Thanks for hanging out and subjecting yourself to the thermal headset Louis! If you want to spend too much money on complicated projects, you know where I am. For everyone else, if you want to see dumb things over-engineered, check out some of my other stuff.
As someone who is obsessed with thermal cameras lol( and I already qualify for spending too much money, 2 Flir pathfindir2 's ( one was destroyed), a therm app hz and therm app pro) - all of this was pretty familiar to me lol What cameras did you use ? Guessing a boson for the first headset? That headset is siiiick- what was it like putting that together ?
@@tippership It was a Flir Vue Pro 640, 69° FOV. I don't even know the Boson's pricing, but the 90 degree FOV would have been nice lol. The backup was a FLIR ONE. I prototyped with a 384x288 thermal core from a scott firefighting camera, but it died for our thermal sins when the shutter wire shorted. The Flir Vue pro was designed for drones, so it output an NTSC signal, allowing us to get very low latency input into FPV goggles in a format compatible with them. The FLIR ONE has high latency, low FPS and was miserable to use. There is no built in function to display the app video in split screen/vr.
Imagine opening your front door and seeing a massive cloud of agent orange blasting towards you. This epic gamer moment brought to you by the US marines.
@@Weisz The Military will contact you for a contract at that rate, haha, edit: well damn you were already working with them, I wasn't that far into the video
@@suddeneevee9441 Curiously, a toaster that checks the temperature of the bread (like the sunbeam radiant control toaster - Technology Connections did a great video on it) will get the toast perfect every time, even adjusting the cook time to account for frozen bread or a recently used toaster, without any fancy tech - so at least for bread/toast, done-ness is almost completely dependant on the temperature, and I suspect that it's probably the same for a lot of foods, so with practice, you'd probably be better at telling if it's done than if you were looking at it with normal colour vision.
@@DaniZeAlmighty That sounds like a cool idea, you would have to get used to having your eyes see different light. Since they are used to being used together. Also, fairly ironic to hear from someone with a Demoman profile picture.
@@catdust imagine an invisible exhibit. You go through once with nothing seeing the people with goggles stare at blank walls and then again with goggles to see the crazy thermal art
Well our brain is incredibly good at mashing 2 pictures together so thermal vision for only 1 eye could work but maby take the colouring out for a black withe image so it the tinting isn't that bad
Certain flir cameras already do something similar that to make the image look more defined around the edges, since the thermal sensor has a pretty low resolution
TBH thermal cameras aren't really that different from regular cameras. The difference is in the wavelengths they capture. If the temperature had been some 800-900C greater normal cameras would start detecting heat as well, and so would our eyes.
Tell that to the engineers who make the microbolometers lmao. You can fit dozens of normal color sensors on a thermal one of similar resolution. Normal sensors also don't need to constantly account for image ghosting.
@@georgefolk3134 yep, and normal temperature ojects captured by the IR camera are also emitting light. It's not visible light, but infrared light, which gets captured by the thermal camera. Every object, that has temperature above 0 kelvin emits infrared light.
Hey Louis you should come hang out! Totally just because you are a fun guy, and not because I need you to stare at the multiple thermally critical projects I'm working on...
I too invite Louis to hang out for his...friendship, and totally not his possession of expensive things like high speed cameras. I just really appreciate his assets.
It would be really cool to have thermal vision completely integrated and be able to just toggle it on and off, I don't think anyone would get bored of it
hilarious video Louis. this nust have given you a mad headache. Cool that you're going to be training with marines, that sounds crazy. also the shirt you copped looks good lmao
Thermal vision is a truly remarkable technology that has revolutionized the way we perceive and interact with the world around us. Personally, I love using my P2 Pro thermal camera for things like checking my house or wildlife observation. It's really a game-changing technology.
