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12V 電源 + 6ピンのHR10 コネクター
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Hirose HR25丸形GPIOコネクター
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Teledyne Partners with Baader Planetarium for Space Surveillance
We are excited to announce that Teledyne Princeton Instruments COSMOS cameras have been selected for a prestigious space surveillance project with the German army (Bundeswehr). Baader Planetarium, a subcontractor on the project will integrate both the COSMOS-8k and COSMOS-6k on the PW1000 and RC1000 telescopes from PlaneWave Instruments.
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Webinar: Bumblebee X Overview and Product Update
A webinar to share newly announced high precision stereo offering, the Bumblebee X.
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Webinar: Stereo Vision in Real Time Applications
An informative presentation on 3D vision technology .
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Getting Started with Training a Caffe Object Detection Inference Network
This application note describes how to install SSD-Caffe on Ubuntu and how to train and test the files needed to create a compatible network inference file for Firefly-DL.
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Using Motion Photogrammetry for Rendering Realistic 3D Movement in Movies
Movie makers are like magicians - when they show you a new trick, you want to know how it was done and what inspired it. This is certainly true of the creators of the movie Ghost in the Shell starring Scarlett Johansson.
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Advanced 3D Optical Profiler using Grasshopper3 camera
The Zeta-20 enables it to capture and analyze images of difficult to measure surfaces in a way that is not possible with traditional techniques.
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Affordable Eye Tracking using the FireflyMV USB2
Gazepoint's GP3 is the 1st eye tracker that delivers the high-end performance of professional-grade eye tracking solutions at a consumer price point.
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Introduction To Splitters
Early microscopes were essentially a tube through which light travels (Figure 1A), from a sample to the eye (or a camera), through some lenses. Modern microscopes have a variety of objectives, mirrors, and pinholes in order to obtain the best image (Figure 1B)
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Description and overview of our technical support process
The Teledyne FLIR Machine Vision Technical Support team is available to provide existing customers with assistance regarding the installation, troubleshooting, configuration, and customization of our cameras.
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USB 3.1: Improvements over USB 2.0
USB 3.1 has improved on the bulk data transfer mechanism of USB. Under ideal conditions, bulk transfer allows greater throughput compared to isochronous transfers. Real world measurement shows that the effective bandwidth available via the bulk transfer method is around 400 MByte/s; approximately 10 times that of USB 2.0. This important transfer mechanism has enabled machine vision camera vendor to build high throughput USB 3.1 cameras. This has created significant cost saving opportunities for integrators as well as improving the overall system speed and efficiency. Users can now use fewer cameras while still covering the same imaging area with large resolution USB 3.1 cameras. The higher bandwidth also allows for faster frame rate, increasing the performance of the system. For example, a system using four 0.3 MP, 30 fps USB 2.0 cameras can now be replaced by a single USB 3.1 camera running at 1080p and 30 fps for the same price while offering even more resolution.