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robinwa

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robinwa
·2 years ago·discuss
Got me there...
robinwa
·2 years ago·discuss
Conventional multispectral and hyperspectral can't keep up (and integrate well) into existing sorting lines. They induce a slow-down in conveyer belt speeds or you have to install splitters and buy multiple $100K cameras.

(we're working to solve this problem though in the classic VC backed way - DM for more information!)
robinwa
·5 years ago·discuss
Pickup truck!
robinwa
·5 years ago·discuss
Living Optics | Software/Production/Systems Engineers | Full-time | Oxford, UK

Living Optics is a new Oxford University start-up building next-generation hyperspectral cameras. We are creating a leap forward in our capacity to easily see what is invisible to the naked eye. Using a combination of patented optical methods, machine learning, and applied mathematics, we are radically miniaturizing hyperspectral photography, bringing down costs while improving performance.

We're building a world-class team to bring our hyperspectral vision to life, and are looking for engineers who are excited for the challenge!

The roles we're hiring for are:

- Software Engineer (Hyperspectral Applications)

- Senior Software Engineer (Architecture)

- Junior DevOps Engineer

- Production Engineer

- Systems Engineer

For more information on the roles: https://livingoptics.co/careers.html

Feel free to drop me a PM about the roles or about the company!
robinwa
·5 years ago·discuss
Yeah! Ping me anytime, email in profile.
robinwa
·5 years ago·discuss
Yeah for sure, the current ones are disgustingly expensive and atrociously hard to use though!
robinwa
·5 years ago·discuss
Hyperspectral imaging.

It reminds me of a Star Trek tricorder. Imagine having a camera where you can see easily ID greenhouse gases, quantify water/fat content in food, identify plant diseases, verify drug components, identify tumours, and measure blood oxygenation. On the machine vision side of things: it could probably outperform any conventional imaging + DNN combination, and you'd probably get pixel-wise segmentation for free while you're there.

There's been a lot of academic progress going on - it shouldn't be long until hyperspectral imaging makes its way into our lives.