![]() If you’re using a brand new install of Raspbian Jessie, then the first thing you should do is ensure your filesystem has been expanded to include all available space on your micro-SD card: $ sudo raspi-config While the Pi Zero isn’t quite fast enough for advanced video processing, it’s still a great tool that you can use to learn the basics of computer vision and OpenCV. It packs a single core 1GHz ARM processor. If you haven’t seen the Raspberry Pi Zero yet, it’s a really cool piece of hardware. Installing OpenCV on your Raspberry Pi Zero You want to install OpenCV v3.0 with Python 2.7 bindings (for Python 3 support, see this post).Īgain, I have already covered installing OpenCV on multiple Raspberry Pi platforms and Raspbian flavors - the primary goal of this tutorial is to get OpenCV up and running on your Pi Zero so you can get started learning about computer vision, image processing, and the OpenCV library.You have Raspbian Jessie installed on your Pi Zero.You are using Raspberry Pi Zero hardware (so the timings supplied with each command will match up). ![]() I’ll also be making the following assumptions in this installation guide: ![]() For a more thorough discussion on how to install OpenCV 3 on your Pi (along with a 22-minute video installation guide), please refer to this post. Since I’ve covered how to install OpenCV on the Raspberry Pi in multiple, previous blog posts, I’ll keep this post on the shorter side and detail only the relevant commands necessary to get OpenCV up and running. ![]() In this blog post I’ll demonstrate how to install OpenCV 3 on the Raspberry Pi Zero. Click here to download the source code to this post
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