BRN Discussion Ongoing

7für7

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Surely we gotta get some traction now after what’s been out there today.


Yeah for sure … traction like this…

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FiveBucks

Regular
Thanks mate
Mate you are setting yourself up for disappointment.

It's an event to promote the switch 2. Purely marketing.

They are not going to talk specs. Nintendo never do. And even if Akida is inside (long shot), they are not going to tell anyone tonight.
 
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7für7

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BMW is dead to me for good… Then they all complain—sanction China, China is evil, this and that… but in the end, they choose Chinese AI. All the hate just to keep the ordinary citizen in the right mood. But I bet they think it’s an Arabic company… 🤡

 
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Frangipani

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No doubt, the Frontgrade Gaisler team will be spruiking the GR801 at the upcoming 40th Space Symposium in Colorado Springs.

By the way, it was a picture taken at the Frontgrade booth during that very expo last year (and posted on LinkedIn by FG), in which I spotted Jonathan Tapson first working for us (https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-418645).

Since he lives in Colorado (although in Telluride, which isn’t exactly around the corner but still much closer to Colorado Springs compared to where our BrainChip staff in Southern California are based), I wouldn’t be surprised if he attended the Space Symposium again this year.

Especially since Frontgrade Gaisler won’t be our only partner there:
ANT61 CEO Michail Asavkin will be a speaker at the Space Symposium Innovate Pitch Competition “designed to showcase emerging space companies with proven technologies and provide an opportunity for entrepreneurs to connect with key stakeholders.” (https://www.spacesymposium.org/agenda/)

I’ve been wondering for quite some time now whether another startup pitching at that event - Little Place Labs - might be experimenting with Akida as well, since I have noticed Alf Kuchenbuch liking numerous posts by that spin-off from the University of Oxford (now headquartered in Houston, TX) and their co-founder and CEO Bosco Lai in recent months.


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Sorry for the bold and layout.

"Apr 2, 2025 2:00 AM Eastern Daylight Time

Frontgrade Gaisler Launches New GRAIN Line and Wins SNSA Contract to Commercialize First Energy-Efficient Neuromorphic AI for Space Applications

View attachment 81100

GOTHENBURG, Sweden--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Swedish National Space Agency (SNSA) has awarded Frontgrade Gaisler, a leading provider of radiation-hardened microprocessors for space missions, a contract to commercialize the first neuromorphic System on Chip (SoC) device for space applications. Already in development at Frontgrade Gaisler, the device is part of the company’s new GRAIN (Gaisler Research Artificial Intelligence NOEL-V) product line.​

Share​

The first GRAIN device that Frontgrade Gaisler will premiere – the Gr801 SoC – integrates Akida™ neuromorphic technology from BrainChip, the world’s first commercial producer of ultra-low power, fully digital, event-based, neuromorphic AI. The GR801 combines Gaisler’s NOEL-V RISC-V processor and the Akida neuromorphic AI processor into a single integrated circuit to enable energy-efficient AI applications in the space environment. Sweden’s Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) is contributing to this development by designing a demonstration application that uses a neuromorphic sensor directly connected to Gaisler’s new GR801 device.​

Frontgrade Gaisler is designing the entire GRAIN product line to enable more advanced and autonomous space missions, and to enhance the space industry's capabilities in energy-efficient AI. The GR801 SoC will support both commercial and institutional space missions, enabling new applications and meeting strict power and weight constraints.​

“Our latest innovation opens new avenues and complements our existing range of proven and reliable processing products,” said Sandi Habinc, General Manager at Frontgrade Gaisler. “GRAIN is an exciting new pursuit for Gaisler because we are well positioned to enable new capabilities for real-time data processing, autonomous navigation, Earth observation, and object detection and tracking.”​

Share​


original Frontgrade Gaisler, a leading provider of radiation-hardened microprocessors for space missions, has launched its new Gaisler Research Artificial Intelligence NOEL-V (GRAIN) product line. The first GRAIN device to premiere – the Gr801 SoC – integrates Akida™ neuromorphic technology from BrainChip, the world’s first commercial producer of ultra-low power, fully digital, event-based, neuromorphic AI.

