Robots have never had a shortage of eyes — but they’ve often struggled to make sense of what those eyes see. RealSense wants to close that gap with the D585 Pro, an AI-native depth camera unveiled on June 18, 2026 at Automate 2026. Rather than shipping raw depth data upstream to a hungry host processor, this camera does the heavy lifting itself.
At its core sits a proprietary Gen 5 system-on-chip, and it’s this silicon that lets the D585 Pro run an AI inference engine directly on the camera. Perception at the edge means lower latency and less strain on the robot’s central compute — a meaningful advantage when a mobile platform or robotic arm needs to react in real time.
The numbers back up the ambition. RealSense claims the D585 Pro delivers more than 2x better depth quality than its previous generation of cameras, and 2.5x better close-range performance than competing solutions. That close-range figure matters: the camera can resolve depth from as near as roughly 10 cm at full resolution, with a sub-15cm minimum range quoted for the same setting.
Coverage is generous too. A wide 120×100° field of view takes in a lot of a robot’s surroundings at once, and the sensor pushes depth output up to 1280 x 960 at full resolution. Frame rates are just as aggressive — full-resolution operation runs at 60 FPS, and depth frame rates climb to 90 FPS when the situation demands smoother tracking.
For applications that need to see across a room or a warehouse, the D585 Pro is comfortable at long range as well. Its ideal operating range extends beyond 10 m, with a maximum exceeding 20 m. That flexibility — genuinely close to genuinely far — is exactly what makes a single sensor viable across bin-picking, navigation and obstacle avoidance.
Because robots rarely live in clean, climate-controlled labs, RealSense fits IP65 protection as standard. Dust and water jets shouldn’t trouble it, which opens the door to logistics floors, agricultural machines and other messy real-world deployments.
- SoC: proprietary Gen 5
- FOV: 120×100° at 60 FPS
- Depth output: up to 1280 x 960 at full resolution
- Frame rate: 60 FPS full resolution, up to 90 FPS depth
- Range: from around 10 cm to beyond 20 m
- Protection: IP65
The catch, for now, is availability. The D585 Pro is not yet on sale — RealSense expects shipping to begin in Q1 2027, and pricing hasn’t been disclosed. Still, for robotics engineers weighing their next perception stack, this is a camera worth watching closely.