vote up 2 vote down star

We are planning to purchase an embedded development board with a motion controllable camera.

  • Requirement-1: Embedded development with a camera
  • Requirement-2: Camera should move both along the X and Z axis (i.e., 2 degrees of freedom)
  • Requirement-3: The processor in the board shall be able to run heavy computation (to perform all the Image processing tasks)
  • Requirement-4: The board should have a nice array of tool-chains
  • Requirement-5: The board should be very cheap

My question:

Do you have any suggestion for such a board

Note

I am going to search the internet for myself. Just in case, if some of you out their, if you have any idea please let me know. It will definitely save me a lot of time with the search and concentrate of programming.

flag

Motion control and cheap are probably incompatible requirements, unless your idea of cheap is relative. I assume you mean pan and tilt rather than linear motions along X and Z axis, right? – RBerteig Oct 14 at 5:50
1  
Can you clarify what you mean by "able to run heavy computation"? For example, the last embedded image-processing application I saw doing something like this was doing dev work on a PS3 cluster, and planning to embed several rack-mounted Cell/B.E. blades in a military aircraft. You're obviously not going to get that on a board. Would an ARM Cortex-A8 (like on a BeagleBoard) do what you need? – Brooks Moses Oct 14 at 6:17
@Brooks, I am planning to work on Image stitching and some 3D graphics. Probably, ARM Cortex-A8 will go. I was thinking of some dual like TI's DM3xx series in my mind – Alphaneo Oct 14 at 8:20

2 Answers

vote up 3 vote down

I would buy a Linux board with USB and a USB camera separately.

link|flag
1  
An alternate option might be buying a board with a fixed camera, and getting a motion-control camera mount and putting the whole board on the mount. – Brooks Moses Oct 14 at 6:12
vote up 1 vote down

If it has to be embedded and low power, look at the TI OMAP & Davinci processors. They can run linux or Win CE on the ARM processor and also have DSP for video processing.

There are very cheap evaluation boards that utilize the omap processor, Beagle Board, and gumstix.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.