BRN Discussion Ongoing

Hi FMF,

Looks like your suspicions were correct!

"Arquimea has deployed Akida with a Prophesee camera on a drone to detect distressed swimmers and surfers in the ocean helping lifeguards scale their services for large beach areas, opting for an event-based computing solution for its superior efficiency and consistently high-quality results."

I wonder if this has anything to do with the recent hiring of Finn Ryder to Development Representative at BrainChip, since he was a Senior Lifeguard and First Responder for the City of Huntington Beach for 5 years prior to joining us?


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Awesome. Nice pick up and thanks posting it @Bravo
 
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In the light of the above LinkedIn post by our CTO Tony Lewis 👆🏻, the recent hire of Finn Ryder is of course rather puzzling, to say the least…
I am sure he is a very nice guy, energetic, ambitious and all, but I do wonder what exactly made him stand out from the sea of applicants (provided there was one) and why our company didn’t pick someone with a more technical background and/or several years of experience in sales within the semiconductor industry, which is usually required as a minimum qualification for other open sales positions with BrainChip.
After all, our IP licenses are currently not exactly selling like hot cakes…

However, if our management were to list BRN at a US stock exchange without major good news preceding the move, we’d definitely benefit from Finn Ryder’s lifesaving and first responder skills to rescue us from drowning… 🛟


https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-447178

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I noticed Finn Ryder has since changed the wording of his self-description under his profile picture and also his job title from “Sales Development Representative” to “Sales Operations Specialist”:

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It may not mean anything, but I also noticed he recently liked a couple of posts by a company called Surfline\Wavetrak that has a global network of surf cameras and is headquartered in Huntington Beach, CA, where he has been a lifeguard for almost six years.




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If you were to believe the shorters & downrampers then someone with first responder and ocean lifeguard skills could come in handy on a sinking ship :ROFLMAO:
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
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I can't take any credit. It was actually @wilzy123 who found it.
Well done Wilzy 👍 (much nicer than my original response)..

Nothing at all showing up on the net with keywords..

This "news" is pretty well hidden..
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
Well done Wilzy 👍 (much nicer than my original response)..

Nothing at all showing up on the net with keywords..

This "news" is pretty well hidden..


It comes up if you look under the search term "prophesee".


Screenshot 2025-03-20 at 10.17.33 am.png
 
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It comes up if you look under the search term "prophesee".


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Yeah, but not on the Web..

I tried "Prophesee" "BrainChip" "Akida" and "Arquimea" combinations and nothing comes up recent, or otherwise..
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
Another "neuromorphic" start-up.

Screenshot 2025-03-20 at 10.31.07 am.png


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Frangipani

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Hope Anthony can say the same about our CEO role as well.

May be sales team at brainchip thinks differently from technology team
After all we the best in R&D but below average in sales.
Dyor

At least one former BRN employee appears to be of the opinion that Sean Hehir is not the ideal choice for the CEO job (and I strongly suspect he is not the only one):


7069955C-F30F-4BEB-917F-4F9669D29ACB.jpeg



As I mentioned earlier this month, Anup Vanarse recently moved back to Australia and now works for BrainEye (https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-452508). When I found out he had left BrainChip last year without having another job lined up, only six months after relocating from Perth to California, I suspected personal tensions to be the reason for his departure:

“The fact that he left what looks like a secure job without another one lined up (except for his ongoing side hustle as a remote AI/ML Advisor for NZ-based Scentian Bio, which presumably doesn’t pay the bills) suggests to me he was unhappy in his previous position, possibly due to personal tensions? (Or someone wasn’t happy with him and asked him to leave?)”
(https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-435564)

And in my eyes, a number of his LinkedIn comments/likes since then appear to confirm my suspicion. Of course there will be those who’ll just shrug their shoulders and say nah, it’s nothing, just the voice of a disgruntled ex-employee, but I believe we should listen up when someone who is evidently still highly respected by many BrainChip staff members past and present (look at all the people congratulating him on his new position with BrainEye) gives posts like these a thumbs-up:

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Diogenese

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Hi FMF,

Looks like your suspicions were correct!

"Arquimea has deployed Akida with a Prophesee camera on a drone to detect distressed swimmers and surfers in the ocean helping lifeguards scale their services for large beach areas, opting for an event-based computing solution for its superior efficiency and consistently high-quality results."

