BRN Discussion Ongoing

Pmel

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manny100

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That's gold Proga 👍
So you think he's not stupid, but still an idiot 🤣

Schnitzel lover, isn't an attention seeking troll, in my opinion.

His agenda is simple, whether he is acting on his own accord, or for someone else.

He seeks to sow doubt and fear, for his own or others benefit.
So that people will sell and either he or other party's, can get their orders filled/stock returned.

He will say, that he has no intention of buying, until he sees a change in trend.
Although, by his own accounts, he has already been in and out several times.

The fact that he is not a complete simpleton, is why I reply to "some" of his posts, when he says things that are deliberately misleading, or untrue.

His post about ARM, having a "loss making" business model, which BrainChip had adopted, took me all of a 20 second Google search, to disprove.

He is smart enough to work that out, if he puts in even a "little" delving, before he posts.

But Truth/honesty, is not a good tool for him.
Psychologists say you post your personality. It always comes through. Pretty much says it all.
It's sad really for SL.
 
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Tothemoon24

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IMG_8201.jpeg



The Edge AI and Alliance team spent last week at CES, tracking the latest technologies for edge AI and machine perception. We had a chance to catch up with Member companies, including STMicroelectronics, BrainChip , Microchip Technology Inc., e-con Systems, NXP Semiconductors and Cadence Design Systems.

If you missed out on this year’s CES, don’t worry: you can see the best edge AI and machine perception technologies at the 2024 Embedded Vision Summit — May 21-23 in Santa Clara, California! Register now: https://lnkd.in/dpYRZSC

Pictured:

- Narayanan Rajan of ST demonstrates ST's VB1940 image sensor used with ST's transmissive diffraction mask and Airy3D's 3D software technology to enable depth sensing along with standard image capture from a single 2D image sensor.
- Todd Viera of Brainchip demonstrates depth-sensor based low-power face recognition using the BrainChip AKD1000 reference SoC and the onsemi AF0310 time-of-flight depth sensor.
- Pulin Desai of Cadence demos a Kneron KL720 chip incorporating the Cadence Tensilica Vision P6 DSP running YOLO v5 at low power.
- Microchip’s Krishnakumar demonstrates their VectorBlox Accelerator SDK with an extremely low-power non-volatile (non-RAM-based) FPGA.
- Suganthi Sugumaran of e-con Systems shows off their Full HD GMSL2 Global Shutter Camera for self-checkout, which can capture high-speed, high-quality images—crucial for reliable self-service retail applications.

IMG_8202.jpeg
 
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TECH

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Hi @TECH, I agree with your sense of BRN having turned the corner, but my view is that: we won't know that for sure until we see consistent and growing monies in the 4Cs. The eco system is becoming more compelling and is growing very fast lately, and with some very exciting names, so that all continues to build an underlying belief. So I'm thinking that the next (nearly due) 4C probably won't see much revenue and we know that there are no new contracts, however my hope is that we begin to see something in the March Qtrly

I have strong respect for your belief and steadfastness, and on the whole am very appreciative of what you bring here.

Excitement is something that I feel, and I like to be excited, however at times excitement can simply be the front runner for a let down, so I watch my excitement levels particularly with regard to investments, and I certainly watch very carefully the "thing" of getting attached to outcomes, not saying I've got that lifetime challenge down, but I'm playing at being mindful there.

While the education grows here, none of us long termers knew when we initially began building positions that the company would be shifting to an IP sales model, and the extended timeframes that this move would entail, even now many newer investors still do not understand the process and how it is impacting income for BRN. So income has become a slow burn, this has not been helped by the macro economic environment we now find enveloping the world, and war never helps anything, management have played that card and it's obvious it hasn't helped.

I have mentioned this before, and I will say it again, I am not so sanguine or bullish as some here about global economic prospects going forward, that doesn't mean I am all that negative, but a big fascination of mine (and has long been) is with regard to political, historic and socio/economic research, and there is "stuff" going on out there that concerns me, and I am certainly mindful of it - I read widely and a lot. Primarily I want success and I hope and pray (again) for good things and bountiful returns for those here who are invested.

So this concern is not so much with the disruptive tech which BRN is working on taking to the world, but rather that things here on earth don't get too wacky (messed up) before BRN/Akidas can get widespread traction out there in the world of business/commerce, that is another timeframe I look at.

