Hi,
I joined that party 42 years ago in 1983 working for IBM. We had the idea for a printed circuit board manufacturing vision systems coincidental with our first designs using surface mount components. They liked to misplace and required a lot of human vision time, which tended to miss a fault here and there. That led to many failing products on their assembly lines. Which were not in the same factory as the board production. Meaning lots of extra cost to swap out bad boards and have a repair tech correct the problem.
The solution was to have a photo of a good board loaded into a computer and then shoot every board as it came to the end of the line and compare them. Faulty looking ones could be sent to a repair tech right there at the board plant. But, how to take a picture?
The first idea was a Polaroid and then scan that into the mainframe. As you might think, that's cumbersome. So we wanted a digital camera. But we at IBM Poughkeepsie NY didn't work on digital imaging sensors. But I knew Kodak at Rochester NY did from some DoD projects I was working on.
So we had them supply us some rather costly monochrome digital sensors and help us make up some cameras to pull this particular trick off. Worked like a charm. :)
Stan
Amateur Photographer
Professional Electronics Development Engineer