Les Pounder has posted a new set of tutorials on the Element 14 website that take you through using both the normal Pi Camera Module and the PiNoIR infra-red camera. The three tutorials are: Taking a picture, Creating a time-lapse and Recording in slow-motion. So, if you’ve got a camera module and you don’t know where to begin, this is a great post to start with. Read it here.
Snap – I’m about to post a slow motion tutorial too, well, pretty much just posting the article I wrote for the MagPi with a few changes.
I wonder how many people have a Camera Module as a percentage of overall Raspberry Pi owners?
Don’t know. You hear a lot about the millions of Pis that have sold but not much about the camera module.
2.7.2015
I have started playing around with the Pi Camera, but I wonder if one can connect two USB Webcams to the Rpi and use OPENCV to compute distances and also finding a pathway for , say, a autonomus robot.
Still, I need to sdo a lot more work.
Slightly off the Topic, I miss a good Pi Camera casing. I know there are ones from SB in Amazon but the have poor rstings. A good casing is something that we need.
I am about to try out the RPi camera extension cable of some
3 Meters – I’ll report on my findings
B D
Use the other sensor: the standard ultrasonic sensor. Depth measurement using cameras is not for the hobbyist.
@niel – I’ve already used a ultrasonic sensor with success. The real application is looking for a route for a robot.
I have received a private mail from Jim who suggests using the Kinect for this.
But I also want face recognition so I’ll not get away from OPENCV. Perhaps sending a Photo to a PC for fast processing. I have the time to do a lot of reading and I’ll need that time.!
Other people have reported good results with the 1 metre cable, so it’ll be interesting to hear your results from the 3 metre.
I forgot to mention that I will be using this
https://www.raspberrypi.org/camera-board-extension/
for the Camera a Camera serial to HDMI converter
Perhaps others would be interested.
BD.