Focusing on the most prominent current and emerging trends in the world of vision, Imaging and Machine Vision Europe’s Vision Yearbook is an essential industry guide to the key technologies that will mark the coming year.
The 24/25 edition of Imaging and Machine Vision Europe’s Vision Yearbook – a special release including the latest news, events, insights and opinion from the world of vision, as well as an inspection on the road ahead – can be detected now, appearing in postboxes and inboxes from today. The Vision Yearbook offers a no-holds-barred look at the key trends that will rule the next 12 months of vision, with a feature article from industry expert Susan Fourtané on the benefits of AI-powered autonomous robots and what Industry 5.0 will mean for humanity.
Expert industry insight and opinion
Giving a valuable real-world example of how machine learning algorithms can already be crucial to machine vision, the Vision Yearbook also includes a case study on how Marexi Marine Technology was able to leverage Zebra’s 3D profile sensors to accurately classify tuna. Meanwhile, with nominations well underway for the Photonics100 list of the most eminent innovators of photonics, we take a closer look at some of the imaging honourees from previous years.
Visionaries 2024: a platform for vision integrators
Forming Imaging and Machine Vision Europe’s own group of groundbreaking innovators, Visionaries 2024 will group together named experts to give their views on the vision industry as they see it, with sit-downs, company profiles and case studies featured in the Vision Yearbook 24/25 with Paul Cunningham, managing director of Acrovision; Ravishankar Rajagopalan, CEO of Augurai; Markus Tarin, president and CEO of MoviTherm and Tommy Svedlund, co-founder and manager of Swedvision.
There’s still time to nominate for Visionaries 2024, by the way. Visit our nomination submission page to find out more.
Elsewhere in the Vision Yearbook 24/25
Equally focused on the now as well as the next 12 months, the Vision Yearbook also includes penetrative roundups on the current position of the vision industry, with detailed findings from the recent EMVA Business Conference – including a panel discussion hosted by Warren Clark, CEO of Imaging and Machine Vision Europe’s publisher Europa Science, the curation of ten recent product releases that have shaken up the sector and all the usual directories of key suppliers and upcoming events to fill up the calendar.
Imaging and Machine Vision Europe will return in…
Until next time, when Imaging and Machine Vision Europe will return to normal business with its August/September issue, released in September. If you don’t already receive a physical copy through your door, sign up to receive one now.