were a payment company!

We only do this totally independent artificial intelligence thing 😔..

Everybody knows, people don't like things that are "artificial"..
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Haha
  • Fire
Reactions: 26 users
Top Bottom