I'm confident in what BRN are doing and I am well enough researched to know that the tech is outstanding. The company have certainly made mistakes, and some of that has been /is very annoying to me, but I think they are building the basis for success into the future (but as I said there are real concerns there IMO). On the management front if I were at the AGM I would have questions about their failure to use the ASX platform to announce a plethora of worthwhile information to Australian investors. I am well aware others will have different questions

There have been mistakes, there has also clearly been very good progress, I don't expect perfect, but as Sean said he should be judged on results, and I would also take that as: he would therefore be responsible for what has or hasn't happened.

With regard to Peter I remain a big fan (although it is IMO unfortunate that he made the "explosive growth" remark, but I think at the time certain external economic factors had not taken hold) Peter has invented something that could change the world, which would make him a person of some genius, he has for a long time come across as a humble man of high integrity. But I wouldn't know if money was a driving passion for him, and to be quite honest I hope that it is. So I don't agree with your sentiment @TECH, with regard to "and there within lies the problem for many". I am here to make money and am totally comfortable with that sentiment.

I don't love BRN, but I have not sold a single share (and am thinking of buying more, it's a few years, but maybe I will) and at present I remain in the green, however I do have empathy for holders here who are taking a beating (i really think that the Mercedes reveal was unfortunate, and created unrealistic expectations and set many retail investors up for bad manipulation by malevolent actors). Having said that I don't like some who come here wanting to be serial whingers who apparently take pleasure in slagging off other people here who continue to do excellent research and remain strong in their investment sentiment. That kind of behaviour is what losers get into. If you have something to say, yes say it, but needing to say it several times a day, every day, means you have most likely got.....well good luck with it.

At the end of the day we all pushed the buy button, and as far as I am concerned, that is where the ultimate responsibility lies - observe what is moving inside and if you need, or want to, take action. And as you might say Tech have a good evening.

Good Morning,

Thanks for your excellent post, nicely balanced opinions.

With regards my quoted comment, it, as stated, was referring to the constant moaners on this forum, always the victim, why me ? who can
I blame for my decision (choice) making, let's blame Sean and Co etc...you don't fall into that category from my observations.

Whereas the moaners, I believe are "totally driven by money" which I personally believe is "there within lies the problem," we are all investing
here and wish to see some sort of return on that investment, but when it consumes your soul day in day out like a gambler it can't be healthy
for your overall wellbeing to the point it effects your mood and everyone around you (forum) with this constant negative attitude.

Anyway, I believe that we both have an excellent stock that will deliver when the time is 100% right.

Kind regards.....Tech :)
 
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Terroni2105

Founding Member
nice Arm post on LinkedIn a couple Hours ago 😄

1705693967089.jpeg



 
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charles2

Regular
Huge up day in US markets...especially tech.

You know the saying....rising tide lifts all boats....(except submarines)

Time for Brainchip to surface and get the screw turning.
 
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A question here @Fact Finder, I have asked this here previously but am not aware of anyone answering my question, so I ask again.

Do we know who was responsible for the vote against the remuneration report specifically, as I understand it there would not have been enough retail people present at the AGM to support that vote, so my thinking it must have been via a lot of retail proxies.

Usually from what I have observed with regard to remuneration strikes, for retail investors to be coherent enough to support a strike there needs to be widespread dissatisfaction and some activist investors who promote and disseminate info to promote said strike, I am not aware of any such being widely discussed at that time, either here or HC.

Or could it have been an institutional holder(s), who had unknown motives. I have asked you because I believe it has been mentioned that you were present at the meeting.

You also state that the top 1000 shareholders own 70% of SOI, so 51% of votes could be garnered from top 1000, we know PVDM & AM have significant holdings but not enough to cover 51%, and I am curious about the intents of some institutional holders because of a pattern of block voting at AGMs. I have no definitive info to support this whatsoever, but there is a pattern which I illustrate below
2023 remuneration vote below

View attachment 54699

Further I am now going back to the 2022 AGM where there was a large block of votes which opposed the re-election of PVDM to the Board. This shocked me at the time and I believe others here felt the same way, Peter had been installed as acting CEO after the resignation Lou Di Nardo in March 2021, but stepped down from that role in Nov 2021 when Sean Hehir was appointed to that role.