I wonder if this has anything to do with the recent hiring of Finn Ryder to Development Representative at BrainChip, since he was a Senior Lifeguard and First Responder for the City of Huntington Beach for 5 years prior to joining us?


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"Finn Ryder" as surfer - there's a bit of vocational onomatopoeia.
 
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7für7

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Diogenese

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Hi FMF,

Looks like your suspicions were correct!

"Arquimea has deployed Akida with a Prophesee camera on a drone to detect distressed swimmers and surfers in the ocean helping lifeguards scale their services for large beach areas, opting for an event-based computing solution for its superior efficiency and consistently high-quality results."

I wonder if this has anything to do with the recent hiring of Finn Ryder to Development Representative at BrainChip, since he was a Senior Lifeguard and First Responder for the City of Huntington Beach for 5 years prior to joining us?


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... and shark detection.
 
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rgupta

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Maybe the company haven’t had any luck with a person who is skilled in this selling the tech, so maybe they trying a different approach.
That is the best one. 🤣🤣🤣
 

Frangipani

Top 20
So with the BrainChip - Prophesee - ARQUIMEA axis of vision confirmed, I guess there’s a good chance, then, that we might have gotten a mention in this November 2024 conference paper I shared on Friday, co-authored by Hélder Rodríguez from ARQUIMEA Research Center? 😊

After all, we now know that ARQUIMEA’s event-based vision drone solution serves “to detect distressed swimmers and surfers in the ocean helping lifeguards scale their services for large beach areas”.

1B247256-8751-4095-B6AC-2E478B6ACE33.jpeg


The link https://portalcientifico.upm.es/en/ipublic/item/10317217 still worked on Friday, but no longer does.

Here is another one:
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10797412 (abstract only)
 
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Frangipani

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I’ve always loved this project on the ARQUIMEA website: a real-time detection system of sperm whale blows using thermal imaging. 🐋
Hopefully our technology can one day also help save more of these majestic ocean creatures…



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DK6161

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At least one former BRN employee appears to be of the opinion that Sean Hehir is not the ideal choice for the CEO job (and I strongly suspect he is not the only one):


View attachment 79707


As I mentioned earlier this month, Anup Vanarse recently moved back to Australia and now works for BrainEye (https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-452508). When I found out he had left BrainChip last year without having another job lined up, only six months after relocating from Perth to California, I suspected personal tensions to be the reason for his departure:

“The fact that he left what looks like a secure job without another one lined up (except for his ongoing side hustle as a remote AI/ML Advisor for NZ-based Scentian Bio, which presumably doesn’t pay the bills) suggests to me he was unhappy in his previous position, possibly due to personal tensions? (Or someone wasn’t happy with him and asked him to leave?)”
(https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-435564)

And in my eyes, a number of his LinkedIn comments/likes since then appear to confirm my suspicion. Of course there will be those who’ll just shrug their shoulders and say nah, it’s nothing, just the voice of a disgruntled ex-employee, but I believe we should listen up when someone who is evidently still highly respected by many BrainChip staff members past and present (look at all the people congratulating him on his new position with BrainEye) gives posts like these a thumbs-up:

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Maybe this bloke is hard to manage.
We used to have people like that working for us and glad they left.
 
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Frangipani

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Hey @DingoBorat,

here is another humanoid robot video for your collection!
Meet Surgie, the first ever humanoid surgeon, performing direct clinical tasks through teleoperation.


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Hey @DingoBorat,

here is another humanoid robot video for your collection!
Meet Surgie, the first ever humanoid surgeon, performing direct clinical tasks through teleoperation.


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I reckon I'd rather have a "medical intern" working on me directly, than that shaky thing! 😛

That's only "G1" though..
G3 to G5, most likely won't need the teleoperation and will be smooth as silk..

I thought they were only going to replace boring, mundane and dangerous tasks 🤔..
 
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Tothemoon24

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Intel Aims For AI Edge As NVIDIA Faces Price Critique​

Recent developments showcase Intel's strategies amidst pricing concerns over NVIDIA's GPUs and market competition.​

Intel has recently announced a series of initiatives aimed at accelerating the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) at the edge, marking a significant push to simplify the integration of AI with existing infrastructure across various industries, including retail, manufacturing, smart cities, and media. The technology giant unveiled the new Intel AI Edge system, Edge AI suite, and Open Edge platform initiative on March 19, 2025, underlining a commitment to enhancing the efficiency and performance of AI applications deployed in real-world scenarios.

