Top-Line growth despite the recession could be registered during this past year in the so-called non-manufacturing applications of image processing and machine vision. A presentation of the first results – still preliminary – of the annual market study conducted by the EMVA, given by Director of Market Research Andreas Breyer at the business conference of the association in Istanbul this past April, has shown a respectable increase from about 12% to about 19% of total sales of European machine vision by these sectors in 2009. This number, a fifth of the industry´s sales result after all, is even more remarkable considering that the market data is gained predominantly in the area of “industrial” machine vision. Companies being active mainly in areas such as life science, security, surveillance, document management as well as ITS, logistics and military, are not even covered by the EMVA survey. This is based in the historical roots of the association. Both, the European association EMVA as well as the German VDMA sub-group “Industrielle Bildverarbeitung” (Industrial Vision/Machine Vision) have their roots in the “traditional” markets of factory floor quality control automation that started about 20 years ago. These “seeing machines” are today an integral part of modern production technology. Even more: the major part of automated processes for the manufacturing of all kind of products – from toothbrushes up to complete automobiles – would not even be feasible without the vision technologies. The golden days of annual strong double-digit growth, however, have come to an end. The American industry association AIA has forecasted a very moderate growth of 3% for 2010; their European counterparts still expect an increase in turnover at about 11% for this year. Beyond the traditional feeding grounds of machine vision, however, the world moves at a whole different pace. Allow me to hazard the prediction, that we will see imaging technologies in every aspect of our daily life ten years from now. Small airborne robots will be used to automatically visually detect structural damages on buildings from above, guided by robot vision in the first place. Vehicle flow on the main traffic arteries will be steered by individual on-board cameras based on data from the higher-level traffic surveillance camera infrastructure. Our vacation planning will be done at 3D monitors within the augmented reality environment of the trip´s destination having been fully digitized by 3D scanners. Miniaturized cameras regularly circle around inside our body and send out warning messages as soon as they detect something out of the order. Utopia? Maybe so. Maybe it will take ten years instead of twenty, but maybe this vision of the future is not yet even close to what will really evolve. Already today a vacuum cleaner can be obtained at Amazon for a mere 300 Euros that is guided through my place by vision. My cell phone is able to identify my vis-à-vis by face recognition, find him in my address data base and spare me the embarrassment of having to reply to a joyful salutation at the trade show booth with a sheepish “Sorry, what was your name again?”.
Gabriele Jansen
Posted by stephanienickl