Didier Lasserre
Analyst · ISQ
Thank you, Lee-Lean. Let me expand on the topics that Lee-Lean just highlighted. We continue to advance our ongoing projects, including our SBIR and POC engagements with potential customers. Recently, Gemini-II has been approved for prototyping by the offshore defense contractor to whom we shipped a board and software to a few months back. This POC focuses on synthetic aperture radar or SAR applications for drones and other edge systems. What's exciting here is that our solution delivers the required performance while maintaining an extremely low power profile around 15 watts, making it ideal for compact energy-constrained environments. For added context on just how competitive the solution is, an incandescent light bulb uses about 4x more wattage than our solution. We are also involved in a joint POC involving two defense organizations and a drone integration partner. This Gemini-II project combines YOLO model, we developed with multimodal large language model processing at the edge, specifically targeting time to first token, a key performance metric for drones. Along with our partner, we successfully demonstrated the end-to-end application to one of the potential end customers. Gemini-II outperformed the competing solution, particularly in how quickly the model produces its first response. We are now optimizing the algorithm and expect to publish initial benchmark results before year-end with a fully optimized version available in the first half of calendar 2026. This algorithm would be for defense applications such as drones, satellites and other military vehicles. Gemini-II is a central part of the near-term commercialization road map, and we are encouraged by the customer engagement and technical validation that is being received. Turning to our Plato program. We are embarking on the journey towards a major milestone, the tape-out of Plato chip in early calendar 2027. Over the next year or so, we plan to actively engage several strategic partners for Plato who could provide funding and collaborate on testing and prototyping early versions of the chip. Their involvement would also support the development of software libraries and APIs, ensuring that Plato becomes a versatile, scalable solution across multiple markets, starting with defense. In military and defense applications, the APU's high-performance and low-power capabilities provide unique advantages. And Plato will further enhance critical functions such as SAR imaging, object recognition, GPS-denied navigation and data fusion for drones and military vehicles, delivering real-time tactical capabilities in compact mobile systems. Plato's design builds directly on the foundation of Gemini-II. To accelerate time to market, we are acquiring building block IP that allows us to focus on differentiation rather than reinventing core components. Strategic partners would play a critical role, not just in meeting our ambitious time line, but in shaping the chip's capabilities, validating its performance in real-world applications and guiding future enhancements. Their technical collaboration and early adoption would position us to deliver a highly optimized field-tested solution, strengthening our long-term leadership in specialized AI compute architectures well beyond the immediate financial support. And lastly, a comment on our SBIR work. We recently received a $751,000 extension of one of our Space Development Agency contracts, which includes additional funding for radiation hardened beam testing of Gemini-II. The goal of this testing is to evaluate the robustness of the current Gemini-II commercial chip for possible use in satellite and other aerospace applications. While it's too early to confirm specific designations, we see this as a significant opportunity. Let me now switch to the second quarter's commercial -- I'm sorry, customer and product breakdown. By revenue, I am referring to net revenue in the following comments. In the second quarter of fiscal 2026, sales to KYEC were $802,000 or 12.5% of revenues compared to $650,000 or 14.3% of revenues in the same period a year ago and $267,000 or 4.3% of revenues in the prior quarter. Sales to Nokia were $200,000 or 3.1% of revenues compared to $812,000 or 17.8% in the same period a year ago and $536,000 or 8.5% of revenues in the prior quarter. Sales to Cadence Design Systems were $1.4 million or 21.6% of net revenues compared to 0 in the same period last year and $1.5 million or 23.9% of revenues in the prior quarter. Military defense sales were 28.9% of second quarter shipments compared to 40.2% of shipments in the comparable period a year ago and 19.1% of shipments in the prior quarter. SigmaQuad sales were 50.1% of second quarter shipments in fiscal 2026 compared to 38.6% in second quarter fiscal 2025 and 62.5% in the prior quarter. I'd now like to hand the call over to Doug. Please go ahead, Doug.