I'm looking for a platform for basic image processing. Found nice products called fit-pc & fit-pc2i
Does anyone know/use better alternatives for that? It would be great if it could run Linux/Windows.
I'm looking for a platform for basic image processing. Found nice products called fit-pc & fit-pc2i
Does anyone know/use better alternatives for that? It would be great if it could run Linux/Windows.
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for oilpan stm multipilot
multipilot 32
I don't think that computer can handle angles regulation on multi rotor, because we need a real time based operating system, (like uClinux). But for high image processing,I think it could be completely OK !
would this be a task for a 32-bit ARM processor, or would something better be required?
While not in the same league as the fit-pc in terms of processing power, the eBox 3350mx might be an option depending on your processing power requirements:
http://robosavvy.com/store/product_info.php/products_id/1704
Another option might be buying a used Sony Vaio P:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_VAIO_P_series
@Ed, thanks. Is this the one you used? http://www.pc104.org/product.php?id=559
in general pc based platforms miss industrial ports like spi and i2c.
all arm platforms will have these ports and much more. but not more cpu power.
@ed: really nice blimp
I worked in a team of 4 last year to build and fly an autonomous blimp to do 3D reconstruction of the terrain using computer vision (a single camera + IMU).
We used a PC104 board featuring a 2.2GHz Core 2 Duo chip. Camera was firewire. Everything written to an SSD. The CPU was pegged but then 3D reconstruction is a harder problem than a lot of other cvis. Anyway, we were pleased with the performance of the PC104 boards. We put Arch Linux on it, which is a particularly delicious flavour I think. Raspberry Pi is certainly not 'plenty' of processing power assuming modern cvis algorithms and decent resolution and frame-rates. But it might be enough for the app.
Video of it just because we all like videos of flying hardware:
raspberry pi is the way to go, $25 bucks and plenty of processing power
indeed E-350 chip has lots of procesing power, you can check out a few Asus motherboards here :
http://www.asus.com/Motherboards/AMD_CPU_on_Board
and 8 motherboards with E-350 comparison test at this link
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/e-350-motherboard-brazos,2958.html