Raspberry Pi launches camera module for vision-based AI applications

Image Credits: Romain Dillet / TechCrunch

Raspberry Pi, the company that sells tiny, cheap, single-board computers, is releasing an add-on that is going to open up several use cases — and yes, because it’s 2024, there’s an AI angle. Called the Raspberry Pi AI Camera, this image sensor comes with on-board AI processing and is going to cost $70.

In more technical terms, the AI Camera is based on a Sony image sensor (the IMX500) paired with a RP2040, Raspberry Pi’s own microcontroller chip with on-chip SRAM. Like the rest of the line-up, the RP2040 follows Raspberry Pi’s overall philosophy — it is inexpensive yet efficient.

In other words, AI startups aren’t going to replace their Nvidia GPUs with RP2040 chips for inference. But when you pair it with an image sensor, you get an extension module that can capture images and process those images through common neural network models.

As an added benefit, on-board processing on the camera module means that the host Raspberry Pi isn’t affected by visual data processing. The Raspberry Pi remains free to perform other operations — you don’t need to add a separate accelerator. The new module is compatible with all Raspberry Pi computers.

This isn’t Raspberry Pi’s first camera module. The company still sells the Raspberry Pi Camera Module 3, a simple 12-megapixel image sensor from Sony (IMX708) mounted on a small add-on board that you can pair with a Raspberry Pi with a ribbon cable. As Raspberry Pi promises to keep production running for many years, the Camera Module 3 will remain available for around $25.

The AI Camera is the same size as the Camera Module 3 (25mm x 24mm) but slightly thicker due to the structure of the optical sensor. It comes pre-loaded with the MobileNet-SSD model, an object detection model that can run in realtime.

At this point, you might be wondering who is going to use the Raspberry Pi AI Camera. While the tiny computers were originally designed for tech hobbyists and homelab projects, Raspberry Pi now sells most of its devices to companies that use Raspberry Pi devices in their own products or as part their assembly lines for internal industrial use cases.

When Raspberry Pi became a public company, it reported that the industrial and embedded segment represented 72% of its sales. That ratio is likely going to be even higher for the AI Camera.

I could imagine companies using the AI Camera module for smart city sensors that detect empty parking spots, say, or track traffic flows. In an industrial environment, the hardware could be used for basic, automated quality assurance with objects passing under the camera module.

The reason why companies like using Raspberry Pi is because they can produce computers and modules at scale — they faced some post-Covid supply constraints but those seem to be resolved. Companies know they can reliability source Raspberry Pi products without suffering delays in a production pipeline. That’s also part of the reason why Raspberry Pi promises that the AI Camera will remain in production until at least January 2028.

Image Credits: Romain Dillet / TechCrunch

Boom's macOS camera app lets you customize your video call appearance

Image Credits: Boom

As someone who talks to many people outside my time zone, I often spend at least a few minutes on a video call explaining my location, time, and weather. That information became easier to convey with a Mac app called Boom, now available as a freemium product.

Boom is a bootstrapped company built by former Shopify employees Robleh Jama and Krishna Satya. The app works with all major video conferencing apps, including Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams. Once installed, you can add customized themes to your video call appearances, including your name, designation, location, time, and weather.

Plus, it lets you react through on-screen effects, stickers, and GIFs during calls. You can tweak your appearance, too, with controls for things like brightness, contrast, saturation, shadow, hue, and exposure. There are different presets for various appearances, as well.

What’s more, users can design an off-camera screen to show a customized design rather than a blank screen.

The company is also now rolling out a new feature to track meeting times

The co-founders told TechCrunch that they started working on the idea during remote work days at Shopify.

“We realized we weren’t just knowledge workers anymore—we were all streamers now. We had the hardware: nice cameras, mics, our home offices doubling as broadcast studios. But the software? Still just vanilla Zoom, Meet, and Teams. That frustration with the existing tools is what sparked Boom,” they said.

Boom co-founders emphasized that the product is to make video calls more fun and engaging across different apps.

The startup has been testing the product for over a year, with the public release in April. The company previously offered a paid-only product, but this summer it has tweaked its pricing model to become a freemium service.

Users can use the virtual camera, themes, and reactions for free. However, advanced camera controls premium themes, custom branding, and screen share features like presenter overlay and cursor highlights magnifier will cost you $7 per month, $70 per year, or $199 for a lifetime license.

Later this month, the startup will launch a timeboxing feature to limit specific discussion topics.

For the next release cycle, Boom is working on features like an agenda tracker, dynamic polls, and quizzes.

Boom co-founders think they can grow the product organically without venture backing.

“We’re pretty set on taking a more independent path and not going the VC route. Our goal is to make Boom so useful that it grows organically and profitably for 10+ years. If we can do that while staying indie, that’s the dream,” they said.

Apple finally places front camera on iPad on the landscape edge — like it should be

Image Credits: Apple

Apple announced new iPads — two iPad Air models and the iPad Pro with M4 processor — at its “Let Loose” event on Tuesday. However, one of the important updates for people who take a lot of video calls was Apple shifting the camera to the landscape edge.

Until now, the camera on the iPad was on the portrait edge, which meant you had to put the iPad in portrait mode while taking video calls. If you placed your iPad in landscape mode — like a laptop — it presented a weird and unflattering angle. The new iPad models solve this problem.

“We’ve also redesigned the iPad Air to put the front-facing camera on the landscape edge and a feature center stage that uses machine learning to keep everyone in the field of view automatically. So it’s perfect for connecting with friends and family over FaceTime or joining a video conference while using a keyboard,” Melody Kuna, director of iPad Design, said.

The company is bringing similar changes to the new iPad Pro models powered by the M4 processor.

The new iPads are shipping next week, with the 11-inch model priced at $599 and the 13-inch model priced at $799.

Read more about Apple's 2024 iPad Event