1:47 "They detect the exact amount of heat hitting each pixel on the sensor." I really dislike it when textbooks and teachers describe infrared radiation as being synonymous with the word "heat." This obviously isn't a criticism for Louis, just me venting about the way things are widely described and taught. It might be pedantic to some people, but when I was first learning physics, I found this unbelievably confusing. People would just say "infrared (heat)" or vise versa, which frustrated me, because how could a spectrum of electromagnetic radiation alone encompass the entire concept of "heat." It took a while before I received a satisfactory explanation-that there are three main ways to transfer heat, conduction (direct contact), convection (where a surface conducts to fluid which can carry heat away and the energy imparted to it enhances this flow), and radiation (where hot objects emit electromagnetic energy mostly, but not exclusively, in the infrared spectrum, and this energy can then be absorbed by an object, heating it up). And importantly, one of the things we call heat is also known as enthalpy, and on a molecular level it can basically be thought of as random, disordered kinetic energy. I'm sure that's still a huge, middle school level simplification, but for me, it was descriptive enough that I understood that heat wasn't just one thing, especially not just another word for infrared, and this was one of those understandings that was nontrivial for me; it really changed the way I looked at everyday life. You obviously can't fit this whole description in every time you offhandedly say what thermal vision does. I just suspect that students would be less confused if we just said they "detect infrared radiation, which can indicate a surface's temperature," or something like that. Since other factors, like reflectiveness/albedo, and a material's thermal conductivity, can also affect the input to an infrared sensor, right? IDK, maybe this is just a me problem and I'm complaining over nothing. It's just something I've always thought about and wondered if anyone else had this problem.
It is a difficult subject to discuss in a short enough time for a yt video and still retain people. We had more stuff on how a microbolometer works in there, including germanium lens stuff, but it just wasn't worth it.
Some thing I always thought was a cool idea is when we get a little more cyberpunk like and start adding parts to our bodies is to have as many kinds of mini sensors as possible in a line where my eye brows use to be. thermal, RF, IR, magnetic, night vision, lidar and as many others that exist as possible. Maybe non-visuals installed some where else if there's no room.
Reminds me of wandering around in training with the Army with night vision goggles. You have no depth perception or perspective but you really can see in pitch black.
what we need is a headset that maps IR -> red, red -> green, and green -> blue. this vision would be incredible, more so than any traditional head set. another option is IR->red, plus green & blue as themselves
Thermal cameras don't show heat, they show infrared radiation. It just happens to be the case that things at everyday temperatures mainly emit in IR. In many ways a thermal camera works exactly like a normal visual light camera, since IR radiation behaves very similar to visual radiation.
6:33 Regarding frisbee. The camera being few cm higher than the eyes probably fucks with your hand-camera coordination. Also latency might be an issue if the system is too slow.
Humans have 7 senses actually. The sense of balance, which allows you to stand, walk, and tell you where down is. And the sense of body, which tells you what position your body is in, and allows you to navigate your limbs and head precisely without looking.
This is fantastic! I thought about doing something similar with 360 vision. It would be a wrap around head set, I think I calculated 6 cameras minimum for no blind spots past arm's length, 8 would be optimal. I just don't have the means to make it, nor that level of programming ability.
an insta360 one x2/3 can live stream video, though it would take some programming. You wouldn't need to make a camera rig, just have a way of interpreting the data in a headset.
Is it just me or does thermal vision seem *extremely* useful for cars? Like, with the scooter on that path the path was clear as day. I'm not exactly talking for human use, but for self driving AI it seems like thermal vision could provide really, really clear images of roads in certain conditions to help. Like it would be a great feature to corroborate visual and other sensor data.
@@CreamCakes420 Well yeah, that's why you'd still have to heavily rely on other sources, I figured it would just be a great redundancy thing. And even in cold weather sun heats up asphalt quite a bit above ambient, shade and concrete is definitely a concern though. I imagine all the places where its not quite as useful is why this isn't an engineering priority with these systems, but as they develop further you may as well, ya know.