Frontgrade Gaisler, a leading provider of radiation-hardened microprocessors for space missions, has launched its new Gaisler Research Artificial Intelligence NOEL-V (GRAIN) product line. The first GRAIN device to premiere – the Gr801 SoC – integrates Akida™ neuromorphic technology from BrainChip, the world’s first commercial producer of ultra-low power, fully digital, event-based, neuromorphic AI.​

“Our continued collaboration with Frontgrade Gaisler to incorporate Akida IP into space SoCs showcases the importance of having environmentally hardened solutions, already proven to perform in the most extreme conditions,” said Sean Hehir, CEO of BrainChip. “We have worked hard to ensure our neuromorphic technology can meet the low-energy, low-latency, high-performance needs of GRAIN and other space-based devices in order to provide AI at – and beyond – the edge.”​

Frontgrade Gaisler announced its new GRAIN product line at the second RISC-V in Space Workshop 2025, in Gothenburg, Sweden. The event focuses on how RISC-V technology is being leveraged in space systems, ranging from satellites to deep space missions. Learn more about the GRAIN product line at gaisler.com/grain

..."​

SNSA? 🤔...
Hey, well I guess it's a start..


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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!

Overview​

This page describes a running development and no guarantees can be given concerning future product availability. All information on this page is subject to change without notice. Please click this link to sign up to receive notifications about product and documentation updates.
The GRAIN architecture consists of a neuromorphic processing engine (Brainchip AkidaTM 1.0), a single-core RISC-V RV64GC processor (NOEL-V) for system management, and several digital interfaces.
GRAIN is a reliable computing platform for AI applications such as image recognition, autonomous navigation, and data analysis. The neuromorphic engine provides fast and energy-efficient inference, enabling fast on-board decisions.


Software​

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Block diagram​

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Detailed features​

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NOEL-V RISC-V Processor
  • General-purpose RISC-V processor (RV64GC)
  • High-performance processing for traditional computing tasks
  • System management and configuration of the neuromorphic engine
AkidaTM neuromorphic processing accelerator
  • Akida provides acceleration of AI models using event-based computing to minimize power consumption.
  • Eight neural processing nodes connected in a mesh network
  • Each node consisting of four convolutional or fully connected engines
  • Each node supports 128 4x4 MACs, for total of 1024 MACs/clock
  • Hardware support for 1, 2, or 4-bit hybrid quantized weights
  • Multi-Pass Processing enables execution of large neural networks
Interfaces
  • PCIe Gen 3 x4 port with capability to act both as a root port and as an endpoint
  • 10/100/1000Mbit Ethernet interface
  • 200Mbit/s SpaceWire port
  • SPI,I2C and UART low speed interfaces.


SiFive's X288 core complex is compatible with RV64GC.

Just saying...

Maybe this is also our way to NASA's HPSC?...So I asked ChatGPT that very question!

PS: Below is the response I received from ChatGPT. I don't need to remind everyone to take it with a grain of salt as it is "speculative", however, I reckon this idea has merit because all of the components appear to be extremely compatible for a radiation hardened, space grade, AI edge acceleration solution.


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BMW is dead to me for good… Then they all complain—sanction China, China is evil, this and that… but in the end, they choose Chinese AI. All the hate just to keep the ordinary citizen in the right mood. But I bet they think it’s an Arabic company… 🤡

It's not really surprising, when you look at their market..


Screenshot_20250402-221636_Firefox.jpg


Chinese customers outnumber their 2nd biggest single market, the US, by almost 2 to 1..
 
