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  2. Keyence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyence

    Keyence is fabless — although it is a manufacturer; it specializes solely in product planning and development and does not manufacture the final products. Keyence products are manufactured at qualified contract manufacturing companies.

  3. Peripheral Sensor Interface 5 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peripheral_Sensor_Interface_5

    Peripheral Sensor Interface (PSI5) is a digital interface for sensors. PSI5 is a two-wire interface, used to connect peripheral sensors to electronic control units in automotive electronics . Both point-to-point and bus configurations with asynchronous and synchronous data transmission are supported.

  4. AS-Interface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AS-interface

    Actuator Sensor Interface (AS-Interface or ASi) is an industrial networking solution (Physical Layer, Data access Method and Protocol) used in PLC, DCS and PC-based automation systems. It is designed for connecting simple field I/O devices (e.g. binary ON/OFF devices such as actuators, sensors, rotary encoders, analog inputs and outputs, push ...

  5. Keysight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keysight

    Keysight Technologies, Inc. is an American company that manufactures electronics test and measurement equipment and software. The name is a blend of key and insight. [2] [4] The company was formed as a spin-off of Agilent Technologies, which inherited and rebranded the test and measurement product lines developed and produced from the late 1960s to the turn of the millennium by Hewlett-Packard ...

  6. User guide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_guide

    In some business software applications, where groups of users have access to only a sub-set of the application's full functionality, a user guide may be prepared for each group. An example of this approach is the Autodesk Topobase 2010 Help [ 6 ] document, which contains separate Administrator Guides , User Guides , and a Developer's Guide .

  7. Hall effect sensor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hall_effect_sensor

    Hall effect devices produce a very low signal level and thus require amplification. The vacuum tube amplifier technology available in the first half of the 20th century was too large, expensive, and power-consuming for everyday Hall effect sensor applications, which were limited to laboratory instruments.

  8. Back-illuminated sensor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back-illuminated_sensor

    A traditional, front-illuminated digital camera is constructed in a fashion similar to the human eye, with a lens at the front and photodetectors at the back. This traditional orientation of the sensor places the active matrix of the digital camera image sensor—a matrix of individual picture elements—on its front surface and simplifies manufacturing.

  9. Hand–eye calibration problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand–eye_calibration_problem

    In robotics and mathematics, the hand–eye calibration problem (also called the robot–sensor or robot–world calibration problem) is the problem of determining the transformation between a robot end-effector and a sensor or sensors (camera or laser scanner) or between a robot base and the world coordinate system. [1]