The Raspberry Pi AI Camera brings AI vision to almost any Raspberry Pi model. With its neural processing hardware, the AI camera does all the heavy lifting on the device, which means you can now use your Raspberry Pi for more AI projects than ever before.

AR Streaming

I’ve always wanted to stream on Twitch for laughs, but I’m camera-shy and a bit of a privacy nut. Sure, I could make a 3D model to replace my physical appearance on-screen, but I don’t want my online avatar to be a werewolf or Sonic the Hedgehog—nothing wrong with that if that’s what you’re into.

So, is there some happy medium between revealing my full identity andcreating a VTuber avatar? With the Raspberry Pi AI Camera, augmented reality (AR) streaming might be the answer I’ve been looking for.

twitch streamer wearing sci-fi ar helmet

The Raspberry Pi AI Camera can perform semantic segmentation, which is a fancy way of saying that it can assign meaning to each pixel of a video stream. Low-latency processing could be powerful enough to overlay AR filters on the fly.

Maybe I’ll use an AR filter to give myself one of those futuristic helmets like the ADVENT officers from XCOM wear. It would cover my eyes and hair but leave the other half of my face and body alone. Then I’ll jazz up the room behind me to make my real bookshelves look like they’re part of the bulkheads of a space cruiser.

young people in a photo booth at wedding with amusing glasses and outfits

The Raspberry Pi AI Camera seems like a great way todemonstrate extended realityapplications and their possibilities. Sure, it might be a lot of effort just to troll my one or two viewers, but a man can dream.

DIY Party Photo Booth

What’s the ultimate way to liven up a party with friends or Christmas get-togethers? You might have guessed alcohol, but I would say a party photo booth.

But renting a photo booth for small gatherings isn’t very practical. It can get expensive very quickly, not to mention the logistics of getting the equipment in and out. That’s where the Raspberry Pi AI Camera comes in.

hummingbird in wildlife photo album

Since it doesn’t need a GPU or separateTensor Processing Unit, the Raspberry Pi AI Camera can do much without taking up much space. It’d be portable enough to prop up a DIY photo booth whenever I wanted.

Here’s all I’d need to set one up:

The Pi AI Camera can analyze pose estimation, meaning it can understand how people are standing or gesturing. It can automatically suggest adding props like lightsabers or animated hearts around couples based on what it detects in the frame.

If someone shows up to our New Year’s Eve party and calls my booth super nerdy, I’ll reply that it beats taking photos like it’s 1999.

Automated Wildlife Album

Living in the WUI (wildland-urban interface), my partner and I have crossed paths with deer, foxes, and all sorts of beautiful hummingbird species that we can’t name. Instead of using binoculars and vague Google searches to identify them, I think I’ll let the Raspberry Pi AI Camera do the work.

There are alreadyamazing Raspberry Pi AI projectsthat can be done with a regular Pi, but adding the AI Camera will let me easily run neural network models. This ability to incorporate machine learning—including apps that use TensorFlow or PyTorch—will takeprojects using a Raspberry Pi and camerato the next level.

It would finally let me indulge the lazy nature photographer in me. Here’s how I’d use AI to compile a local wildlife album:

Maybe I’ll finally figure out what’s been destroying our azaleas in the middle of the night. Even voles won’t be safe from the AI revolution.