Halcon 17.12
MVTec Software will release the new version 17.12 of its standard software Halcon on December 8
MVTec Software will release the new version 17.12 of its standard software Halcon on December 8
MVTec Software has appointed Christoph Wagner to grow the company's embedded vision business
Artificial intelligence seems to be sweeping the world and neural networks are now starting to find their way into the industrial imaging market. Greg Blackman investigates
Abigail Williams explores the production and automation markets in China, India and other fast-growing nations
Embedded vision, deep learning, and Industry 4.0 could all have a big impact on the machine vision sector in the future. Three experts give their opinions
The machine vision industry is on the verge of entering a new era, one based on embedded processing, according to Basler’s CEO Dr Dietmar Ley. Greg Blackman reports from the European Machine Vision Forum in Vienna
MVTec Software has announced a new version of Halcon, offering a large selection of functions for using deep learning out of the box
Embedded processing is opening up a huge market for imaging, a market that machine vision suppliers are trying to tap into. Greg Blackman attended the Embedded Vision Summit in Santa Clara, where Allied Vision launched its new camera platform
With the new HALCON 13.0.1 release, MVTec Software now makes its machine vision software readily available for ARM-based platforms running the Linux operating system.
MVTec Software will present its entire portfolio, including its latest release, Merlic 3, at Hannover Messe from April 24 to 28
A roundup of some of the latest embedded vision technology
Tim Hayes provides a window into how to find defects in glass
Mathias Bochow, GFZ Helmholtz Centre, Potsdam, is working on the Trace project to track marine plastic. Credit: Frank Schweikert, Aldebaran Marine Research & Broadcast (www.aldebaran.org/en/)
Abigail Williams speaks to scientists tracking marine plastic using satellite spectral imagery
Tim Reynolds finds out how vision and AI algorithms are making cities safer
Anne Wendel, director of VDMA Machine Vision, on how the mechanical engineering sector could be affected by the war in Ukraine
Greg Blackman examines the importance of Tower foundries to machine vision sensor firms, following Intel’s acquisition