This reminds me of a thought experiment I had a long time ago, thinking about passive-nightvision, active-nightvision, thermal vision, x-ray vision from Metroid Prime 1, and the Echo-Visor from Metroid Prime 2. If I had to choose between being blind, black & white, or one of those, which would I choose. I choose Black & White with greyscale of course. But the others were so tempting. Light amplifying passive or active night vision is great, I can see when normal people can't, but enough light for them to see, overwhelms & blinds me. X-Ray turns the whole world into wire-frame graphics, like an ancient video game, helpful to find things inside things, but I may crash into everything, like people walking into clean glass doors. Then, finally, thermal and SEEING ECHO-LOCATION, are so great for pitch black, where there's no light to amplify, no powersource if IR lights, and can see unique things based on temperature, or density, whatever, but just removes any detail or paint on a surface. And all screens just become unusable, and I love gaming & videos, so no. Black & White over being blind. 2nd place, is monochrome grey light amplifying. Mono chrome green is horrendous. Living with the others is just too ridiculous, as you proved with permanent thermal vision.
@@RepeatedFailure It makes me wonder what would happen if someone who has monocular vision (like me) had the IR feed fed to the bad eye while keeping the good eye in normal light. Better yet, maybe feed the good eye sound based visuals created from ULF audio reflections. Could be a good experiment.... hmmmm ;)
@@DarkWolfsDen I would prefer to send lidar data over sound for usability, but it would still be interesting nonetheless. A lot of night vision is monocular for keeping the other eye not exposed to light as well.
@@RepeatedFailure Lidar could be interesting. Since my left eye is more or less useless, been toying with the idea of trying to feed alternative light signals into that eye while keeping the right eye at visible light just to see what kind of "merged" signal the brain gets.
I don't consider myself a full fledged geek, but I love all things scientific. So this is pretty cool. Good job presenting the in's and out's of this challenge. It was fun to watch.🤓👍🏼👍🏼🔬🧬
The thermal camera isn't really measuring heat. It's measuring the emission of longwave radiation. The scenarios where you can differentiate between objects that are at temperature equilibrium are because the objects have different emissivities. Many things can influence the apparent temperature readings but it's a correlation between the amount of IR and mainly the emissivity of the object that allows you to determine it's temperature.
Emissivity of interior paints and floors are pretty close and basically made you blind in a building with good HVAC lol. I'm not super familiar with ambient IR scattering, but we didn't see too many artifacts. This camera's auto calibration to prevent ghosting was good even at 30fps
You could make a sort of thermal dot matrix display with an array of resistors. Dunno what that would be good for but only thermal eyes could see the image/text
I got here because I was trying to find out what a mirage would look like using heat vision. But seeing all the other applications/different, Hot/Cold contrasting images, is pretty cool.🤓👍🏼👍🏼
this is just unconscionable. I was basically ready to sign up for the task force to help you out with shit... but like... I just can't even watch this and I'm just so disgusted with you. like, if you can't understand why partnering with the people who send our friends off to die for oil makes you a bad person... then I don't know what to tell you. I love your videos usually, but I just can't look at you anymore.
I respect him a lot more for it, if you’re not willing to die for the prosperity of your country aka your community (in which humans have evolved to be a part of), then why even live in the first place?
the marines probably paid him a ton of money, and I think it’s just a stupid idea to turn down $50k-100k to make one low effort video, especially when youtube is a full time job. If it was that easy for me to make that much money, I’d happily be sponsored by the early 1940s German government
Thanks for hanging out and subjecting yourself to the thermal headset Louis! If you want to spend too much money on complicated projects, you know where I am. For everyone else, if you want to see dumb things over-engineered, check out some of my other stuff.
Did you manage to fix the first headset?
@@Produkt_R The camera died for good (part of the power supply board roasted). It was still under warranty and was just returned.
As someone who is obsessed with thermal cameras lol( and I already qualify for spending too much money, 2 Flir pathfindir2 's ( one was destroyed), a therm app hz and therm app pro) - all of this was pretty familiar to me lol
What cameras did you use ? Guessing a boson for the first headset?
That headset is siiiick- what was it like putting that together ?
