ORB-SLAM3/Changelog.md

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# ORB-SLAM3
Details of changes between the different versions.
### V1.0, 22th December 2021
- OpenCV static matrices changed to Eigen matrices. The average code speed-up is 16% in tracking and 19% in mapping, w.r.t. times reported in the ORB-SLAM3 paper.
- New calibration file format, see file Calibration_Tutorial. Added options for stereo rectification and image resizing.
- Added load/save map functionalities.
- Added examples of live SLAM using Intel Realsense cameras.
- Fixed several bugs.
### V0.4: Beta version, 21st April 2021
- Changed OpenCV dynamic matrices to static matrices to speed up the code.
- Capability to measure running time of the system threads.
- Compatibility with OpenCV 4.0 (Requires at least OpenCV 3.0).
- Fixed minor bugs.
### V0.3: Beta version, 4th Sep 2020
- RGB-D compatibility: the RGB-D examples have been adapted to the new version.
- Kitti and TUM dataset compatibility: these examples have been adapted to the new version.
- ROS compatibility: updated the old references in the code to work with this version.
- Config file parser: the YAML file contains the session configuration, a wrong parametrization may break the execution without any information to solve it. This version parses the file to read all the fields and give a proper answer if one of the fields have been wrongly deffined or does not exist.
- Fixed minor bugs.
### V0.2: Beta version, 7th Aug 2020
Initial release. It has these capabilities:
- Multiple-Map capabilities: it is able to handle multiple maps in the same session and merge them when a common area is detected with a seamless fussion.
- Inertial sensor: the IMU initialization takes 2 seconds to achieve a scale error less than 5\% and it is reffined in the next 10 seconds until it is around 1\%. Inertial measures are integrated at frame rate to estimate the scale, gravity and velocity in order to improve the visual features detection and make the system robust to temporal occlusions.
- Fisheye cameras: cameras with wide-angle and fisheye lenses are now fully supported in monocular and stereo.