NI Bolsters Machine Vision Leadership With Adoption of GigE Vision Standard; NI Continues to Support All Major Industrial Camera Interfaces, Including Gigabit Ethernet.AUSTIN, Texas -- National Instruments National Instruments, or NI (NASDAQ: NATI), is an American company with over 4,000 employees and direct operations in 41 countries founded in 1976 by Dr. James Truchard, Bill Nowlin and Jeff Kodosky. (Nasdaq:NATI NATI National Association of Teen Institutes NATI Newfoundland Association of Technical Industries ) extends its machine vision market leadership by today announcing its adoption of the new Automated Imaging Association (AIA AIA - Application Integration Architecture ) standard for Gigabit Ethernet An Ethernet standard that transmits at 1 Gbps. Used mostly to connect high-end workstations and servers as well as for network backbones, Gigabit Ethernet transmits full duplex from point to point using switches and half duplex in a shared environment (CSMA/CD) using a hub. (GigE) Vision. A longtime leader in end-user vision systems, NI now adds support for GigE Vision cameras to its existing image acquisition software. With NI Vision Acquisition software, engineers can acquire images from thousands of different cameras and seamlessly move between standard vision buses including IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, New York, www.ieee.org) A membership organization that includes engineers, scientists and students in electronics and allied fields. 1394a, IEEE 1394b, Camera Link and analog. National Instruments, in cooperation with more than a dozen other machine vision companies, helped define and develop the GigE Vision standard. This firsthand knowledge translates into a highly optimized and easy-to-use software package. "In my experience, National Instruments vision software provides both high performance and ease of use," says Fritz Dierks, head of Component Software Development at Basler Vision Technologies. "Adding support for GigE Vision ensures that National Instruments image acquisition software and hardware will continue to work with the most cutting-edge cameras available today." Using NI Vision Acquisition software and GigE Vision cameras, engineers can acquire images at speeds greater than 100 MB/s over standard Gigabit Ethernet while using only a fraction of a computer's CPU CPU in full central processing unit Principal component of a digital computer, composed of a control unit, an instruction-decoding unit, and an arithmetic-logic unit. , leaving essential processing power available for complex machine vision algorithms. This performance is realized without adding more software complexity. In fact, with NI Vision Acquisition software, engineers can interchange IEEE 1394 and GigE Vision cameras without changing their programs. In addition, with NI Vision Acquisition software, they can speak to GigE Vision cameras and ordinary TCP/IP TCP/IP in full Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol Standard Internet communications protocols that allow digital computers to communicate over long distances. network devices via the same port. Because of this unique innovation, engineers can use the same port for acquiring images as well as general-purpose Web applications without the need to switch drivers. GigE Vision provides many features that have been unavailable in a single camera interface until now. The combined features of high data rates, long cable lengths (up to 100 m) and low-cost cabling make Gigabit Ethernet an attractive interface option for security and application monitoring. In addition, GigE Vision is compatible with standard Gigabit Ethernet hardware, allowing networking of cameras. This is especially useful in situations requiring multiple views of the same product or that involve many networked cameras placed far from a PC. NI Vision Acquisition software is a single software package for acquiring, saving and displaying images from industrial cameras on standard industrial machine vision buses, including GigE. It is part of both the NI Vision Development Module and NI Vision Builder for Automated Inspection. Engineers also can order this package separately for applications requiring only image acquisition and not image processing image processing Set of computational techniques for analyzing, enhancing, compressing, and reconstructing images. Its main components are importing, in which an image is captured through scanning or digital photography; analysis and manipulation of the image, accomplished or analysis. In August, NI will host the Vision Summit at NIWeek 2006, one of the largest vision events in North America. During the Summit, industry experts will present the advantages and disadvantages of the popular machine vision camera buses, including GigE. For more information and to register for the Vision Summit at NIWeek, readers can visit www.ni.com/niweek. About National Instruments For 30 years, National Instruments (www.ni.com) has been a technology pioneer and leader in virtual instrumentation -- a revolutionary concept that has changed the way engineers and scientists in industry, government and academia approach measurement and automation. Leveraging PCs and commercial technologies, virtual instrumentation increases productivity and lowers costs for test, control and design applications through easy-to-integrate software, such as NI LabVIEW, and modular measurement and control hardware for PXI (PCI EXtensions for Instrumentation) A peripheral bus specialized for data acquisition and real time control systems. Introduced in 1997, PXI uses the CompactPCI 3U and 6U form factors and adds trigger lines, a local bus and other functions suited for measurement , PCI (1) (Payment Card Industry) See PCI DSS. (2) (Peripheral Component Interconnect) The most widely used I/O bus (peripheral bus). , PCI Express, USB USB in full Universal Serial Bus Type of serial bus that allows peripheral devices (disks, modems, printers, digitizers, data gloves, etc.) to be easily connected to a computer. and Ethernet. Headquartered in Austin, Texas, NI has more than 3,900 employees and direct operations in nearly 40 countries. For the past seven years, FORTUNE magazine has named NI one of the 100 best companies to work for in America. Readers can obtain investment information from the company's investor relations Investor relations The process by which the corporation communicates with its investors. department by calling 512-683-5090, e-mailing nati@ni.com or visiting www.ni.com/nati. LabVIEW, National Instruments, NI, ni.com and NIWeek are trademarks of National Instruments. Other product and company names listed are trademarks or trade names of their respective companies. |
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