@@tippership It was a Flir Vue Pro 640, 69° FOV. I don't even know the Boson's pricing, but the 90 degree FOV would have been nice lol. The backup was a FLIR ONE. I prototyped with a 384x288 thermal core from a scott firefighting camera, but it died for our thermal sins when the shutter wire shorted.
The Flir Vue pro was designed for drones, so it output an NTSC signal, allowing us to get very low latency input into FPV goggles in a format compatible with them. The FLIR ONE has high latency, low FPS and was miserable to use. There is no built in function to display the app video in split screen/vr.
the kid named Out:
Imagine opening an oven and seeing a massive orange cloud blasting towards you
Imagine opening your front door and seeing a massive cloud of agent orange blasting towards you. This epic gamer moment brought to you by the US marines.
No thanks
fire
imagine you are standing in line for checkout and you see an orange cloud rushing from the ass of the guy on front of you
I don't think that would happen unless it was super humid foggy hot air or something
It'd be cool to do this with an assortment of cameras that randomly rotate. So night vision, thermal, Regular etc (I think 3 examples is enough)
It’d be sick if we could like make a rig that does that, and then make an interactive program so you could switch it yourself as you watch.
@@Weisz what if you overlayed them all to have supervision that can see everything at once
don’t forget ultraviolet
@@Weisz The Military will contact you for a contract at that rate, haha,
edit: well damn you were already working with them, I wasn't that far into the video
@@Weisz intel depth cameras record in thermal, depth, and regular all at once. Could look into that
4:06
"As I got closer I saw the outline of a mother cradling her child comfortingly"
"You're looking at a blank wall"
Oh. There's ghosts in there.
Or he can see through walls.
@@Chara_Dreemurr1 I bet there's a water pipe or AC duct behind the wall.
"Where did you procure those eggs?"
"I procured them over here"
"hell yeah"
that man is the chillest person ever
Cooking in thermal vision sounds really fun because you get to see everything heating up.
Whilest I fully agree, it does sound cool. Not being able to see how the food is doing: raw, done, burned. Is kinda a big downside.
@@suddeneevee9441 Yeah, you would need someone else with you to make sure it was fully cooked.
@@suddeneevee9441 Curiously, a toaster that checks the temperature of the bread (like the sunbeam radiant control toaster - Technology Connections did a great video on it) will get the toast perfect every time, even adjusting the cook time to account for frozen bread or a recently used toaster, without any fancy tech - so at least for bread/toast, done-ness is almost completely dependant on the temperature, and I suspect that it's probably the same for a lot of foods, so with practice, you'd probably be better at telling if it's done than if you were looking at it with normal colour vision.
@@suddeneevee9441 well we could have one eye with thermal vision and one eye without
@@DaniZeAlmighty That sounds like a cool idea, you would have to get used to having your eyes see different light. Since they are used to being used together.
Also, fairly ironic to hear from someone with a Demoman profile picture.
The art gallery experience had me in stiches!
Same 😂
still might be a cool idea tho, lol
Blank wall
@@catdust imagine an invisible exhibit. You go through once with nothing seeing the people with goggles stare at blank walls and then again with goggles to see the crazy thermal art
@@akulsinator7680 this guy gets it!
it would be interesting to be able to combine the ir image data with visible light, hot things would be slightly tinted and brighter overlaid
Well our brain is incredibly good at mashing 2 pictures together so thermal vision for only 1 eye could work but maby take the colouring out for a black withe image so it the tinting isn't that bad
that and stereoscopic vision, so two thermal cameras.
Maybe they could have replaced the red channel from RGB with the thermal band? That would be pretty cool
Certain flir cameras already do something similar that to make the image look more defined around the edges, since the thermal sensor has a pretty low resolution
I think this might have been a little easier if he still had depth perception aha
You can see shadows in IR if you’re outside
@@alexwang982 they mean 2 cameras, so he could perceive depth from the parallax. shadows only appear if they're stagnant for long enough.
