Camera-based AI systems that monitor PPE compliance, detect hazardous behaviours, and enforce safety standards continuously – without manual oversight or added headcount. This category covers real-world deployment of AI safety monitoring across construction sites, food manufacturing, and energy sector facilities: accuracy benchmarks, hardware trade-offs, and the gap between a working pilot and a system that holds up during a compliance audit. Articles draw on Agmis deployments running at 93-100% detection accuracy in live production environments. If you’re evaluating AI-based PPE detection or building a business case for automated safety compliance, start here.
AI PPE detection sounds straightforward – point a camera, detect a hardhat, send an alert. Vendors make it look effortless in demos. Clean footage, perfect lighting, a worker walks into frame wearing obvious safety gear, and the system draws a nice green box around it. Then…
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In the midst of the COVID pandemic, retail changed in a fortnight. Extra safety precautions, panic buying, fights over the last toilet paper rolls and understaffed stores – this is the new grocer reality! In these difficult times retailers are turning to AI solutions to support operational continuity.
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Computer vision is changing the way businesses operate. From retail to warehousing, from manufacturing to urban planning, the technology allows to measure and analyze real life objects and create a quantifiable data level on top of them.
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Technology is at the heart of today’s health and safety management systems. Advent of new technologies help to make construction worksites safer. ‘Always on’, they aim to eliminate human factors in day-to-day operations and reduce risks for worker injury.
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Technology company AGMIS launched a Computer vision solution to improve worker safety in high-risk working conditions. The companies currently testing the solution note that it has a lot of real life potential.
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Being too expensive to deploy or simply unpractical, Computer Vision (CV) solutions were out of reach of most but the largest construction companies. With the growth of cloud computing resources and drop in their prices, as well as with increase of CV solution providers, the technology will make strong inroads into construction sector mainstream in 2019.
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