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Frangipani

Top 20
Uni researchers in the United Arab Emirates (from New York University Abu Dhabi and Khalifa University, Abu Dhabi) have experimented with Akida for neuromorphic AI-based robotics - the field our CTO Dr. Tony Lewis is an expert in:


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Rachmad Vidya Wicaksana Putra and Muhammad Shafique, two of the New York University (NYU) Abu Dhabi eBrain Lab researchers, whose above paper on experimenting with Akida for neuromorphic AI-based robotics was published almost exactly a year ago, appear to be extremely enamoured with our neuromorphic processor! They co-authored another paper on AKD1000 with their colleague Pasindu Wickramasinghe that was published yesterday and that also got accepted at the International Joint Conference on Neural Networks (IJCNN), June 30th - July 5th, 2025 in Rome, Italy.


“Neuromorphic Processors
1) Overview: The energy efficiency potentials offered by
SNNs can be maximized by employing neuromorphic hard- ware processors [22]. In the literature, several processors have been proposed, and they can be categorized as research and commodity processors. Research processors refer to neuro- morphic chips that are designed only for research and not commercially available, hence access to these processors is limited. Several examples in this category are SpiNNaker, NeuroGrid, IBM’s TrueNorth, and Intel’s Loihi [4].
Meanwhile, commodity processors refer to neuromorphic chips that
are available commercially, such as BrainChip’s Akida [7] and SynSense’s DYNAP-CNN [8]. In this work, we consider the Akida processor as it supports on-chip learning for SNN fine-tuning, which is beneficial for adaptive edge AI systems [7].


(…)


E. Further Discussion
It is important to compare neuromorphic-based solutions against the state-of-the-art ANN-based solutions, which typically employ conventional hardware platforms, such as CPUs, GPUs, and specialized accelerators (e.g., FPGA or ASIC). To ensure a fair comparison, we select object recognition as the application and YOLOv2 as the network, while considering performance efficiency (FPS/W) as the comparison metric. Summary of the comparison is provided in Table I, and it clearly shows that our Akida-based neuromorphic solution achieves the highest performance efficiency. This is due to the sparse spike-driven computation that is fully exploited by neuromorphic processor, thus delivering highly power/energy-efficient SNN processing. Moreover, our Akida-based neuromorphic solution also offers an on-chip learning capability, which gives it further advantages over the other solutions. This comparison highlights the immense potentials of neuromor- phic computing for enabling efficient edge AI systems.

VI. CONCLUSION
We propose a novel design methodology to enable efficient SNN processing on commodity neuromorphic processors. It is evaluated using a real-world edge AI system implementation with the Akida processor. The experimental results demonstrate that, our methodology leads the system to achieve high performance and high energy efficiency across different applications. It achieves low latency of inference (i.e., less than 50ms for image classification, less than 200ms for real- time object detection in video streaming, and less than 1ms for keyword recognition) and low latency of on-chip learning (i.e., less than 2ms for keyword recognition), while consuming less than 250mW of power. In this manner, our design methodology potentially enables ultra-low power/energy design of edge AI systems for diverse application use-cases.”



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7für7

Top 20
It's not really surprising, when you look at their market..


View attachment 81143

Chinese customers outnumber their 2nd biggest single market, the US, by almost 2 to 1..
Yes sure … I know that , but that brings me back to the point that they always try to make us believe how bad Europe’s (Germany’s) relationship with China is… Meanwhile, they continue doing business, but the ordinary citizen is supposed to hate China or at least feel some kind of resentment toward them.

I don’t want to get political, but I just wanted to highlight the double standards. Nothing we don’t already know, but it’s still nauseating every time.
 
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Frangipani

Top 20
We get mentioned twice on www.eenewseurope.com today!


 
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Yes sure … I know that , but that brings me back to the point that they always try to make us believe how bad Europe’s (Germany’s) relationship with China is… Meanwhile, they continue doing business, but the ordinary citizen is supposed to hate China or at least feel some kind of resentment toward them.