I agree, that was probably the real reason playing frisbee and basketball was so hard.
VR thermal let's go
TBH thermal cameras aren't really that different from regular cameras. The difference is in the wavelengths they capture. If the temperature had been some 800-900C greater normal cameras would start detecting heat as well, and so would our eyes.
Tell that to the engineers who make the microbolometers lmao. You can fit dozens of normal color sensors on a thermal one of similar resolution. Normal sensors also don't need to constantly account for image ghosting.
👻💬
That's called light hot metal glows hot air glows(plasma/fire) and lots of other things glow when they get hot
@@georgefolk3134 or just black-body radiation.
@@georgefolk3134 yep, and normal temperature ojects captured by the IR camera are also emitting light. It's not visible light, but infrared light, which gets captured by the thermal camera. Every object, that has temperature above 0 kelvin emits infrared light.
Hey Louis you should come hang out! Totally just because you are a fun guy, and not because I need you to stare at the multiple thermally critical projects I'm working on...
I too invite Louis to hang out for his...friendship, and totally not his possession of expensive things like high speed cameras. I just really appreciate his assets.
What a cool idea! So interesting seeing what you lose when you switch to thermal vision and what you gain.
That is a much better title then "I was a predator for 50 hours"
💀
💀
3:48 I laughed pretty hard. But when he said “they seemed nice!” I laughed even harder 😂
This is like some future next gen test. Imagine this being something normal later on.
They're trying out some amazing technology, the haditha trial is really impressive.
You want it to be normal for people to see heat vision?
Dude no one wants to do this 💀
It's highly impractical and confusing to use daily
I think you couldn't even read since it only detects heat and not light
Is thermovisor expensive
The NVGs that the Marines use have a different gradient than that IR camera. It's really cool to look through a set if you ever get the chance.
There are black hot/white hot options on this camera, but they aren't as interesting for youtube. I actually found them easier to use IRL.
It would be really cool to have thermal vision completely integrated and be able to just toggle it on and off, I don't think anyone would get bored of it
The cold and hot water mixing looks amazing!
"and this is my life in hindsight" Now this one's gonna be a good video
This is an interesting experiment, sorta makes you think about the challenges that people with low vision (legal blindness) would face
hilarious video Louis. this nust have given you a mad headache. Cool that you're going to be training with marines, that sounds crazy. also the shirt you copped looks good lmao
At 4:08 I was laughing because how can a person see a mother cradling a baby in a blank wall 😂😂
So sick Louis! Glad I was able to make it out and film you eating raw food and riding on scooters hahah!
Thermal vision is a truly remarkable technology that has revolutionized the way we perceive and interact with the world around us. Personally, I love using my P2 Pro thermal camera for things like checking my house or wildlife observation. It's really a game-changing technology.
This is so cool, imagine being able to see just as clearly in pitch black as in daylight
So now we can understand how The Predator lives. Tough life in an alien planet...
1:47 "They detect the exact amount of heat hitting each pixel on the sensor."
I really dislike it when textbooks and teachers describe infrared radiation as being synonymous with the word "heat." This obviously isn't a criticism for Louis, just me venting about the way things are widely described and taught. It might be pedantic to some people, but when I was first learning physics, I found this unbelievably confusing. People would just say "infrared (heat)" or vise versa, which frustrated me, because how could a spectrum of electromagnetic radiation alone encompass the entire concept of "heat."
It took a while before I received a satisfactory explanation-that there are three main ways to transfer heat, conduction (direct contact), convection (where a surface conducts to fluid which can carry heat away and the energy imparted to it enhances this flow), and radiation (where hot objects emit electromagnetic energy mostly, but not exclusively, in the infrared spectrum, and this energy can then be absorbed by an object, heating it up). And importantly, one of the things we call heat is also known as enthalpy, and on a molecular level it can basically be thought of as random, disordered kinetic energy. I'm sure that's still a huge, middle school level simplification, but for me, it was descriptive enough that I understood that heat wasn't just one thing, especially not just another word for infrared, and this was one of those understandings that was nontrivial for me; it really changed the way I looked at everyday life.