So again this was another significant block of votes which must have been an organized retail group, or powerful organic retail reaction against PVDM, who to all intents and purposes was a respected Board member and CTO. Or was it an institutional actor?
Below is 2022 vote targeting PVDM


View attachment 54696

I am also aware that there was another significant block of votes opposed to the remuneration package at the 2021 AGM, so there has been ongoing significant blocks of votes opposing remuneration for some time.
2021 vote below

View attachment 54697

So if anyone else other than Fact Finder has any thinking about these consistent and significant blocks of votes at our AGMs, I would appreciate feedback you may have. I have no trust whatsoever with regard to the ASX and their total lack of respect or regulation toward the fair treatment of retail market participants, or the absence of any apparent disposition on their part to prevent corrupt and malicious SP manipulation.
Hi McHale
All I have is a theory. Go back to the beginnings and who created the company. Who still holds large very large parcels from that time. Who liked to be on centre stage with Peter and Anil. Think about what the company looked like after the arrival of Antonio and Sean and the subtle power shift and who might have experienced relevance deprivation and needed to kick a few shins to say don’t ignore me.

No evidence at all just a theory but ask yourself apart from a muscle flex what was the practical effect of the vote. As far as I could tell it changed nothing.

My opinion only DYOR
Fact Finder
 
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wilzy123

Founding Member
nice Arm post on LinkedIn a couple Hours ago 😄

View attachment 54731



ARM pumping BRN to its 435,036 LinkedIn followers is ok with me.
 
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Chris B

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Talks about Edge/On Device AI

WoW. Great video to watch.. Thanks... How does that saying go... 🍎 Apple one day, will keep the down rampers at bay 🍎
 
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Mt09

Regular
Hi McHale
All I have is a theory. Go back to the beginnings and who created the company. Who still holds large very large parcels from that time. Who liked to be on centre stage with Peter and Anil. Think about what the company looked like after the arrival of Antonio and Sean and the subtle power shift and who might have experienced relevance deprivation and needed to kick a few shins to say don’t ignore me.

No evidence at all just a theory but ask yourself apart from a muscle flex what was the practical effect of the vote. As far as I could tell it changed nothing.

My opinion only DYOR
Fact Finder
Mitro
 
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Jasonk

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Out of interest, has anyone found out if the Samsung24 out in Feb can use AI photo editing without an internet connection, unlike current attempts that are sending the image to cloud? I have had a google but not much luck.

I think that it flys under radar as most people would always have reception but not going to cloud would be a leap forward.
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
Memories light the corners of my mind. 🎶

Originally Posted by Daimler Media Center 4 Jan 2022

EXTRACT ONLY


View attachment 54057



Funny that, because in the CLA Class it's all about efficiency too.

I wonder what Gerrit Ecke meant when he said the CLA Class carries the genes of the Vision EQXX?

View attachment 54060



View attachment 54059

Speaking of efficiency and the CLA Class, here's a Reuters article dated 1 September 2023 citing CEO Mercedes-Benz, Ola Kaellenius, who talks about the additional "challenge of offsetting the power consumption of the high-powered Nvidia chips that will be used to control driver assistance, large infotainment screens and other systems in the CLA and future EVs, he said."

The articles goes on to state that Mercedes engineers have been testing ways to improve EV efficiency with the Vision EQXX.

If this doesn't resolve any doubts of our involvement, then I don't what will, especially when you think about it in light of the article posted by Daimler Media Centre 4 Jan 2022 and more recently Gerrit Ecke's Linkedin post (as above) .

In my opinion, the only two ways this can't involve us would be 1) if NVIDIAs chips were to magically stop being such massive power guzzlers or 2) if a neuromorphic solution other than ours had been incorporated, which is highly unlikely given we are the only one commercially available.

🥳🥳🥳


EXTRACT
Screenshot 2024-01-20 at 10.38.45 am.png




EXTRACT ONLY Originally Posted by Daimler Media Center 4 Jan 2022
Screenshot 2024-01-20 at 11.15.51 am.png
 
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nice Arm post on LinkedIn a couple Hours ago 😄

View attachment 54731


LOVE IT!

But aren't ARM a loss making business 🤔..
 
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IloveLamp

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Huge up day in US markets...especially tech.

You know the saying....rising tide lifts all boats....(except submarines)

Time for Brainchip to surface and get the screw turning.
"Time for Brainchip "to surface" and get the screw turning"

Are you saying "BrainChip's" a submarine?

Because, you also said submarines were excepted? 🤔..
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
Speaking of efficiency and the CLA Class, here's a Reuters article dated 1 September 2023 citing CEO Mercedes-Benz, Ola Kaellenius, who talks about the additional "challenge of offsetting the power consumption of the high-powered Nvidia chips that will be used to control driver assistance, large infotainment screens and other systems in the CLA and future EVs, he said."