I don’t want to get political, but I just wanted to highlight the double standards. Nothing we don’t already know, but it’s still nauseating every time.
Europe, including Germany, is still Russia's biggest buyer of Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) and Pipeline Gas too..


20250402_233034.jpg


"We Love you Ukraine, but hey, don't mind us supporting the ones clobbering you aye, it's nothing personal"

Russian shadow tankers, mostly Western sourced?..


So much "Virtue Signalling" BS goes on..



AKIDA in Switch 2??...
 
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Frangipani

Top 20
And the news about our collaboration with Raytheon/RTX as part of the AFRL contract has also been shared on a Ukrainian website:


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Beebo

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7für7

Top 20
Europe, including Germany, is still Russia's biggest buyer of Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) and Pipeline Gas too..


View attachment 81167

"We Love you Ukraine, but hey, don't mind us supporting the ones clobbering you aye, it's nothing personal"

Russian shadow tankers, mostly Western sourced?..


So much "Virtue Signalling" BS goes on..



AKIDA in Switch 2??...
I just saw the presentation… holy moly hitman on switch 😂 I played it on VR. Stunning game. But nothing can bring me back to flatscreen…
 
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Frangipani

Top 20

Our snow ball is rolling and growing!
We need to get off the ASX baby slope.
We need to get on the Nasdaq black diamond mountain.

Schussing down the slope without a skiing helmet made of proper IP licences & resulting revenue expectations is pretty suicidal, though, if you ask me…
Rumour has it, there is a shark tank set up at the end of that obstacle-riddled hazardous Double Black Diamond run that only expert skiers will be able to avoid. And beware of the avalanche risk, too…

By the way, we still don’t know what US stock exchange our management has in mind. Nowhere did they actually say it would be the Nasdaq.

And I agree with what others have also said before: With our current share price in the doldrums, setting sails for the Nasdaq would require us to do a large reverse split before even thinking of crossing the ocean, which in my experience, although it may look totally harmless in theory and on paper - and now please jump back to the skiing imagery - will usually open up the gate to a downward slope so steep long-term shareholders will rarely ever get to climb up again…

I’d much prefer the opposite - a split - one day, like the one I had last year for my NVIDIA shares! 😊
 
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Great news on FG today.

I also see that Sandi Habinc from FG will be speaking at the Rymdforum conference in May on one of the key topics - Space Commercialisation.

Fittingly the evening welcome first day is May the 4th :LOL:

Presuming we will get a bit of a mention you'd think with their new chip ;)


Sweden - A new space era​

Rymdforum – The Swedish Space Conference 2025 is an international conference organized by the non-profit organization Rymdforum. The association´s aims and endeavors is to spread knowledge about Swedish and international space activities.
The proposed theme, ’Sweden – A New Space Era,’ aligns well with our industry and enables many exciting presentations conveying messages that resonate with Rymdforum’s objectives.


Sandi Habinc​

General Manager​

Frontgrade Gaisler​

Sandi Habinc is General Manager at Frontgrade Gaisler, a world-leading supplier of radiation-hardened microprocessors and IP cores for space applications. With decades of experience in embedded systems and space electronics, Sandi has been instrumental in delivering reliable, high-performance computing solutions used in a wide range of satellite and spacecraft missions worldwide.
At Rymdforum 2025, he brings deep technical and commercial insight into the commercialisation of space, highlighting how advanced electronics and processor technologies are enabling more capable, cost-efficient, and scalable missions in the new space economy.
  • Sandi Habinc
  • is participating in:
Space Commercialisation
 
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cosors

👀
Schussing down the slope without a skiing helmet made of proper IP licences & resulting revenue expectations is pretty suicidal, though, if you ask me…
Rumour has it, there is a shark tank set up at the end of that obstacle-riddled hazardous Double Black Diamond run that only expert skiers will be able to avoid. And beware of the avalanche risk, too…

By the way, we still don’t know what US stock exchange our management has in mind. Nowhere did they actually say it would be the Nasdaq.

