Although no public linkage currently exists at this point in time between BrainChip and Lockheed’s Golden Dome satellite interceptor effort, I believe it’s entirely plausible that Akida could fit into Golden Dome’s architecture requirement - particularly for autonomous, edge AI in space. Especially given BrainChip has already demonstrated space-readiness through its IP licensing for radiation-hardened systems.
If Golden Dome satellites require autonomous, ultra-efficient, low-latency AI processors, especially in space-hardened environments, there's a clear technical alignment with Akida’s strengths:
- On-chip learning
- Event-driven inference
- Hardened, low-power performance
The article quotes Jeff Schrader, vice president of Lockheed’s space division. Interestingly Jeff Shrader held strategic roles within Raytheon.
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Defense contractor Lockheed Martin develops satellites capable of intercepting missiles from space to support Trump's Golden Dome defense shield initiative.
www.foxnews.com