BRN Discussion Ongoing

RobjHunt

Regular
A little confused about the Cessation of Securities ann. That doesn’t mean we’ll be going to a trading halt, does it??
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 users

perceptron

Regular
As Tony Lewis said, it can know a little about a lot or a lot about a little. The second option would be ideal for RAG (Retrieval Augmented Generation), where different models can be loaded depending on the required subject matter. The additional models could be downloaded or they could be stored on a co-located memory.
So now we have inference, intelligence and possible multiplexing at the edge without the cloud.
Excited to see the road map that Dr Lewis will present in May. Further, there is a new podcast out, episode 37 "Neuromorphic computing in space"
https://brainchip.com/episode-37-neuromorphic-computing-in-space/
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Fire
Reactions: 15 users

7für7

Top 20
I really hope people have been taking my recent posts with humor. It’s simply a way to cope with the ridiculous stock price through irony and sarcasm. My confidence in the company’s development and the fact that we are undoubtedly leading in this segment remains unshaken.

After all, does anyone really think that any military institution would engage with a technology that doesn’t work and could compromise security systems? I certainly don’t. The real question is whether the military is playing a role in slowing down our expansion regarding licensees. After all, the military is always the pioneer before a technology is released to the mass market. I think that could be the case.

As for the stock price—like I said, it’s a joke. There’s nothing more to say. I just hope the management finally rewards its loyal supporters and shareholders.
 
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: 11 users

AARONASX

Holding onto what I've got
some good news to end the week with a new podcast

 
  • Like
  • Fire
  • Love
Reactions: 22 users

IMG_4149.jpeg
 
  • Like
  • Fire
  • Love
Reactions: 20 users

JB49

Regular
some good news to end the week with a new podcast


Great stuff. But 2 products on the market 5 years from now - Ugh...

I hope we have some other customers who are moving quicker.
 
  • Like
  • Sad
  • Thinking
Reactions: 10 users
I believe we are in the new Nintendo Switch and would assume the deal for payment from Megachip will be a deposit and 1 to 3 months agreement before the full payment. This is all a guess of course yet I assume something along these lines which means we should see the $$$ in the next 2 financials quarterly’s from Megachip.
🛎 🤞
 
  • Like
  • Thinking
  • Haha
Reactions: 14 users

7für7

Top 20
Jesus Christ 18???? Come ooooon…..

1743738121356.gif
 
  • Haha
Reactions: 1 users

DK6161

Regular
Akida ballista
Sad Dying Inside GIF
 
  • Haha
Reactions: 1 users

HopalongPetrovski

I'm Spartacus!
Just saw this on Facebook.


The world’s first biological computer, the CL1, is here—and it’s powered by human brain cells! Developed by Australian company Cortical Labs, this Synthetic Biological Intelligence (SBI) blends lab-grown neurons with silicon hardware, creating a learning system that adapts faster than today’s AI models. Officially launched in Barcelona on March 2, 2025, the CL1 is set to transform fields like medical research, drug discovery, and robotics.
Unlike traditional AI chips, the CL1 mimics the way real neural networks grow and evolve, offering a more energy-efficient and dynamic computing system. Researchers can buy a unit or access it remotely via Cortical’s "Wetware-as-a-Service" (WaaS) model, making this technology widely available.
The CL1’s capabilities extend far beyond its early days when similar neural networks were trained to play Pong. Now, scientists are exploring ways to create a "Minimal Viable Brain", which could help understand intelligence at its core. With affordable pricing compared to existing tech and a cloud-based research platform, the CL1 is an exciting step toward bridging biology and computing.
Could this be the future of AI? Stay tuned as researchers push the limits of synthetic intelligence.




486666564_1074471298044653_158323598105946756_n.jpg
 
  • Wow
  • Like
  • Thinking
Reactions: 8 users

DK6161

Regular
Just saw this on Facebook.


The world’s first biological computer, the CL1, is here—and it’s powered by human brain cells! Developed by Australian company Cortical Labs, this Synthetic Biological Intelligence (SBI) blends lab-grown neurons with silicon hardware, creating a learning system that adapts faster than today’s AI models. Officially launched in Barcelona on March 2, 2025, the CL1 is set to transform fields like medical research, drug discovery, and robotics.
Unlike traditional AI chips, the CL1 mimics the way real neural networks grow and evolve, offering a more energy-efficient and dynamic computing system. Researchers can buy a unit or access it remotely via Cortical’s "Wetware-as-a-Service" (WaaS) model, making this technology widely available.
The CL1’s capabilities extend far beyond its early days when similar neural networks were trained to play Pong. Now, scientists are exploring ways to create a "Minimal Viable Brain", which could help understand intelligence at its core. With affordable pricing compared to existing tech and a cloud-based research platform, the CL1 is an exciting step toward bridging biology and computing.
Could this be the future of AI? Stay tuned as researchers push the limits of synthetic intelligence.




View attachment 81352
Yeah, we can't compete with that.
Good game lads. Good effort by the management, but it's game over. On to the next one then! Selling shirts is it now?
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 users
I wish I did sell the other day after looking at todays SP

1743744965397.gif
 
  • Like
  • Haha
Reactions: 6 users

manny100

Top 20
Air Force Research Lab, Raytheon and BrainChip to Bring AIoT to Radar
Great article concerning the AFRL contract. Describes the purpose of the contract and the Authors take on the roles of BRN and Ratheon.
" And now for Raytheon’s role: It will deliver services and support as a partner with BrainChip for the completion of the contract award. In other words, Raytheon will manage military protocols while BrainChip focuses on tech."
Worth a read.
 