And I agree with what others have also said before: With our current share price in the doldrums, setting sails for the Nasdaq would require us to do a large reverse split before even thinking of crossing the ocean, which in my experience, although it may look totally harmless in theory and on paper - and now please jump back to the skiing imagery - will usually open up the gate to a downward slope so steep long-term shareholders will rarely ever get to climb up again…

I’d much prefer the opposite - a split - one day, like the one I had last year for my NVIDIA shares! 😊
I once had Electra shares. Among other mistakes, they went public on the NASDAQ too early and without any turnover. I sold in the euphoria of the announcement after analysing how many new companies or start-ups were successful and how many were not.
From the listing onwards, it was all downhill and I was rightly out beforehand. Some time later, when Electra was crushed or gnawed off in the shark tank, there was nothing left and they were delisted.
Never go to the NASDAQ without solid figures I think to myself.
Screenshot_2025-04-02-18-16-25-21_40deb401b9ffe8e1df2f1cc5ba480b12.jpg


____
Very, very few new ones were successful. From memory, in the very low single-digit percentage range. So my decision to sell.
 
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SERA2g

Founding Member
I once had Electra shares. Among other mistakes, they went public on the NASDAQ too early and without any turnover. I sold in the euphoria of the announcement after analysing how many new companies or start-ups were successful and how many were not.
From the listing onwards, it was all downhill and I was rightly out beforehand. Some time later, when Electra was crushed or gnawed off in the shark tank, there was nothing left and they were delisted.
Never go to the NASDAQ without solid figures I think to myself.
View attachment 81177

____
Very, very few new ones were successful. From memory, in the very low single-digit percentage range. So my decision to sell.
Another example is AHI, who dual listed on the NASDAQ while remaining on the ASX.

Prices not quite the same but it is now delisted from NASDAQ and was upwards of $1.40 on the ASX and is now 9c and has been in suspension for over 6 months, maybe a year.

Same deal as Brainchip, it had tons of partnerships, what appeared to be a solid board of directors, absolutely no revenue. Got absolutely mauled because it didn't manage to convert those partnerships to revenue. We are in the same position right now, albeit better placed to succeed.

It was my first ever investment at $2,500 and ended up selling all of my shares for $400.

Similarly to Brainchip's ride up to $2.34, I had the opportunity to sell AHI at circa 6x but chose not to because things were looking promising and ended up getting completely fucked 🤣.

Paid a $2,100 lesson but unfortunately didn't learn that lesson until well after Brainchip's slide down from $2.34 otherwise I probably would have realized selling at +$2 was the right move. Hindsight!

I am still as positive as ever on Brainchip's long term value so am not planning to sell any shares, but from experience, fully agree with you on the risks of listing on the NASDAQ too early.

We need more IP licences and preferably royalties rolling in to extract as much value with limited dilution on listing with the NASDAQ or another exchange.

Dual listing is expensive and hopefully not the route they go.

I just hope they show progress to get the share price well up before the redomicile as Aus Super will force my Brainchip shares to be sold so I will lose a significant portion of my holdings (circa 80%). It therefore needs to be at a much higher price than today so that I and other industry fund shareholders make some money on the shares we do lose. Alternatively, share price much higher results in having the value sitting there to make it worthwhile setting up and reinvesting via a SMSF.

Plenty of shareholders are in the same boat as me with their shares being held in an industry fund. It is going to be a real problem for a lot of Australian investors.
 
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Nothing to report about the switch 2 and no mention of what’s running the console. Maybe find out more on the 5th June when it’s released and has been torn down to provide more information on what’s inside.
 
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Frangipani

Top 20
Actually, those “exciting news” you shared with us are totally wurst to me.
(It basically means ‘I don’t care’ or ‘it doesn’t make a difference’, and yes, that’s a really common expression in German, even though I’d personally use the variant wurscht in this context.)