Dan Rodriguez, Intel's Corporate Vice President and General Manager of the Edge Computing Group, expressed enthusiasm about the potential for AI integration in existing workflows. "I'm enthusiastic about expanding AI utilization in existing infrastructure and workflows at the edge," Rodriguez stated, highlighting the strong demand for AI-driven solutions that cater to distinct business needs.

According to industry analysts at Gartner, the landscape of data processing is poised for transformation, with predictions indicating that by the end of 2025, fifty percent of enterprise-managed data will be processed outside traditional data centers or clouds. This shift, particularly driven by the integration of AI technologies, is expected to be significant, as companies increasingly rely on data processing at the edge.

Further, it is anticipated that by 2026, at least half of all edge computing deployments will incorporate machine learning, emphasizing the growing importance of AI in data handling and decision-making processes within organizations.

Intel is currently positioned to leverage its extensive footprint in edge deployments; it has over 100,000 real-world edge implementations in collaboration with partners, many of which capitalize on AI functionalities. The new AI technologies are crafted to address multiple industry-specific challenges, underscoring Intel's commitment to enhancing performance standards in edge AI applications.

In a notable development on the following day, March 20, 2025, former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger issued a biting critique of NVIDIA's pricing structure for its AI GPUs during an interview. He asserted that the current pricing models are "overpriced by 10,000 times the cost required for AI inference," a claim that raises eyebrows around the industry and reflects deep concerns over the affordability of implementing AI solutions.

Gelsinger attributed NVIDIA's recent success to sheer luck rather than a sound strategic framework, suggesting that the company's advancements in AI were more incidental than planned. He emphasized, "AI is in inference, highlighting the need for optimized hardware," pointing to the necessity for improved cost structures as the AI market rapidly evolves.

The discussion surrounding NVIDIA's AI GPU pricing cannot be taken lightly. These GPUs, designed for data center applications, are traded in the tens of thousands of dollars range, making them significantly pricier compared to more affordable specialized hardware developed for inference tasks. Gelsinger's remarks suggest not only industry-wide implications for hardware production but also a serious reassessment of market competitiveness.

Despite Intel’s efforts in the AI domain, the company has faced considerable challenges in maintaining its competitive edge. Recently, it discontinued development of the 'Falcon Shores' AI chip and is now narrowing its focus on the 'Jaguar Shores' initiative. This strategic pivot reflects a recognition of the fierce competition present in the AI semiconductor market, wherein companies like NVIDIA and AMD are currently leading with innovative AI solutions.

Intel’s 'Gaudi' series also aims to deliver cost-effective performance. However, critics argue that its performance falls short when compared to powerhouses like NVIDIA's 'Hopper' and AMD's 'Instinct' lines. This competitive disadvantage is causing Intel to reevaluate its offerings in a landscape that increasingly prioritizes computational efficiency alongside performance metrics.

Looking ahead, Intel is pinning its hopes on the Jaguar Shores line as it seeks to re-establish a foothold in the AI market. However, skepticism remains regarding enterprises’ willingness to pivot away from NVIDIA’s established ecosystem, which is bolstered by its proprietary development environment, CUDA. This ecosystem has proven to be a powerful leverage point, facilitating varying AI applications beyond mere hardware comparisons.

As the industry navigates these turbulent waters, Gelsinger’s statements highlight the urgency for Intel to not only build technologically superior products but also foster a comprehensive ecosystem that includes robust software support and greater cost efficiency. Should the demand for optimized hardware solutions for AI inference grow, as Gelsinger suggests it might, Intel could regain its footing in a rapidly shifting market.

Ultimately, the future of AI market competition appears to be in a constant state of flux, characterized by emerging technologies and changing consumer expectations. The initiatives launched by Intel, coupled with the critical insights shared by industry veterans, make for an intriguing narrative, but the company's ability to adapt and innovate will determine its success in this burgeoning field.
 
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Frangipani

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When is LDA selling? As by the look of things it’s started already and will probably stop once the sell side evens up with the buy side again. Oh the sorters must love LDA so they can close there positions 🥲
 
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