Frequently asked questions

Answers about vision robotics with RoboVisionAI

Practical answers for facilities teams, clinical technology officers and logistics managers evaluating computer vision robotics in Canada.

Robotics demonstration session at RoboVisionAI Kingston lab
No. RoboVisionAI is a computer vision robotics innovation lab developing intelligent mobile systems, perception pipelines and simulation tools. We do not sell marketing services, website design or general IT helpdesk outsourcing.
No. Our robotics systems are designed to assist and collaborate — outcomes depend on environment, configuration and human oversight. We do not provide medical advice or guarantee specific clinical results.
RoboVisionAI is a computer vision robotics research and integration practice headquartered at 166 Brock Street in Kingston. We design and deliver structured programmes (RVA-101 through RVA-601), run AMR pilot sessions, build healthcare robotics labs and provide simulation review services.
Our primary domains are healthcare facilities (hospitals, long-term care, research institutes), warehouse and intralogistics operations, and collaborative office or campus environments. We have also supported municipal innovation pilots and university robotics labs across Ontario.
No. We are vendor-neutral integrators. You procure hardware from manufacturers or distributors of your choice; we integrate perception pipelines and operational workflows, train your staff and document integration artefacts. Our revenue comes from programmes and services, not equipment margins.
Most warehouse AMR pilots run eight to twelve weeks: two weeks for simulation setup, four to six weeks on-site with weekly review calls, and two weeks for operator certification and handover documentation. Timelines extend when network infrastructure upgrades or union consultation is required.
We provide technical documentation, risk assessment templates and integration evidence that your compliance team can submit to provincial authorities. We do not provide legal advice, medical device licensing or certified safety audits — those remain your responsibility with qualified professionals.
We regularly work with ROS 2, OpenCV, Gazebo, NVIDIA Isaac Sim, Webots and custom Unity-based environments. Our simulation review service is platform-agnostic — we evaluate scenario fidelity, sensor models and failure coverage regardless of which toolchain you use.
Brock Street is our research anchor, but simulation review, motion planning workshops and portions of RVA-101 can be delivered remotely. On-site AMR pilots and healthcare lab builds require physical presence at your facility or our Kingston staging bays.
Programmes provide structured curricula with defined deliverables — ideal for first-time robotics adopters. À la carte services suit teams mid-deployment who need targeted help (e.g., a two-week perception tuning engagement). We recommend programmes when you lack in-house robotics expertise; services when you have engineers but need specialist augmentation.

FAQ answers are informational only and do not constitute engineering, legal or medical advice. Engagement specifics are defined in written statements of work. Outcomes vary by facility conditions.