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HOT new tech? - FLIR ONE Thermal Camera

2016-08-09
do I make you hot well there's only one way to find out for sure a thermal camera meet the one from FLIR and affordable thermal camera module that clips to the bottom of your smartphone math drop is currently featuring the msi gtx 1080 armor 8g OC learn more at the link in the video description let's start with one of my biggest complaints about the FLIR one in spite of the name there are actually two of them I mean I understand the reason one is for Apple devices with a lightning connector and the other is for Android devices with a microbial USB connector but if there was a way to equip the FLIR 2 or whatever a successor ended up being called with swappable interfaces without compromising the admittedly very strong connectors i think that would go a long way towards improving the versatility and future-proof nosov these devices an important consideration when you factor in that even an affordable mobile accessory version of flares technology is going to run you 250 US dollars let's take a closer look then at the one both versions look almost the same and share the same internals and same basic mode of operation so we'll be mostly treating them as one for the rest of the video here the outer shell is plastic but a fairly confidence-inspiring it's not rated for water or dust resistance but it seems like it could survive a drop or two on the right is a status LED equipped power button so you can tell when it's booting up versus fully powered on and ready to engage with the phone app on the left is a battery charge indicator and a micro USB charging port so yes that means the FLIR one uses a 350 million power internal battery and does not charge off of the device it's attached to convenient in some ways but kind of a drag and others and finally at the front are the twin cameras the stars of the show I did say twin but I should probably clarify that I mean fraternal twins in this case because they are absolutely nothing alike one of them is for capturing infrared light a thermal camera and the other is for capturing visible light a web camera camera the thermal camera uses flares lepton an astonishingly small and low-cost long wave infrared sensor to generate 80 my 60 pixel thermal images that are accurate to within point 1 degrees Celsius from a range of -20 all the way up to 120 degrees that's minus 4 to 248 Fahrenheit for our American viewers the visible camera is less impressive it's a 640 by 480 ya vga affair and that's pretty much all we know about it other than the reason that the FLIR one even has one without getting too deep into this resolution is a word that gets frequently misused it means how much detail can be resolved from an image so a film picture also has a resolution even if you can't count the pixels so let's fire up the app and just take a picture here so the visible camera is actually where it seems like the advertised effective resolution of 160 by 120 comes from thanks to a technique called NSX blending that in a nutshell captures a visible light picture then strips out everything but textures and edges and overlays the thermal image with the ability to peek behind it at the original normal capture as needed for easy diagnosis of whatever it is that you're looking at an HVAC system a problematic circuit or that freaking cat that's trying to avoid being taken to the vet FLIR claims this technique allows the image to have five times the detail a figure that they may have pulled out of their butts for all I can tell but whether it's four or five or six times it clearly works pretty darn well because the thermal image alone is much more difficult to read especially for a lay person like me and on top of still image capture it actually supports video panorama and even time-lapse capture which is actually a stroke of genius for diagnosing problems that might develop slowly or be related to the time of day which is cool Linus but why should I care what are these things even for and why the hell do you need one well for the first one I don't know about you but I care because they're just pretty freakin cool as for practical uses there are actually many thermal imagers like so many things were actually developed for military use allowing personnel to detect heat signatures engine exhaust operating machinery and even people during the Korean War but today their applications range from medical use ever seen those cameras and arrivals at the International Airport they're checking to see if you have a fever and you're going to spread disease to building optimization to check the effectiveness of insulation to law enforcement night vision goggles anyone - storm tracking - home inspection to nature watching you name it and what we've been enjoying is the way that suddenly a thermal camera allows us to validate manufacturer claims like one pluses assertion that they're quick charging technique keeps the phone running cooler than competing Qualcomm quick charge 3.0 and razors claim that the new blade 14 2016 Edition runs much cooler than last year's model neat right yeah I guess Linus but uh does this make the existence of higher-end ones like the FLIR East 60 which is like a $7,000 camera that you were showing off on Instagram a little while ago superfluous great question but no I don't think so the app is surprisingly stable and functional but higher-end models have features that are a must for industrial use swappable batteries SD recording rugged housing and the ability to operate without a phone attached to name a few and the FLIR one is not perfect we ran into compatibility issues for example with the iPhone se and on the Android side of things the onward march towards USB type-c standardization reveals the problem with that future-proof decision to before we actually tried using a type c2 micro-b adapter with the HTC 10 but we didn't have any luck getting it to work though your mileage may vary bottom line though it's not perfect and hopefully resolution durability and compatibility rise as cost continues to lower but if you need an affordable thermal camera for some reason then the FLIR one which FLIR is leaving with us to enrich our future reviews by the way which is awesome will likely be as welcome in addition to your diagnostic arsenal as it is to ours speaking of being a welcome addition to your arsenal Tuggle bear and my notes say something about summer and boarding planes and cars and trains doesn't want board a car anyway the point is that tunnel bear is the simple VPN app that makes it easy to browse privately and enjoy a more open Internet with tunnel bear turned on a couple of things happen number one is your connection is secured with AES 256-bit encryption and two your online activity is kept private from your internet provider and advertisers who are looking to harvest your data and sell you more like I don't know aluminum spoons or whatever some stupid thing that you've probably seen a banner for recently tunnel bear has a top rated privacy policy and does not log your activity and the best part is you can try it for absolutely free it's like those food samples in the grocery store it's like wow I can have 500 megabytes of these food samples no credit card required then if you decide you want an unlimited plan they start at just a few bucks a month and you can save 10% by going to tunnel bear comm /l tt linked in the video description so thanks for watching guys if this video sucked you know what to do but if it was awesome get subscribed hit that like button or check out the link to where to buy the stuff that we featured at Amazon in the video description also linked in the description is our merch store which has cool shirts like this one and our community forum which you should totally join now that you're done doing all that stuff you're probably wondering what to watch next so click that little button in the top right to check out our latest video over on channel super fun
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