• @Buffalox
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      257 months ago

      If you have a house, you can detect bad isolation and gaps.
      It can also detect hotspots in electronics, which can be immensely helpful if you repair or make your own designs.
      Those are the most helpful uses I’ve found myself, but admittedly I haven’t really used my FLIR for about a year now, so not something I use often.

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        The very rare need for it seems like it would be best to just rent a camera when needed or buy a better specific use one for a toolbox rather than needing to carry a mediocre one around in your pocket 24/7

    • Sabata11792
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      97 months ago

      I don’t need it but would absolutely use the shit out of it for fun.

    • @manualoverride
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      77 months ago

      Me! I need that. I use thermal imaging to fix things from plumbing, cars, to circuit boards. I use it to see if my dog is still at the end of the garden at night and to find draughts in the home. Thermal imaging is useful AF.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        I too think it’s useful. Also the “who needs it” isn’t really an argument. If you can fit it in and people are willing to pay for it… Why not? I mean who needs 5 regular cameras in their phone? One with a marcro lens, one fisheye and one tele plus a regular one plus one on the front… I mean in a normal phone as of todaz the additional flir camera isn’t really changing much.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      I have a phone with one, it’s just been a neat toy so far. I do know someone who used a USB-C module version to track down wasp nests though.

      Oddly, despite being older, the resolution of the infiray “camera” in mine is 256×192, higher than the FLIR unit in this phone.

      • Neato
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        17 months ago

        Is it just an IR camera like security cameras use?

        • @[email protected]
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          67 months ago

          No, it’s proper thermal, like predator vision, just doesn’t let you see through walls unfortunately.

          Night vision security cameras use near IR, thermal is long wave IR.

    • @ikidd
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      37 months ago

      As a farmer and mechanic, I use the hell out of our FLIR for checking hotspots on equipment, like failing bearings. I’ve identified a few problems before they became really expensive.

    • @[email protected]
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      37 months ago

      I’m w/ you on this assuming the question is: “Who needs it on their phone.” It’s the “on their phone” part that matters. It’s like…Who needs a can opener? Most people. Who needs a can opener on their phone? Not many people. The bigger problem being the can opener wouldn’t be as good as the standard tool & the price of the phone would increase. If I wanted/needed a thermal camera I would prefer to buy a dedicated device w/ high performance sensors.