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A Tiny Al WIRELESS STREAMING CAMERA

Electronics For You

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June 2025

AI cameras are everywhere—spotting people, detecting objects, and powering advanced driver assistance systems in cars. But most are too bulky and power-hungry for compact applications like drones, wearables, or wildlife tracking.

- ASHWINI KUMAR SINHA

A Tiny Al WIRELESS STREAMING CAMERA

This device demonstrates how machine learning can be embedded into a tiny package—perfect for places where size, power, and real-time intelligence matter. By using TensorFlow.js with the COCO-SSD model, the camera identifies people, vehicles, and animals directly within a browser, combining intelligent software with minimal hardware. This serves as the foundation for designing one of the smallest AI streaming cameras. Fig. 1 shows the author detecting a person and a potted plant during testing.

Why go small?

Compact AI cameras offer clear advantages across diverse sectors. In drones, they lower payload while supporting obstacle detection and object tracking. In wearables, they integrate discreetly into glasses or badges to deliver real-time visual feedback. In home security, they enable unobtrusive surveillance. For wildlife monitoring, their size allows placement in tight or concealed spots such as birdhouses. In robotics, they serve as visual inputs for navigating constrained environments.

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