The articles goes on to state that Mercedes engineers have been testing ways to improve EV efficiency with the Vision EQXX.

If this doesn't resolve any doubts of our involvement, then I don't what will, especially when you think about it in light of the article posted by Daimler Media Centre 4 Jan 2022 and more recently Gerrit Ecke's Linkedin post (as above) .

In my opinion, the only two ways this can't involve us would be 1) if NVIDIAs chips were to magically stop being such massive power guzzlers or 2) if a neuromorphic solution other than ours had been incorporated, which is highly unlikely given we are the only one commercially available.

🥳🥳🥳


EXTRACT
View attachment 54739



EXTRACT ONLY Originally Posted by Daimler Media Center 4 Jan 2022
View attachment 54738


And here's another 4 year old article which is worth reading as it also touches on the high energy consumption of NVIDIA's chips and how detrimental this is to the vehicles range. It also leads me to suspect that Mercedes and most likely NVIDIA were already well aware of us and what we could bring to the table at that point in time.

Mercedes-Benz & Nvidia Partner On Autonomous Driving — Numerous Thoughts & Questions​

4 years agoAlex Voigt

Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News!

The CEOs of Mercedes-Benz and Nvidia announced today at a press event that they were launching a partnership for a, quoting Ola Källenius, “groundbreaking, software-defined, high-performance computer architecture for driving assistance and autonomous drive. That’s the next generation that will go into the Mercedes fleet targeting a launch sometime towards the end of 2024.”
In a nutshell, Ola Källenius and Jensen Huang announced that they were together building a central vehicle operating architecture and its operating system to allow over-the-air updates for the often-mentioned S-Class, to enable a subscription-based business model. They explained that it will allow the vehicles to improve over time and that they will build on and offer with that architecture different services, including driving assist features and fully autonomous driving in about 5 years from now.
Everything that Mercedes-Benz and Nvidia presented today could have been words from Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla*, 7 years ago in 2013. That is not bad, just late. If all works out as announced, and that is a big if, Mercedes-Benz would launch first functionality for truck hub-to-hub transportation 10 years after Tesla, in late 2024. Today, in 2020, my Tesla in front of my house already delivers most if not all of what Källenius and Huang described, and although I welcome the partnership and approach, it is not only late — but maybe too late.
What Ola Källenius did not explain at the event today is why BMW, Bosch, and Audi, all companies that previously announced similar partnerships with Mercedes-Benz, decided not to be a part of the announcement today. What was also not explained is how Daimler intends to develop software functionality alone that just a few months ago it tried to build as a partner with VW as well as with BMW. And neither of those two competitors apparently knew about the talks Källenius was having with the other.
Finally, it was also not explained how Mercedes-Benz intends to develop autonomous driving software that needs data to train self-learning algorithms without having any real-life driving data yet or even a fleet of vehicles with a required set of cameras and sensors to collect such data. To be honest, the partnership announced today reveals that Mercedes-Benz is more than 10 years behind, and while their intentions may be good, I believe their timeline is not realistic and is missing critical components to attract the necessary talent to build a working solution — including building, as confirmed by Källenius, missing hardware components like sensors.

Just 4 days ago, Mercedes-Benz and BMW announced that they were stopping their planned cooperation and partnership to develop driving-assist systems up to autonomous driving Level 4. An explanation we hear quite often these days was given by both companies — that cost factors and the economic crisis caused by Covid-19 were the root cause why the cooperation was ending. If high costs are the driving factor, is Mercedes-Benz now better off developing everything alone (or just with Nvidia)?