You obviously can't fit this whole description in every time you offhandedly say what thermal vision does. I just suspect that students would be less confused if we just said they "detect infrared radiation, which can indicate a surface's temperature," or something like that. Since other factors, like reflectiveness/albedo, and a material's thermal conductivity, can also affect the input to an infrared sensor, right?
IDK, maybe this is just a me problem and I'm complaining over nothing. It's just something I've always thought about and wondered if anyone else had this problem.
It is a difficult subject to discuss in a short enough time for a yt video and still retain people. We had more stuff on how a microbolometer works in there, including germanium lens stuff, but it just wasn't worth it.
Okay nerd.
/j
@@DaFieFie bro you don't know the half of it I have zero control over where my attention goes lol
I could see you involving tools to help you see things like a mobile hair dryer or an ice pack.
I love these types of challenge videos. Keep it up!
Companies after pride month: 0:33
For real 😂
June*********
Some thing I always thought was a cool idea is when we get a little more cyberpunk like and start adding parts to our bodies is to have as many kinds of mini sensors as possible in a line where my eye brows use to be. thermal, RF, IR, magnetic, night vision, lidar and as many others that exist as possible.
Maybe non-visuals installed some where else if there's no room.
Yo, this is exactly what I was thinking of throughout the video
Reminds me of wandering around in training with the Army with night vision goggles. You have no depth perception or perspective but you really can see in pitch black.
4:22 bro living in the retro dimension
I was thinking about the same thing xD
Him: looking at a blank wall
The dude on the other side in the bathroom:
😂
Louis out here living like The Predator 💀
Now I REALLY dont believe that they see in thermal vision since they have screens
what we need is a headset that maps IR -> red, red -> green, and green -> blue. this vision would be incredible, more so than any traditional head set. another option is IR->red, plus green & blue as themselves
I can recognize Pittsburgh’s T stations in any type of vision apparently, so cool seeing familiar landmarks
Thermal cameras don't show heat, they show infrared radiation. It just happens to be the case that things at everyday temperatures mainly emit in IR. In many ways a thermal camera works exactly like a normal visual light camera, since IR radiation behaves very similar to visual radiation.
Makes me wonder how technology, infrastructure, and the world would look if we had thermal imagining capabilities in our eyes instead of visible light
2:13 why is it always primal instinct to write hi whenever people figure out you can write with something not meant to write😂
This was so much better than expected
6:33 Regarding frisbee. The camera being few cm higher than the eyes probably fucks with your hand-camera coordination. Also latency might be an issue if the system is too slow.
Since I have a phone with thermal vision as one of the camera modules I completely understand firsthand why you did this video 😂 it's awesome stuff.
What phone.?
what phone my guy?
Wow, what phone are you using?
@@PouLS I’m pretty sure one of the old lgs had modules that u can switch out
4:04 To be fair, that's still a pretty accurate experience going to an art gallery.
AR glasses + IR camera might be a pretty good kitchen tool lol
Humans have 7 senses actually.
The sense of balance, which allows you to stand, walk, and tell you where down is.
And the sense of body, which tells you what position your body is in, and allows you to navigate your limbs and head precisely without looking.
“50 hours with no balance” would be a liability lmao
6:05 water cool
The level of implicit acceptance of walking around wearing this makes me think we are closer than we realize to a real life cyberpunk dystopia
Trying this with a lidar camera / sensor would be interesting to see.
It would look like the game Scanner Sombre
yoink! I am stealing this, as I have a lidar....
@@RepeatedFailure Good luck!
The most underrated channel on yt
This is such a cool idea! Living as a predator for 50 hours.
Living as a predator 24/7 by exploiting your young audience to die in the US military for money.
This is fantastic!
