Juy-952 -

A popular indie game released in 2012, “Echoes of the Net,” featured a secret level that could only be accessed by entering “Juy‑952” at a hidden console. Players who solved the puzzle were rewarded with an in‑game artifact—a stylized glyph that later appeared on fans’ t‑shirts, stickers, and even as a tattoo among dedicated speedrunners.

The juy‑952 is a next‑generation, modular, low‑power edge‑computing node designed for harsh‑environment IoT deployments. It combines high‑performance AI inference, flexible I/O, and a rugged enclosure to deliver reliable on‑site data processing while minimizing bandwidth and power costs. juy-952


| Year | Milestone | |------|-----------| | 2022 | Proof‑of‑concept demonstration of Li₆PS₅Cl SE with Li metal (JuyTech internal R&D). | | 2023 | First‑prototype JUY‑952 pouch cell (100 mAh) achieving 400 Wh kg⁻¹. | | 2024 | Scale‑up to pilot line; 1 Ah cylindrical cells pass 300‑cycle test. | | 2025 | Independent validation by the European Battery Consortium (EBC) confirming 1 200‑cycle life. | | 2026 | Commercial launch targeting electric aviation and high‑performance EVs. | A popular indie game released in 2012, “Echoes


  • Cloud‑Connector – Out‑of‑the‑box support for Azure IoT Edge, AWS Greengrass, and Google Cloud IoT Core; custom connectors can be added via the REST API.
  • Management Console – Web UI (responsive) provides:

  • | Competitor | CPU | AI Accel | Power (typ) | Enclosure | Price (USD) | |------------|-----|----------|--------------|-----------|-------------| | NVIDIA Jetson Nano | Quad‑Core ARM A57 | 0.5 TOPS (GPU) | 10 W | Non‑rugged | $99 | | Google Coral Dev Board | Quad‑Core Cortex‑A53 | 4 TOPS (Edge TPU) | 5 W | Non‑rugged | $149 | | Advantech MIC‑770 | i7‑8550U | None | 30 W | IP‑65 | $450 | | juy‑952 | Cortex‑A78 | 8 TOPS (NPU) | 10 W | IP‑67 | $399 (volume) | | Year | Milestone | |------|-----------| | 2022

    The juy‑952 uniquely balances high AI throughput, industrial‑grade ruggedness, and low power—positioning it between low‑cost hobbyist boards and expensive x86‑based gateways.