Costs, but also lack of relevant technology and experienced resources, are without a doubt some of the many issues German automakers have when trying to promise new autonomous technology.
“It takes more and more money, more and more software resources, and more and more hardware know-how,” Waymo CEO John Krafcik has said.
It does not make it more convincing, though, that Audi in 2019 was a part of the partnership discussions too but faded out of it late last year. Audi announced in April 2020 that the new Audi A8 flagship vehicle would come without the promised Level 3 autonomous driving capabilities, despite marketing efforts that had hyped it. Hans-Joachim Rothenpieler, Head of R&D and Audi Board Member, announced that the functionality would not to be available and would be left out because of regulatory issues.
Rothenspieler explained that the lack of uniform international legal regulations, in particular the question of liability in the event of an accident often being unclear, was the problem. That sounds again like something that has nothing to do with a lack of functionality for Level 3 autonomy for the Audi A8. Obviously, other automakers are willing to deal with those regulatory challenges, like Mercedes-Benz. Why can’t Audi? Peter Mertens, former Head of R&D at Audi, said on that topic in an interview in June 2020 that his successors may have promised “a little bit too much.”
The CEO of Audi since April 2020, Markus Duesmann, announced 4 days ago that he is taking over the R&D role, and Rothenspieler announced in return that he will leave Audi after working 34 years for Volkswagen Group. Herbert Diess, Volkswagen Group’s CEO, wrote a friendly goodbye PR letter, but it’s known that he brought Duesmann into VW from BMW and promoted him to the R&D role. Draw your own conclusions about that sequence of events.

The original plan of the 3 German automakers — Audi, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz — was to announce the autonomous driving partnership in September 2019 at the IAA conference. Now, 9 months later, just Mercedes-Benz is left. Also, Källenius mentioned that the Bosch partnership to develop robotaxis is also on hold now.
The objective of the partnership last year was, “to jointly develop the next generation of technology for driver assistance systems and automated driving on motorways as well as automated parking functions (each up to Level 4).” The 2019 plan was to deliver the functionality for customers in 2024. Does that somehow sound similar to you about what has been announced today?


Even more interesting is that the talks that started under former Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche and former BMW CEO Harald Krüger may have been negatively affected after it leaked out that Daimler was in secret talks with VW about software cooperation too. BMW and VW have a relationship that can be best described with the word hostile.
The irritation from BMW, to use a polite word, was severe. Therefore, it is not a surprise that Mercedes-Benz talking with two competitors about the same cooperation secretly in parallel did not create credibility or trust.
Regardless of how we judge what German automakers have done so far, one part is very clear: without functionality that allows more than just basic driving assist support, consumers have a strong reason to turn away from a German vehicle and choose one that offers a reliable solution, like Tesla is offering today.
Since I’ve used the available Full Self Driving capabilities of my Tesla Model 3 about 98% of the time I’ve been driving on the German Autobahn for a year, including automatic lane changes at a top speed of 150 km/h, I may be an exception but can confirm from experience that it works very well. The Tesla Autopilot system even saved me in many situations in which, if I would have been driving myself, I probably would have reacted too late.
For safety, as well as relaxed driving, I herewith testify that never in my life do I intend to buy a vehicle that does not have similar functionality. In other words, if the German automakers won’t be able to deliver on their promises, then I will rule them out even if they offer a nice electric vehicle.
Since Daimler announced the new S-Class will have Level 3 capabilities and BMW said it will have them in the iNext, there are at least two German automakers with announcements that I am looking forward to. In any case, the self-learning algorithms used in those systems need to learn, and they can’t do that in a virtual or simulated environment, only with vehicles driving on real roads.

Also, the known energy consumption of the best Nvidia automotive chips is very high and this will have a negative impact on the vehicle range. To achieve the required critical balance between hardware and software mandates tailor-made solutions that are hard to achieve with a supplier like Nvidia that develops systems and chips for many automotive companies with different hardware, not tailor-made for Mercedes-Benz.

Nvidia may have the best available chips for processing and computing data but this is a part that needs to play perfectly well with other parts in a complex system to achieve the goal defined by many requirements. In the gaming industry that Nvidia is coming from, the energy usage never played an important role, but it does with electric vehicles. If Mercedes-Benz intends to develop autonomous driving functionality for fossil fuel vehicles, though, like the new S-Class, it makes another strategic mistake

Caption from Daimler press release: “Mercedes-Benz and NVIDIA planto build a new software-defined computing architecture for ADAS that will enable state-of-the-art automated driving, to be deployed across Mercedes-Benz’ Future Fleet.” Image courtesy Daimler.

Vertical integration could change that supplier-related issue, but the German automakers didn’t even try up till now to become more vertically integrated and have lost critical time in their continuous ongoing negotiations in recent years that led nowhere.

Having driving data collected is critical as well, and although some test vehicles are seen from time to time in Germany, that does not scale up to the gradual approach from Tesla, which releases more functionality over time and step by step, like traffic light recognition and then going through a green light without confirmation. To have hundreds of thousands of vehicles driving and collecting data in all of the diverse situations of the world is another must-have component a Mercedes-Benz will need to build for many years, but as Källenius said today, they have not even decided on sensors yet. Without that decision, it is hard to imagine how they could line up a timeline to be feature complete by the end of 2024.