  • Like
  • Fire
  • Love
Reactions: 40 users

WhiteDove

Member
"watch the financials..."
 
  • Like
  • Haha
  • Fire
Reactions: 16 users

manny100

Top 20
  • Like
  • Fire
  • Love
Reactions: 16 users

HopalongPetrovski

I'm Spartacus!
Yeah, we can't compete with that.
Good game lads. Good effort by the management, but it's game over. On to the next one then! Selling shirts is it now?
Who knows, but I recall PVDM saying that he was working on a cortical column in his lab maybe 5 or 6 years ago.
Akida is still in development and I'm pretty sure Peter has left a lot of inspiration in his wake.
He told me on one occasion that he was working towards some kind of device to which a human mind could be downloaded.
I think BrainChip was founded with a dream in mind.
Of course I don't know how far down the path he got.

Last couple of days we, and a lot of the world's markets, suffer the implications of the current American president's hubris.
Hopefully the American people wake up and stand up to him in time, before he does irreparable harm to his country and the rest of the world.
Also spare a thought for the poor penguins on Heard island. 🤣
GLTAH
 
  • Like
  • Haha
  • Fire
Reactions: 13 users

Diogenese

Top 20
Just saw this on Facebook.


The world’s first biological computer, the CL1, is here—and it’s powered by human brain cells! Developed by Australian company Cortical Labs, this Synthetic Biological Intelligence (SBI) blends lab-grown neurons with silicon hardware, creating a learning system that adapts faster than today’s AI models. Officially launched in Barcelona on March 2, 2025, the CL1 is set to transform fields like medical research, drug discovery, and robotics.
Unlike traditional AI chips, the CL1 mimics the way real neural networks grow and evolve, offering a more energy-efficient and dynamic computing system. Researchers can buy a unit or access it remotely via Cortical’s "Wetware-as-a-Service" (WaaS) model, making this technology widely available.
The CL1’s capabilities extend far beyond its early days when similar neural networks were trained to play Pong. Now, scientists are exploring ways to create a "Minimal Viable Brain", which could help understand intelligence at its core. With affordable pricing compared to existing tech and a cloud-based research platform, the CL1 is an exciting step toward bridging biology and computing.
Could this be the future of AI? Stay tuned as researchers push the limits of synthetic intelligence.




View attachment 81352
Hi Hoppy,

Did you notice when it was published?
 

keyeat

Regular
  • Wow
  • Like
Reactions: 2 users

HopalongPetrovski

I'm Spartacus!
Hi Hoppy,

Did you notice when it was published?
No, sorry Dio.
There wasn't any other info beyond what I reproduced here, on Facebook.
A quick squiz shows there are a few concerns working in the space.
FinalSpark in Switzerland as well as this mob Cortical Labs and of course, turning the dial up to 11, our Musky nemesis Brain chip.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 users

Frangipani

Top 20
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.


View attachment 81120

View attachment 81127



View attachment 81124


View attachment 81129 View attachment 81130 View attachment 81131 View attachment 81132



View attachment 81134

Mitch Stevison, CEO of Frontgrade Technologies (the US parent company of Sweden-based Frontgrade Gaisler) is very much looking forward to attending the upcoming 40th Space Symposium (https://www.spacesymposium.org/) in Colorado Springs (April 7-10), organised by the Space Foundation (https://www.spacefoundation.org/).

In an interview uploaded to YouTube two days ago (my transcription is lightly edited for easier readability, eg. without filler words such as “erm”, “you know”, word repetitions etc), Mitch Stevison refers to the annual Space Symposium as “our biggest show of the year” and “the space ecosystem’s most meaningful cong [gets interrupted by the interviewer]”.

Asked about what he is most excited to see, he replies “I am always one that wants to listen to what the operational leaders are saying”, adding that the defence sector still makes up two thirds of Frontgrade Technologies’ business.
Relating to national security, Stevison tells the podcast episode’s listeners that “I’m always most interested in what is on the mind as the priorities from those leaders, from government that will speak at the conference. And then there’s always things that you just walk around and you see both from a competitive standpoint and from a technology standpoint that is interesting. Because the other thing we haven’t talked about here today is: partnership is key in whatever happens in the future of space. No one company is gonna be the solution set that is going to drive us to be what we need to be in space with respect to national security or even our commercial capabilities that every part of the ecosystem today demands that space is there at every moment of every day, whether it’s communications or GPS or anything else of that nature.”

From the perspective of the Frontgrade CEO, the upcoming Space Symposium is simply THE place to be: “There is nowhere else that we go, that I can literally touch every customer we have in a matter of two or three days. Everybody is there. You know, we support the European Space Agency from our facility in Sweden. They are a great partner for us in developing capabilities that we couldn’t develop ourselves. They’re gonna be there, so the Director of the European Space Agency. You’ll see leaders from NASA.

He then shares that he was initially a little concerned about some of the Trump administration’s governmental directives about not travelling that could potentially result in fewer government officials showing up this year, but he recently talked to Space Foundation’s CEO Heather Pringle (a retired US Air Force major general who last served as the Commander of the AFLR) who reassured him that “the Space Operations Command had made this mission [attending Space Symposium 2025] essential for their employees (https://www.spoc.spaceforce.mil/About-Us/About-Space-Operations-Command) and gave him “very high confidence that this would be one of the most well-attended Space Symposiums ever” despite those recent governmental directives.


Listen from 29:54 min


 
  • Like
  • Love
Reactions: 17 users
Top Bottom