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Embedded Linux On a High Speed Camera
Posted by
timothy
on Fri Jan 11, 2002 01:45 AM
from the cool-hardware dept.
from the cool-hardware dept.
destructor writes: "Linuxdevices has an interesting article on a High Speed Gated Intensified Camera that
"combines a fast gated micro-channel plate (MCP) image intensifier, a CMOS image sensor, and an embedded computer based on an Axis Communications ETRAX RISC processor running Embedded Linux." The camera (Elphel Model 303) itself is network operable and can be used for capturing images of explosions, lightning bolts, etc. Link found via. megarad.com."
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Embedded Linux On a High Speed Camera
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Home-Matrix movies or Meteor shower capture? (Score:2, Interesting)
Kid jumping off roof with blankie thinking he's going to be ok.. you get to get every angle of that by running around him with the camera
Would be nice to be able to take a lot of shots ( and I mean helluva lot of shots ) of meteor showers then you'd have a pretty good chance of grabbing a good shot..
yeah, maybe it can do all that, but.. (Score:2, Troll)
Too limited! (Score:3, Funny)
Wouldn't it be better to make a camera that can be used for ordinary pictures?
Give a man a fish and he eats for one day. Teach him how to fish, and though he'll eat for a lifetime, he'll call you a miser for not giving him your fish.
Actually useful! (Score:2, Insightful)
Blinded Me with Science (Score:5, Interesting)
Just for the educational point:
The neat thing is that the camera is operating as a webserver:I have always disliked trying to find out why my company's systems were not working our customers' sites -- had my hardware really failed, or had they just updated some (seemingly unrelated) software on their computers which were running a popular OS? - - - This last issue unambiguously told me the camera should run a web server. Internet technologies are the best de-facto "common denominator" for the different computers and operating systems.
The world's fastest webcam! amazing! ;-)
Ah, but can it.... (Score:2, Funny)
A good pattern recognition framework needed (Score:2, Insightful)
For example, if I had the ability to extract all facial images captured by the camera I could feed them to something like this [slashdot.org].
Of course there are big issues about privacy and whatnot with that kind of application, but I'm not going to touch that here. There are plenty of other, non-privacy intruding uses for an automated image analyzation system.
High Speed Photography (Score:3, Interesting)
??? (Score:1)
I worry. (Score:3, Funny)
...what's next?
I think back to the film Real Genius probably the high point of Val Kilmer's acting career. In the film, the character of Hollyfield, a madman who lives in a closet, is described as "a gifted scientist, until he found out the government was using one of his inventions to kill people " (emphasis mine).
With that thought, the chilling possibility arises: if Linux can be used for good, like in cameras, how long before it is used for evil? How will Slashdot report on the first embedded-linux-using guided atomic bomb?This is something the needs to be seriously considered now. The Linux community cannot afford to wait until embedded Linux is used in torture devices by some fascist regime before confronting the possibilities of using Linux for evil.
A "Linux Bill of Rights" should be drawn up, roundly condemning the use of Linux for destructive, sexist, racist, or environmentally degrading practices. So much progress has been made through Linux. This great OS, the product of strong, free geeks, must not be allowed to become a tool for evil. The voices of the Linux community must be heard: rememer the lesson of Real Genius!
Be careful! (Score:1)
Give a man a fish and he eats for one day. Teach him how to fish, and though he'll eat for a lifetime, he'll call you a miser for not giving him your fish.
What's the point of a free operating system? (Score:2)
As a side point, The camera seems to have no external trigger, and be only network triggerable. If you're taking 10ns frames, this is not going to be useful.
On the other hand, the integration of the frame grabber gets around the problem of many cameras (especially pulnix) in that the camera needs a lot of fiddling before it works with a third party framegrabber.
Watch out for that MCP (Score:1)
And if it gets out of hand, only Tron can save us!
--G
Embedded Linux in my Buick (Score:2)
Meteor shower cam ... (Score:1)
Cool. See through haze, silt (Score:3, Interesting)
Basically, the problem in low-visibility situations like that is that the particles near you scatter so much of your light back at you that you can't see the stuff further away. If you send out a 10 ns pulse of light and don't open the shutter until it has had time to go out some distance (say 100 ns for 100 feet, divided by whatever the refractive index of water is), then you only see the light that has bounced off whatever is 100 feet away (well, mod multiple reflections from silt particles).
Won't work in really thick clouds, of course, but it has possibilities. (Consider, for example, driving in a snowstorm at night -- you don't need or want the snow immediately in front of the headlights lit up.)
Future home oops (Score:1)
Network Cameras in general (Score:2)
There are actually quite a few [iapplianceweb.com] network cameras available if you don't need a high-speed camera. Most have a built-in webserver, and several run a version of embedded linux. My personal favorite (and Ed's [edcheung.com]) is the Panasonic KX-HCM10 [panasonic.com] which can be had for as low as $329.99 [panwebi.com]. The Axis [axis.com] and Samsung [webthru.net] cameras are pretty cool too, if you can afford them.
Other cameras include the StarDot NetCam [wincam.com], which is also available from ThinkGeek [thinkgeek.com] (along with the Axis 2100 [thinkgeek.com] and 2120 [thinkgeek.com] cameras) and the IQeye cameras [visiqn.com].
The real advantage to these is that you can simply plug them into your network and watch [whatever] through your web browser. My interest stems from my upcoming need to be able to work and keep an eye on a baby sleeping at the same time. There are, of course, baby monitors that come with little TV's or that plug into your television, and the annoying X10 cameras, but they all require a separate monitor and need extra gear to be viewed in more than one location. With a network camera, not only can we watch the kid from any computer in the house, but relatives can watch too, over the internet. And all I need to do to set it up is plug it in and set the IP address.
Re:pr0n? (Score:4, Funny)
That depends on how many people are turned on by explosions and lightning bolts.
Re:ah, linux (Score:1)
Re:Proud owner (Score:1)
Only problem w/ the Axis is I've seen it lock up at times going through my Apache rewriter (maybe needs a config tweak) or via my SMC NAT when accessed from outside the LAN. Maybe a slow connection on the other end, but I don't think that's it. I should really do a firmware upgrade on it
Other than that, it works fine - I wish them luck too and hope to see more stuff on the market with embedded Linux. There's some jockying going on - i.e. J2ME, Tini, etc. but there's plenty of space in this area. You should be able to flash a new release of Linux into your HDTV, security or phone system to get more functionality out of it, and you should be able to telnet into it to fix things