
2. Compatible with SPIKE Prime, EV3, and ICBricks robotics building platforms, and also supports popular open-source hardware such as micro:bit, Arduino, and Raspberry Pi.
3. The Grove interface supports ICreateRobot, Seeed, and M5Stack open-source hardware, while the LPF2 interface connects directly to SPIKE Prime.
4. Two M3 screw holes allow mounting of 3D-printed parts, wooden boards, or metal components, while four 8mm holes are compatible with LEGO bricks, enabling seamless integration into robotics and maker classrooms.
5. Built-in offline vision recognition and deep learning capabilities, with support for training and importing custom models through CanMV for more advanced AI vision applications.
5. With a JPEG-enabled camera, the ESP32-S3 achieves video stream latency below 100ms, offering smooth, near realtime visuals—perfect for robotics education, maker experiments, and video-based remote control projects.
6. Perfect for AI literacy education, DIY projects, and robotics competitions, this vision module combines vision recognition,and low-latency video streaming to provide an immersive, hands-on AI learning experience in classrooms and maker projects.