Neither does Dana LeVan provide any source at all for his claim that “Mercedes-Benz & BrainChip are moving from R&D to commercial deployment”, nor does he have any connection to either company as far as we can tell.

One thing I was able to find out about him, though, is that he is the former CMO of Wevorce (“New Agreements. Peaceful. Relationships. Skip the courthouse, keep the kindness”). On their website, where he promotes himself as an excellent pick for “private judge”, he describes himself as being highly skilled at Divorce Coaching, so our company may want to save his contact details in case one day a joint partnership goes awry… 🤣 (https://www.wevorce.com/blog/team/dana-levan/)

Note that he is now the CMO of CrowdSmart.ai (https://www.crowdsmart.ai/about-crowdsmart/), whose “patented human-interactive AI helps groups share and refine their intelligence with curated insights to generate trusted and predictive strategies, plans, and decisions.”

My guess is that his post was largely AI-generated and he unfortunately failed to verify what the LLM came up with.





By the way, when you shared that paragraph from Dana LeVan’s LinkedIn post, why did you cut off the header that reads “Neuromorphic Hardware: The Long-Term Play (3-5 years)”? Didn’t you consider it important to also share that timeframe with us?


View attachment 79564


Somebody asked Dana LeVan about his claim re MB & BRN on LinkedIn, and he cryptically responded with a quote. 🤔

Is it meant to be his own reply, which seems weird given the quotation marks and the fact he himself made that very claim in the first place?

Or was this quote taken from the Trump fan boys’ podcast he referred to earlier in his post (without sharing which episode it was, though)?

I noticed that he also gave Patrick Pasternacki’s second reply a 👍🏻, in which he was informed that the Vision EQXX concept car would never go commercial, but he still didn’t clear up the confusion. His self-description on https://www.wevorce.com/blog/team/dana-levan/ as a “passionate and empathetic communicator who untangles complex circumstances” doesn’t exactly shine through here…

View attachment 79565



Anyway, not a trustworthy source at all, if you ask me…
I much prefer to listen to the horse’s mouth: “… we’re currently looking into Neuromorphic Computing as part of a research project. Depending on the further development progress, integration could become possible within a timeframe of 5 to 10 years.” (Mercedes-Benz on LinkedIn, January 29, 2025)

https://thestockexchange.com.au/threads/brn-discussion-ongoing.1/post-449452


Oh, THAT 👆🏻 guy again 👇🏻… Looks to me as if he were just fishing for some attention for himself and his buddy and/or client Paul Dlugosch from Boise, ID - the founder and CEO of Natural Intelligence - since he keeps tagging him or his company in his posts promoting neuromorphic computing, without really knowing much about the topic himself (“… and #Qualcomm Zeroth showing promise”). Turns out, Dana LeVan used to live in Idaho’s capital as well - what a coincidence… 😉


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Just over two weeks ago, @MDhere posted the allegedly “exciting news” that “Mercedes and BrainChip were moving from R&D to commercial deployment”. Yet, to this day, Dana LeVan has failed to reply to a very valid same-day question by a member of this forum asking for clarification with regards to his post and his weird reply to Patrick Pasternacki:


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I am not sure if @MDhere still stands by her initial assessment of Dana LeVan’s post really being “exciting news” and her interpretation that there may possibly be some cleverly hidden info in the confusing reply he gave in the comment section 👇🏻

Not sure Dio, but that's an interestimg answer by Dana on Linkedin, answering a question with a question but also adding single quotation marks to his answer then adding a question then a further question on qualcomm. Maybe the single quotation mark is a statement. Then combining the questions as one combined?
Isnt the english language intersting when you add or omit apostrophes lol

(…)

Anyway all i can say is boomidy boom boom.

… but the way I see it, her onomatopoeia 👆🏻 regarding the alleged MB & BRN “reveal” by Dana LeVan has now unmistakenly turned out to be the sound of an implosion rather than an explosion (watch from around 31:30 min):

 

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