OpenALPR

Automatic number-plate recognition library From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

OpenALPR is an automatic number-plate recognition library written in C++. The software is distributed in both a commercial and open source version.

Quick Facts Original author(s), Developer(s) ...
OpenALPR
Original author(s)Matthew Hill[1]
Developer(s)OpenALPR Technology, Inc.[2]
Initial release2 May 2014; 10 years ago (2014-05-02)[2]
Stable release
2.5.103 / March 5, 2018; 7 years ago (2018-03-05)
Repositorygithub.com/openalpr/openalpr
Written inC, C++, Python, Java, and C#
Operating systemLinux, Windows[3]
PlatformIA-32 (i386), x86-64 or ARM
Size276 MB
Available in1 languages
List of languages
English
TypeAutomatic number-plate recognition
LicenseProprietary and AGPL
Websitewww.openalpr.com
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History

OpenALPR was originally developed by a two-man team led by Matt Hill.[1] The open source software became available as a free download at the end of 2015.[4] In March 2016, OpenALPR launched a paid Cloud API service[5] and in February 2017 introduced the OpenALPR agent for Axis Communications cameras.[6]

In August 2017 an Australian web developer Tait Brown became known by creating an alternative to an 86 million AUD project of Victoria Police by using OpenALPR.[7] In March 2018 ProgrammableWeb added OpenALPR to its list of Recognition APIs.[8]

Software

OpenALPR is an automatic number-plate recognition library written in C++.[9] The software is distributed in both a commercial cloud based version[1] and open source version.[3][10] OpenALPR makes use of OpenCV and Tesseract OCR libraries. It could be run as a command-line utility, standalone library, or background process. The software also integrates with video management systems (VMS) such as Milestone XProtect.[11]

References

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