I thought about doing something similar with 360 vision. It would be a wrap around head set, I think I calculated 6 cameras minimum for no blind spots past arm's length, 8 would be optimal. I just don't have the means to make it, nor that level of programming ability.
an insta360 one x2/3 can live stream video, though it would take some programming. You wouldn't need to make a camera rig, just have a way of interpreting the data in a headset.
4:54 made me laugh
Damn, pleasantly surprised at the quality of this video! Keep reppin the ‘Burgh, subscribed
Be interesting to see UV, infared and visible blended together.
That thumbnail is amazing, I don't know how you would even begin to come up with that.
6:34 that's because you cant see in 3D troughth the camera
4:01 Beautifully ironic scene. 😂
Is it just me or does thermal vision seem *extremely* useful for cars? Like, with the scooter on that path the path was clear as day. I'm not exactly talking for human use, but for self driving AI it seems like thermal vision could provide really, really clear images of roads in certain conditions to help. Like it would be a great feature to corroborate visual and other sensor data.
Yeah it’s just weather could really mess with it
@@CreamCakes420 Well yeah, that's why you'd still have to heavily rely on other sources, I figured it would just be a great redundancy thing. And even in cold weather sun heats up asphalt quite a bit above ambient, shade and concrete is definitely a concern though. I imagine all the places where its not quite as useful is why this isn't an engineering priority with these systems, but as they develop further you may as well, ya know.
@@StuffandThings_ oh my god I forgot about useing multiple systems I can’t believe I overlooked that , thanks dude
honestly a standalone video of "everyday life in thermal vision" would be really cool
I did not expect this to be military propaganda when I started the video, but maybe that's on me
This video being sponsored by the US marines is the weirdest thing.
military propaganda 🤮
@@drearyplane8259 gay pride 🤮
The US Military has now sponsored a mad scientist. What a world
Wait, so mirrors also reflect heat?
This reminds me of a thought experiment I had a long time ago, thinking about passive-nightvision, active-nightvision, thermal vision, x-ray vision from Metroid Prime 1, and the Echo-Visor from Metroid Prime 2. If I had to choose between being blind, black & white, or one of those, which would I choose.
I choose Black & White with greyscale of course. But the others were so tempting.
Light amplifying passive or active night vision is great, I can see when normal people can't, but enough light for them to see, overwhelms & blinds me.
X-Ray turns the whole world into wire-frame graphics, like an ancient video game, helpful to find things inside things, but I may crash into everything, like people walking into clean glass doors.
Then, finally, thermal and SEEING ECHO-LOCATION, are so great for pitch black, where there's no light to amplify, no powersource if IR lights, and can see unique things based on temperature, or density, whatever, but just removes any detail or paint on a surface. And all screens just become unusable, and I love gaming & videos, so no.
Black & White over being blind.
2nd place, is monochrome grey light amplifying.
Mono chrome green is horrendous.
Living with the others is just too ridiculous, as you proved with permanent thermal vision.
It would be awesome if you used two cameras for depth perception!
I suggested that, but it would've been an extra $5k lmao
@@RepeatedFailure It makes me wonder what would happen if someone who has monocular vision (like me) had the IR feed fed to the bad eye while keeping the good eye in normal light. Better yet, maybe feed the good eye sound based visuals created from ULF audio reflections. Could be a good experiment.... hmmmm ;)
@@DarkWolfsDen I would prefer to send lidar data over sound for usability, but it would still be interesting nonetheless. A lot of night vision is monocular for keeping the other eye not exposed to light as well.
@@RepeatedFailure Lidar could be interesting. Since my left eye is more or less useless, been toying with the idea of trying to feed alternative light signals into that eye while keeping the right eye at visible light just to see what kind of "merged" signal the brain gets.
I don't consider myself a full fledged geek, but I love all things scientific.
So this is pretty cool.
Good job presenting the in's and out's of this challenge. It was fun to watch.🤓👍🏼👍🏼🔬🧬
I think you forgot about depth perception, but i guess it would cost 5 grand more.
