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Vision China Shanghai 2024

Allied Vision, LMI Technologies, Chromasens, and SVS-Vistek will jointly participate in Vision China Shanghai 2024 at the TKH Vision booth. Visit us to explore the various vision solutions available from TKH Vision.

 

Booth number: Hall E1, 1402

8 - 10 July, Shanghai New International Expo Centre

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Take your food sorting imaging task to the next level!

Alvium G1 cameras

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AI-BLOX and Allied Vision

An exciting collaboration between AI-BLOX and Allied Vision. The modular edge technology platform called Blox will be integrating the new Alvium GM2 (GMSL2™ interface) cameras.

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Last Time Buy for CCD cameras: August 31, 2024

Last-Time-Buy period for all Sony CCD-based sensors is ending soon. Place your order now!

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Kudan and Allied Vision

A new exciting collaboration between Kudan and Allied Vision. The Kudan Grand SLAM software will now support the Nerian Ruby 3D depth camera and is available as part of Kudan’s Mobile Robot Development Kit for Autonomous Mobile Robots.

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High-resolution short-wave infrared cameras

Alvium SWIR cameras with Sony IMX992 and IMX993

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Discover the Goldeye XSWIR Cameras

Goldeye XSWIR cameras with extended SWIR sensitivity up tp 2.2 µm and integrated dual-stage cooling (TEC2). 
Learn more about the award-winning Goldeye XSWIR cameras and XSWIR sensor technologies 


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Take your career to the next level!

Allied Vision is looking for people like you. We are always on the lookout for ambitious professionals who share our passion for quality and innovation and who like to make our customers happy.

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Focus on what counts

We don't just develop cameras. We provide answers.

At Allied Vision, we help people achieve their goals with digital cameras for computer vision. This technology opens up a range of new possibilities for businesses throughout a broad spectrum of industries. Originally built with the needs of manufacturers in mind, our camera portfolio now extends to a wide variety of sectors including science and research, medical imaging, traffic monitoring, and sports analytics.

Given the wide variety of application challenges our customers face, we have always endeavored to offer a flexible and variable camera portfolio. This is why we design our cameras to be modular. The result is a diversity of sensors, lens mounts, filters, board-level versions, and many more options that maximize flexibility.

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The image you need

Camera technology for your requirements

Our engineers design digital cameras with a large scope of resolutions, frame rates, bandwidths, interfaces, spectral sensitivities, sensor technologies, and technical platforms. We have created a modular concept to ensure that your camera adapts to requirements of your application and not the other way around.

We know how to help you find the best camera solution for your application. That includes a digital camera, but also the right lens, the right connectivity hardware and the right software interface. Our job is to reliably deliver the image you need, when you need it and how you need it.

 

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From embedded to scientific

Vision solutions for your application

Do you need help

Technical information and support

Allied Vision is at your side throughout the life cycle of your image-processing project. We are here to help you integrate your camera into your system, solve software issues and ensure your system performs as it should even years after you purchased your camera.

Our specialists provide expert advice, engineering, manufacturing and support for digital cameras, their peripherals and their integration into your machine vision system.

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Latest news

Embedded vision: What is the real price of image processing?

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Embedded systems are usually very cost-sensitive. It is important to consider overall system costs to make the right decision.

More and more embedded systems include image-processing functions, and thanks to the growing performance of embedded processors, these image-processing functions are increasingly complex. Yet embedded systems are usually very cost-sensitive. Image correction and image processing come at a cost, and it is important to consider overall system costs to make the right decision. There are two types of image processing tasks performed in a vision system: Image pre-processing and image processing. Both require processing power to deliver the expected result.


Image pre-processing, advanced processing, and post-processing
Image pre-processing or image correction and optimization is the sum of the processing tasks performed to convert the raw image data delivered by the sensor into an image whose quality meets the requirements of the specific system application. Image pre-processing may include functions such as defect pixel correction, white balance, gain, noise reduction that will optimize the image for the specific task to be performed by the image-processing software. Once the images have been optimized, the advanced processing allows for more complex enhancements to facilitate the application-specific image analysis. Examples of advanced processing are sharpness or color corrections using look-up tables.

In an embedded system, the pre-processing and advanced processing correction tasks are typically performed in an Image Signal Processor (ISP). The purpose of these corrections is to optimize the image for the actual image processing application of the system also known as post-processing. For example, enhance contrast for easier edge detection.
This post-processing application can be anything depending on the specific system goal, for example identifying a face in the image, locating and reading a license plate in a traffic monitoring application or checking the quality of objects in an industrial inspection application. These tasks are performed by complex, application-specific software algorithms on the main processor of the embedded board.


Camera module vs. sensor module
Image corrections and image processing both require processing power. Until today, embedded system designers have been relying on low-cost sensor modules to capture the images. These devices should rather be called sensor module because their functionalities are limited to interfacing the image sensor with the host. With a sensor module, both the image correction and the application-specific image processing are performed on the host embedded board.

Camera manufacturers coming from the machine vision industry offer more advanced camera modules that bring the performance and intelligence known in PC-based industrial and scientific image processing. These devices have an ISP on-board and perform advanced correction tasks such as defect pixel corrections, color corrections, cropping to a defined region of interest and many more. Allied Vision revolutionized the embedded vision market with the introduction of the ALVIUM® technology that combines high-performance, low-cost processing hardware with a rich image optimization feature set. Such camera modules deliver ready-to-use images to the host application and do not require an image sensing processor on the host side.

 
Low-cost sensor modules not suitable for low-cost systems
Until recently, most embedded system designers have been accustomed to working with low-cost sensor modules for image capture and perform all the image processing on their host system. So for particularly cost-sensitive applications, their intuition is to search for the lowest possible cost for these sensor modules.

This may not be the most economical way, though. Low-cost sensor modules require higher processing power on the host side, and it comes at a cost. Advanced camera modules may be slightly more expensive than sensor modules but they actually include an ISP and allow system designers to offload the whole image pre-processing from their main board. As a result, they can cut overall system costs significantly by using lower-performance, lower-cost host processors.


Real price of image processing
As counter-intuitive as it may seem at first sight, low-cost sensor modules are not necessarily the best choice for low-cost systems. Depending on your application and processing needs, spending a few dollars more for a more advanced camera module can save you a few hundred dollars on the host side and help you lower your overall system costs.

The rise of advanced camera modules with built-in ISP means a paradigm change for designers of embedded vision systems: More than ever, they should always consider overall system costs when selecting their imaging components. Whether onboard the camera or on the host side: processing power always comes at a cost. Finding the right balance between the camera and the host for image processing is the key to truly optimized system costs.