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As the RealSense 3D camera starts arriving on more and more PCs and tablets, Intel sets its sights further with a goal for RealSense on "any device that can use it".
This week the folks at Intel revealed their latest RealSense camera tech, a model by the name of RealSense Depth Camera D435i.
It's time to make the head and plan the robot arm mounting for the Really Useful Robot. The upper section of the robot can travel up and down the utility stick mounted on the robot's base. The head ...
An addition to the Intel® RealSense TM Stereo product portfolio, the D435f depth camera is based on the popular wide field of view global shutter D435 model with an IR pass filter attached to the ...
The removable tablet bit of this machine has an Intel RealSense Camera R200 onboard – on its rear – allowing users to capture movements for 3D modeling or 3D scanning of object of all sorts.
After 14 years of developing inside of semiconductor giant Intel, RealSense is striking out on its own. RealSense sells cameras that use stereoscopic imaging, a process that combines two images of ...
Intel's new RealSense Lidar Camera is the first to pack a lidar sensor. Pricing and availability have yet to be announced.
Intel Corp.’s computer vision subsidiary RealSense said today it’s now operating as a standalone company after spinning out from its parent and closing on a $50 million round of funding.
Wall Street Journal reports that Intel is working on an augmented reality headset of its own, looking to employ its RealSense 3D camera tech to help the device stand out.
RealSense, a depth-camera technology that basically disappeared within Intel, has returned as a separate company. The company has spun out from Intel and raised $50 million in funding. The company ...
What you need to know Intel today announced the RealSense 455 depth camera. The stereo camera doubles the range of its predecessors, giving developers more accuracy to work with.