3D Robotics

Centeye optical flow copters on TechCrunch!

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Our friend Geoff Barrows, who has been working with us on his great optical flow boards, just got covered by TechCrunch! UPDATE: They've disabled the cool video for embedding, but you can see it here

When we first wandered up to the suburban split-level that houses Centeye Inc., we were a bit confused. Could this be the place where a mad roboticist was building tiny robots with insect eyes and brains that could interact with their environment? We rang the doorbell and weren’t disappointed.

Founded by Geoffrey Barrows, Centeye is dedicated to computer vision. They make little electronic eyes that are cheap to reproduce and “see” only a few thousand pixels. He has a staff of two engineers who work with him on designing and building chips and has just released the open source Arudeye board, a tiny Arduino board with camera built-in.

Barrows does everything from his basement. Recent advances in fabrication allow him and his staff to design chips on a computer at home and then send the plans to manufacturers in Asia. They can then mass produce their eyes, driving down the cost per unit to a few dollars. They don’t need a big lab because everything is done remotely.

Their robots are actually proofs-of-concept but they’re really cool. The little helicopters use Centeye eyes to remain stationary in space and other models can avoid objects as they move. Because each eye takes in a small part of the scene, not much computing power is needed to process each bit of input. Like insects, the brain doesn’t have to work very hard to get a lot done.

Centeye has contracts with DARPA but is trying to commercialize their hardware with the Arduino offerings. It’s fascinating to see makers in their own habitat and even more exciting to see them make cool stuff in the oddest of places. Check out the video for more information and you can watch all of our TC Makers episodes here

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Comments

  • Good Video It was cool how the machine moved out of the way when he put his hand in front of it could have anti crash properties!

  • The TechCrunch sight has a typo: it should be Ardueye, not Arudeye. At least the silk-screening on the board spells it Ardu and not Arud. I know, it's nit. I guess spellcheckers do not yet have Arduino in their dictionaries.

  • They have restricted video embedding for all. Works on TechCrunch website.

    Video: http://techcrunch.com/2012/08/19/tc-makers-centeye-creates-insect-l...

    TC Makers: Centeye Creates Insect-Like Flying Robots In A DC Basement
    When we first wandered up to the suburban home that house Centeye Inc., we were a bit confused. Could this be the place where a mad roboticist was bu…
  • Distributor

    Oh snap... video not available in Canada... Can you do something? (dont feel like jumping through hoops with proxy and VPN...

    thanks

This reply was deleted.