For me, as a German, what matters most is that I experienced Tesla Autopilot in the last 12 months and found it to be safer compared to me driving on my own, and I have done that for 35 years and never had an accident or incident — people call me a very safe driver.
In that respect, and it’s my subjective point of view but supported by hard facts and data that Tesla does release, Autopilot is so many years ahead that it may have achieved escape velocity already.

With regards to full autonomy, Källenius announced that truck hub-to-hub transport is their main use case they want to start with. One reason for that could be the latest announcement from Tesla that it is starting production of its Semi truck soon, which with its self-driving technology and lower TCO (total cost of ownership) per km/mile, may cut deep into the order book and demand for Mercedes-Benz commercial vehicles. Robotaxis in an urban environment he sees coming at a later point in time, which means a passenger car from Mercedes-Benz or Daimler with autonomous driving technology won’t be seen before 2024.

Caption from Daimler press release: “Mercedes-Benz, one of the largest manufacturers of premium passenger cars, and NVIDIA, the global leader in accelerated computing, plan to enter into a cooperation to create a revolutionary in-vehicle computing system and AI computing infrastructure. Starting in 2024, this will be rolled out across the fleet of next-generation Mercedes-Benz vehicles, enabling them with upgradable automated driving functions. Working together, the companies plan to develop the most sophisticated and advanced computing architecture ever deployed in an automobile. The new software-defined architecture will be built on NVIDIA DRIVETM and will be standard in Mercedes-Benz’ next-generation fleet, enabling state-of-the-art automated driving functionalities.” Image courtesy Daimler.

What I heard today is another one of those announcements that German automakers make to keep word of mouth going, with many promises to develop solutions that often never see daylight.

I hope to be wrong, but what has been presented to me today did not fit together.
*Disclaimer: I am a Tesla Shareholder
 
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Speaking of efficiency and the CLA Class, here's a Reuters article dated 1 September 2023 citing CEO Mercedes-Benz, Ola Kaellenius, who talks about the additional "challenge of offsetting the power consumption of the high-powered Nvidia chips that will be used to control driver assistance, large infotainment screens and other systems in the CLA and future EVs, he said."

The articles goes on to state that Mercedes engineers have been testing ways to improve EV efficiency with the Vision EQXX.

If this doesn't resolve any doubts of our involvement, then I don't what will, especially when you think about it in light of the article posted by Daimler Media Centre 4 Jan 2022 and more recently Gerrit Ecke's Linkedin post (as above) .

In my opinion, the only two ways this can't involve us would be 1) if NVIDIAs chips were to magically stop being such massive power guzzlers or 2) if a neuromorphic solution other than ours had been incorporated, which is highly unlikely given we are the only one commercially available.

🥳🥳🥳


EXTRACT
View attachment 54739



EXTRACT ONLY Originally Posted by Daimler Media Center 4 Jan 2022
View attachment 54738
Hi Bravo
Brilliant research.

“When deployed at scale” - Mercedes Benz

“Everywhere” - Edge Impulse

My opinion only DYOR
Fact Finder
 
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HopalongPetrovski

I'm Spartacus!


"Unseen images of code breaking computer that helped win WW2.​

GCHQ has released never before seen images of Colossus, the UK's secret code-breaking computer credited with helping the Allies win World War Two.
The intelligence agency is publishing them to mark the 80th anniversary of the device's invention.
It says they "shed new light" on the "genesis and workings of Colossus", which is considered by many to be the first digital computer.
Its existence was kept largely secret until the early 2000s."

I wonder if the 'confidential' usage of our Akida tech by the security and military services will take as long to be revealed. 🤣
I don't mind if you're using it guys to keep ahead of the commies, but ffs, how about paying us!!! hmmmm??? 🤣
 
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Colorado23

Regular
Im surprised to hear some speak negatively of Brainchips choice to follow in ARM's footsteps ie buisness model. I for one think that our affiliation with ARM will eventually be our largest revenue stream. Its hard to conduct research on the topic of chip manufacturers without hearing about ARM and how their competitors such as QUALCOMM and AMD are all employing ARM's designs.


As TECH states, 2025 may be the year that sees our partnerships with ARM, Intel Labs etc come to fruition via mobile devices(phones/laptops).
Good luck to all
 
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Colorado23

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