Hardware Store Marauderâs Map is Clarkian Magic
The âMarauderâs Mapâ is a magical artifact from the Harry Potter franchise. That sort of magic isnât real, but as Arthur C. Clarke famously pointed out, it doesnât need to be â we have technology, and we can make our own magic now. Or, rather, [Dave] on the YouTube Channel Daveâs Armoury can make it.
[Dave]âs hardware store might be in a rough neighborhood, since it has 50 camerasâ worth of CCTV coverage. In this case, the stockmanâs loss is the hackerâs gain, as [Dave] has talked his way into accessing all of those various camera feeds and is using machine vision to track every single human in the store.
Of course, locating individuals in a video feed is easy â to locate them in space from that feed, one first needs an accurate map. To do that, [Dave] first 3D scans the entire store with a rover. The scan is in full 3D, and itâs no small amount of data. On the rover, a Jetson AGX is required to handle it; on the bench, a beefy HP Z8 Fury workstation crunches the point cloud into a map. Luckily it came with 500 GB of RAM, since just opening the mesh file generated from that point cloud needs 126 GB. That is processed into a simple 2D floor plan. While the workflow is impressive, we canât help but wonder if there was an easier way. (Maybe a tape measure?)
Once an accurate map has been generated, it turns out NVIDIA already has a turnkey solution for mapping video feeds to a 2D spatial map. When processing so much data â remember, there are 50 camera feeds in the store â itâs not ideal to be passing the image data from RAM to GPU and back again, but luckily NVIDIAâs âDeep Streamâ pipeline will do object detection and tracking (including between different video streams) all on the GPU. Thereâs also pose estimation right in there for more accurate tracking of where a person is standing than just âinside this red boxâ. With 50 cameras, itâs all a bit much for one card, but luckily [Dave]âs workstation has two GPUs.
Once the coordinates are spat out of the neural networks, itâs relatively simple to put footprints on the map in true Harry Potter fashion. It really is magic, in the Clarkian sense, what you can do if you throw enough computing power at it.
Unfortunately for show-accuracy (or fortunately, if you prefer to avoid gross privacy violations), it doesnât track every individual by name, but it does demonstrate the possibility with [Dave] and his robot. If you want a map of something⌠else⌠maybe check out this backyard project.
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hackaday.com/2025/12/20/hardwaâŚ