BRN 2.56% 19.0¢ brainchip holdings ltd

Ann: Investor Presentation - EoY Update FY18, page-90

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    DECEMBER UPDATE WEBINAR PART 2


    Other questions, I've just tried to capture what came in as questions as well as things that I thought were necessary to cover. You know, we talked I guess it was two or three quarters ago about Quantum Corporation. It's a large storage supplier. They were looking to integrate BrainChip Studio with what they call their StorNext Platform. At the time they had two businesses. Both were very interested in using BrainChip Studio to triage massive amounts of video and create metadata. Then when they had to do a search, they didn't have to go back to raw files. One was the surveillance business and one is what they call media and entertainment.

    There's been a lot of change at Quantum in the last nine months or so. They've targeted their focus at their core competency or the core business of media and entertainment. That's not a downside for us because that's where, frankly, that's where their greatest strength is. The same requirement exists to create metadata as a triage so that when you, you know, the NBA or a NASCAR or your baseball league game, you want to be able to search massive amounts of recorded video and creating metadata allows you to do that far more quickly. The Quantum Corporation, I think that's still a very live and well engagement. I would maybe call it co-marketing in that BrainChip Studio would be bundled with the StorNext platform at some point. It would be integrated and we'd be behind the scenes and no one would see BrainChip Studio. It would just be a Quantum product.

    It was found to us a kind of similar application although it's a cloud based application for searching any type of video that an end user would want. It could be law enforcement, it could be media and entertainment. Some stuff can't go to the cloud because of privacy concerns. The integration, I'm saying nearing completion. We had to modify a doper which is kind of like a plug in so that you can just plug BrainChip Studio into their existing system. Our priorities for the last quarter or so have been keeping engineering focused on getting GPI done as well as keeping as many engineers as we could on the Akida development. I think this is nearing completion and it should be a matter of weeks before that's launched. We did recently acquire, as well, I don't think that has any impact on us.

    The only commercial agreement is with a VMS provider. I'm hoping once the contract gets signed and I wanted to see it signed in November. Legalsgot in the way and there's redlines going back and forth. All the business issues are resolved, it's more about identification and warranties and all kinds of legalistic stuff. It got caught up in the holidays. Everybody's back to work now. I think once the contract gets signed, we'll be able to put the press release out, name the vendor. It is one of the large VMS, VMS being video management system. Where all the cables come back, whether it's from surveillance or from whatever video streams. The first thing it hits is a video management system. Putting, again, kind of as a triage the ability to set up search criteria as a video is being ingested is really what the VMS suppliers want to add. Basically, to their portfolio so that they can differentiate themselves from one another. There are some very large players in this space. This is one of the larger. It would be nice to get two or three of the largest. That's what we're working on.

    We have a question about Safran. Safran has continued to buy licenses but bits and pieces here and there. They, I guess this is kind of French thing. They had to take the large deployment and they had to put it out for tender offer. The tender offer was written around our specification. We've actually signed a purchasing agreement. You know, it's not numbered units. It's not pricing. It's, here's how we will do business going forward. My feeling on this is we're probably looking at a couple hundred, maybe 300 channels to start. Then share, pretty soon we'll have arm wrestle over pricing but somewhere between 1000 and 2000 bucks a channel. For their first large bite, I think that'll be very healthy for us. Again, remember, all of these things that we're talking about are basically meeting 95, 97 per cent gross margin. It all falls through as profit. Particularly in the case of Studio where we're not doing any incremental engineering. All we have to do is pay the sales guys.

    Yvelinesis a restart. The deployment is not moving forward as far as we can tell. It looks like they're going to hit a restart what analytics they want, how they want to architect the system. I'd take it out of our forecast but it doesn't mean it's dead. It just means we need to re-win. We know the application, we know the people. It's just going to be a tedious process. There were a lot of questions about NDA's. There was an interesting question about NDA's. We have dozens of NDA's. You know, all of which, not all of which, most of which at this point were associated with BrainChip Studio. The question was that at the request of the customer or was that our request? Those were all at the request of the customer. You know, we don't need an NDA for BrainChip Studio. Customers wanted to keep their privacy intact. Some, as we move to deployment and full scale deployment, they'll be quite comfortable with us talking publicly.

    The NDA's that we request right now are associated with Akida, particularly prior to filing provisional patent. Provisional patent sets your priority date. When you lay claim to the invention or the novelty, if you talk about those things before you file a provisional, you're not going to get your patent. It's already in the public domain. If you want to view that, the only way to do that is under NDA's. When you talk to big companies, we got inbound traffic which was really remarkable on Akida. You know, we've had meetings. None of these are moving more than we move further than meetings and get to know one another. We've had meetings with companies like HP, for example. HP doesn't want to sign an NDA. They want to keep things, tell us what you want, tell us in the public domain. It was, get our appetite wet and then we'll move the ball forward. In that case, we're quite comfortable because it's all in the public domain.

    In other cases, large companies wanted to go a little bit deeper and protect our IP as a provisional patent was being drafted. We asked them to sign NDA's. I talked about the trials. The trials, it's a matter of intersecting at the right time. Do they have the people ready? Do they have the resources in place? How active the trial which typically runs about 90 days. Where are they in their budgeting process and what kind of deployment would they have? These are things that people ask questions about and I'll talk about a few more customers or potential customers in a couple of minutes.

    I'm going to jump to Akida. This really, this is the heart and soul of the company. BrainChip Studio spawned out of the acquisition with SpikeNet. We didn't buy SpikeNet to get their customer, custom software and create BrainChip Studio. We bought SpikeNet so that we could have a very skilled video analytic team that, at the time, we had Snap 64. At the time we could integrate and have, you know, end to end use cases that we could show customers. That was never going to happen on Snap 64. Snap 64 was FPGA with 9000 neurons and I think it was 10 million sinaps. That's not enough neuro fabric to implement any real world design. Compare that to Akida. Akida is 1.2 million neurons. 9000 versus 1.2 million. Maybe 10 million sinaps compared to 10 billion sinaps. With 1.2 million neurons and 10 billion sinaps, you can do a whole lot of processing.

    As you know the development environment was launched. We've got feedback, we're adding some enhancements. If we want to see some analytics as to what's going on in inside the neuro fabric as they're running their scripts, so we're working with collaborative relationships to put enhancements in that make the development environment as robust as possible so that you can today start designing for Akida which we're going to sample, engineering samples in the second half of 2019. You know, if you look at the bottom right hand corner here, this is the Akida development environment. The dark blue at the bottom is the Akida execution engine. That's the 1.2 million neurons, the 10 billion sinaps, the data to spike converter which I'll touch on in a minute with respect to this IP we acquired from Praxis University. That they have a spike converter is a very powerful invention or novelty. Taking data of any sort, we're very good with video. We take pixel data, we turn it into spikes. We got BrainChip Studio or it can happen in Akida will far exceed what happens in BrainChip Studio. Data can come from lidar, radar, ultrasound. It can come from pressure, vibration, temperature. It could come from sound.

 
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