RealSense and AVerMedia Debut All-in-One Vision Kit to Speed Robotics Development
- The SenseEdge Development Kit combines RealSense depth cameras with NVIDIA Jetson-powered compute hardware in a pre-integrated system.
- Three flexible configurations support lab, field, and networked deployments, with remote management tools included.
RealSense and AVerMedia have announced a strategic partnership to simplify robotics development with the launch of a humanoid-ready developer kit. The all-in-one system is designed to shorten integration time and help teams move faster by removing friction from perception stack development for humanoids and mobile robots.
At the heart of this ready-to-use AI vision platform is a tightly integrated hardware stack, including AVerMedia’s D317 carrier board built for NVIDIA Jetson AGX Orin and RealSense depth cameras. The system comes preloaded with JetPack, RealSense SDK, and AVerMedia’s development tools, allowing teams to move directly into application development without the usual setup and integration overhead.
“This partnership is a major step in our mission to deliver the Visual Cortex for Physical AI,” said Nadav Orbach, CEO of RealSense, in a press release. “By combining RealSense’s industry-leading depth perception with AVerMedia’s powerful edge compute solutions, we’re enabling robots to see, sense and act in real time in dynamic human environments. Together, we’re helping robotics teams innovate faster and get actual products into the real world.”
The SenseEdge Development Kit is available in three variations, each built for a different kind of deployment. One version is designed for rugged use in mobile and outdoor systems, another offers a fast setup for labs and production lines, and a third supports large-scale, connected environments like smart infrastructure. The kits will be available starting in Q1 2026.
🌀 Tom’s Take:
By packaging depth sensing, compute, and software into a single system, this kit removes the typical integration roadblocks. This allows developers to spend less time wiring hardware and more time building real applications.
Source: BusinessWire / RealSense