This camera uses AI to automatically identify the birds in your yard

A new camera designed for use with bird feeders promises to tell you when there are birds visiting your yard—and even use machine learning to identify what types of birds they are. The Birdfy, from Netvue which also makes surveillance cameras and video doorbells, has raised more than $38,000 on Kickstarter, with pricing starting at $149 and an initial batch of cameras slated to ship in time for Christmas. The system is designed to detect birds using motion detection, save their pictures to cloud or local storage, and trigger a notification to a linked smartphone app along with information about what species of bird it spotted. The Birdfy can recognize up to 6,000 species, according to Netvue’s Kickstarter page.

        if(typeof(jQuery)=="function"){(function($){$.fn.fitVids=function(){}})(jQuery)};
            jwplayer('jwplayer_ifn53DT8_G2hQKLvX_div').setup(
            {"playlist":"https:\/\/content.jwplatform.com\/feeds\/ifn53DT8.json","ph":2}
        );

It’s not the only digital tool that can recognize birds: The Cornell Lab of Ornithology offers a free app called Merlin that can identify birds by sight or sound, and various commercial apps can also help you either automatically recognize birds or look them up in an in-app guidebook by various features. But the Birdfy is designed for automated use in a yard, capturing images of birds as they collect food from an integrated seed container or an existing feeder to which the camera can be mounted. The bird images can then be shared on social media or accessed by other users invited to link their Netvue apps to a particular Birdfy feeder. And users can tap in the app to access the Wikipedia page about whatever bird species they’ve just spotted. “Birdfy caters to all—the birds and the users,” wrote Netvue marketer Jacqulin Simons on a ProductHunt post about the device. The system also includes a feature to let bird fanciers chase away unwanted visitors such as squirrels from their feeders. With the touch of a button in the app, users can trigger an alarm and flashing lights designed to scare away bird seed-hunting rodents.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90698909/identify-birds-smart-camera?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 4y | 23 nov. 2021, 11:21:34


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

AI-generated errors set back this murder case in an Australian Supreme Court

A senior lawyer in Australia has apologized to a judge for

15 août 2025, 16:40:03 | Fast company - tech
This $200 million sports streamer is ready to take on ESPN and Fox

Recent Nielsen data confirmed what many of us had already begun to sense: Streaming services

15 août 2025, 11:50:09 | Fast company - tech
This new flight deck technology is making flying safer, reducing delays, and curbing emissions

Ever wondered what goes on behind the scenes in a modern airliner’s cockpit? While you’re enjoying your in-flight movie, a quiet technological revolution is underway, one that’s

15 août 2025, 11:50:07 | Fast company - tech
The case for personality-free AI

Hello again, and welcome to Fast Company’s Plugged In.

For as long as there’s been software, upgrades have been emotionally fraught. When people grow accustomed to a pr

15 août 2025, 11:50:07 | Fast company - tech
Why AI is vulnerable to data poisoning—and how to stop it

Imagine a busy train station. Cameras monitor everything, from how clean the platforms are to whether a docking bay is empty or occupied. These cameras feed into an

15 août 2025, 09:40:03 | Fast company - tech
5 ways to keep your electronic devices from overheating this summer

The summer holidays are here and many of us will heading off on trips to hot and sunny destinations,

14 août 2025, 17:30:04 | Fast company - tech
Why Nvidia and AMD’s China pay-to-play deal with Trump could backfire

Welcome to AI Decoded, Fast Company’s weekly new

14 août 2025, 17:30:02 | Fast company - tech