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  2. Ball camera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball_camera

    A ball camera or camera ball is a spherical camera. One variant is designed to be thrown into the air to capture panoramic images from a height or in hazardous locations.

  3. Int-Ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Int-Ball

    The Int-Ball, also known as the JEM Internal Ball Camera, is a series of experimental, autonomous, self-propelled, and maneuverable ball cameras, deployed in the Japanese Kibō module of the International Space Station. The devices are intended to perform some of the photo-video documentation tasks aboard the ISS, reducing the workload of the ...

  4. Hawk-Eye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawk-Eye

    Hawk-Eye camera system at the Kremlin Cup tennis tournament on 20 October 2012, Moscow. Hawk-Eye is a computer vision system used to visually track the trajectory of a ball and display a profile of its statistically most likely path as a moving image. [1]

  5. All-in-one camera ball scouts dangerous locations - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2015-06-26-camera-ball-explorer...

    Imagine how much easier it would be if first responders could search inside collapsed buildings, or if police could scope out a suspect's room for danger before breaking in. That's the driving ...

  6. Panono - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panono

    "The ball camera with an all-round view" [4] according to the German WirtschaftsWoche. "The Panono is certainly a different kind of camera, but I can't wholeheartedly recommend it just yet. It's expensive and doesn't shoot video." [5] - Mashable "The me from three years ago would have loved the hell out of the Panono.

  7. Forward-looking infrared - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forward-looking_infrared

    Many camera systems use digital image processing to improve the image quality. Infrared imaging sensor arrays often have wildly inconsistent sensitivities from pixel to pixel, due to limitations in the manufacturing process. To remedy this, the response of each pixel is measured at the factory, and a transform, most often linear, maps the ...