"Thermal sunrise"
Thermal Camera - SWEATS PROFUSELY
Try it with a black and white/monochrome filter like you're living in a noir film.
This man is a clear example of improvise, adapt, overcome
i was not expecting military propaganda lol
4:10 - 4:12 has to be my favorite part of this video
can't believe I got tricked into watching a military recruitment ad
The thermal camera isn't really measuring heat. It's measuring the emission of longwave radiation. The scenarios where you can differentiate between objects that are at temperature equilibrium are because the objects have different emissivities. Many things can influence the apparent temperature readings but it's a correlation between the amount of IR and mainly the emissivity of the object that allows you to determine it's temperature.
Emissivity of interior paints and floors are pretty close and basically made you blind in a building with good HVAC lol. I'm not super familiar with ambient IR scattering, but we didn't see too many artifacts. This camera's auto calibration to prevent ghosting was good even at 30fps
0:50
I think that's normal on pride parades.
Love the pride support at the begginning! 👍
You can have blind mode android/IOS voice activated, with full control. #BlindSurfer
Also voice reading camera for computer screens where you can't see yourself, just voice activate the mode and point the camera.
"Whered you procure those eggs" is the best way to word it. Procure is such a good word
0:20 ur lucky to not see what theyre doing and unlucky to support them without knowing lol
I think you got that backwards m8
@@RepeatedFailure wdym backward
@@RepeatedFailure hah failure, suits you
@@dovix Game respects game I see
glad to see you're not running out of ideas, this had my interest throughout the entire video
0:01 bro do you not have fingernails
I like how everyone’s acting so casual even though there’s a protest going on outside.
Pittsburgh?
Yinz know it
fallout 3
You could make a sort of thermal dot matrix display with an array of resistors. Dunno what that would be good for but only thermal eyes could see the image/text
You can read led matrixes that turn off for a bit, like the subway info sign at the T station
wow vury awsum
I agree
How did this guy get sponsored by the freaking marine corps?
Good on you man, you deserve it
They probably realise the young folks they want to brainwa--I mean convince--to join the marine corps hang out on yt a lot lmao
What's up with all those gays?
Pride
Hope you had fun in Pittsburgh, totally not biased at all
us marine corps cringe
You misspelled based
Bro looked at the parade and said this is overwhelming
Gay parrade at the start of the video? Ngl i think you need to go turkey mate wrong country
This is in Pittsburgh? I am confused. I think it is a great place for a video
@@RepeatedFailure turkey is better cause one time ago they sprayed high pressure water to the gay parade and one of them almost went flying
@@RepeatedFailure I think I might be too harsh but I’m an Anti LGTBTQ my opinion
I got here because I was trying to find out what a mirage would look like using heat vision. But seeing all the other applications/different, Hot/Cold contrasting images, is pretty cool.🤓👍🏼👍🏼
Cringe sponsor today bro 💀
I LITERALLY SAW THIS GUY JUST WALKING AROUND BRO. TF?
Why did you do military propaganda
3:06 bro why'd you step on the lava you're burning!!
this is just unconscionable. I was basically ready to sign up for the task force to help you out with shit... but like... I just can't even watch this and I'm just so disgusted with you. like, if you can't understand why partnering with the people who send our friends off to die for oil makes you a bad person... then I don't know what to tell you. I love your videos usually, but I just can't look at you anymore.
I respect him a lot more for it, if you’re not willing to die for the prosperity of your country aka your community (in which humans have evolved to be a part of), then why even live in the first place?
the marines probably paid him a ton of money, and I think it’s just a stupid idea to turn down $50k-100k to make one low effort video, especially when youtube is a full time job. If it was that easy for me to make that much money, I’d happily be sponsored by the early 1940s German government
I respect him more for it
shut up
Same I've unsubscribed, this is absolutely vile.
The fact that the phone reflects thermal light just as much as it does visible mount bus incredible to me, I just want expecting that for some reason.
I also wonder what it would look like if it was a full rainbow spectrum.
US military propaganda PogU