Movidius was co-founded in 2005 by Sean Mitchell and David Moloney in Dublin, Ireland. [2][3] Between 2006 and 2016, it raised nearly $90 million in capital funding.[4] In May 2013, the company appointed Remi El-Ouazzane as CEO.[5] In January 2016, the company announced a partnership with Google.[6] Movidius has been active in Google's Project Tango,[7] and also announced a planned acquisition by Intel in September 2016.[8]
Productsedit
Myriad 2edit
The company's Myriad 2 chip is a manycorevision processing unit that can function on power-constrained devices.[citation needed] The Fathom is a USB stick containing a Myriad 2 processor, allowing a vision accelerator to be added to devices using ARM processors including PCs, drones, robots, IoT devices and video surveillance for tasks such as identifying people or objects. It can run at between 80 and 150 GFLOPS on 1W of power.[9]
Myriad Xedit
Intel's Myriad X VPU (vision processing unit) is the third generation VPU from Movidius. It uses a Neural Compute Engine, a dedicated hardware accelerator—for neural network deep-learning inferences.
Neural Compute Stickedit
The Intel Movidius Neural Compute Stick (NCS) is a tiny fanless deep-learning device that can be used to learn AI programming at the edge. NCS is powered by the same low-power, high-performance Intel Movidius Vision Processing Unit that can be found in millions of smart security cameras, gesture-controlled drones, industrial machine vision equipment, and more. Supported frameworks are TensorFlow and Caffe.[10]
On 14 November 2018, the company announced the latest version of NCS, marketed as "Neural Compute Stick 2" at the AI DevCon event in Beijing.[11]