OnSemi and others who are part of ( “machine vision” OR “machine learning” )

https://www.onsemi.com

I was just looking for a datasheet for the AR0522. I was on Digikey looking to buy it, and their “datasheet” is only a summary. I wanted something that shows pins, interfaces and register level programming. I am looking at education on the Internet at all levels. One area where advances seem to be slow is use of cameras. As I walk through what people face, it is fairly clear how many broken pathways there are in that part of the Internet. The is simple “machine vision”. I see this chip is listed as obsolete. But sold often in parts of the web where people are learning.

Maybe you have whole training programs for industry people but I am looking at the needs of 2 billion kids from 4 to 24 who are “first time learners” and many retired and active working people who are faced with new devices ever changing. There is a lot of interest in machine vision, 3D and machine learning. Image data ought to be simple. But interfacing from small computers is taking years to grow, when it can be deliberately simplified. That will help many fields.

There are about 5 billion people now using the Internet in some form. When industries do a bad job of sharing and indexing their information it affects everyone, particularly emerging industries — who buy their parts from existing industries — if they are clear and available.

I took over this domain from Network Solutions back in 1998. I concentrate mainly on global sharing policies and best practices. Government agencies, social media sites, the largest sites, edu and org and int and about 400 million active domain. And billions who are affected by global issues where tens of millions might all work at something – in parallel (duplicating) and very inefficient overall.

( “machine vision” OR “machine learning” ) is right at 1.01 Billion entry points today. And from looking in depth at it and similar topics for 25 years every day, I can tell you that is a huge waste that is often due to many people saying “not my job” or “too big”. But it is not too big and it affects industries and companies globally, so it ought to be everyone’s job to engage clients and ultimate users, and the ones who will be part of the next few generations.

I was just looking for a datasheet for the AR0522. I was on Digikey looking to buy it, and their “datasheet” is only a summary. I wanted something that shows pins, interfaces and register level programming. I am looking at education on the Internet at all levels. One area where advanced seem to be slow is use of cameras. As I walk through what people face, it is fairly clear how many broken pathways there are in that part of the Internet. The is simple “machine vision”. I see this chip is listed as obsolete. But sold often in parts of the web where people are learning.

Maybe you have whole training programs for industry people but I am looking at the needs of 2 billion kids from 4 to 24 who are “first time learners” and many retired and active working people who are faced with new devices ever changing. There is a lot of interest in machine vision, 3D and machine learning. Image data ought to be simple. But interfacing from small computers is taking years to grow, when it can be deliberately simplified. That will help many fields.

There are about 5 billion people now using the Internet in some form. When industries do a bad job of sharing and indexing their information it affects everyone, particularly emerging industries — who buy their parts from existing industries — if they are clear and available.

I took over this domain from Network Solutions back in 1998. I concentrate mainly on global sharing policies and best practices. Government agencies, social media sites, the largest sites, edu and org and int and about 400 million active domain. And billions who are affected by global issues where tens of millions might all work at something – in parallel (duplicating) and very inefficient overall.

( “machine vision” OR “machine learning” ) is right at 1.01 Billion entry points today. And from looking in depth at it and similar topics for 25 years every day, I can tell you that is a huge waste that is often due to many people saying “not my job” or “too big”. But it is not too big and it affects industries and companies globally, so it ought to be everyone’s job to engage clients and ultimate users, and the ones who will be part of the next few generations.

You might want to rethink your policy of excluding gmail and similar emails. The solution for identifying individuals with verifiable certificates online is partly being solved by those groups who recognize that global communication means verifiable identify. You mentioned NDA’s but that is a blunt term. What are your risks and what are you sharing and what do you want to happen? — those are more the issues you should consider, not try to make one size fits all. I can tell you the whole is changing very fast, and many of the new policies are good ones and will help. You cannot set policies company by company. Not even industry by industry. Certainly not country by country. it is too complex using old methods. But emerging global methods seem to be working and moving in directions that will enhance global visibility of industries, and better protect the contributions and value added by organizations of all sorts.

I know there must be someone, maybe many someones, at OnSemi who care about such things.

Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation

Image Sensor Group (ISG) – Thank you for registering for the Image Sensor Portal.

Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

Director, The Internet Foundation Studying formation and optimized collaboration of global communities. Applying the Internet to solve global problems and build sustainable communities. Internet policies, standards and best practices.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *