Here you can see the real image quality of the Seek Reveal... wooow, they've managed to reduced the noise
On the small screen, the noise is not visible. They do not show the saved image. Because it will be bad.
I find it really disturbing that Seek is using fake images to showcase their products.
May be it is time to create another thread on debunking their hi res BS images. What they do is clearly deceptive.
They love to use this two (fake) images:
(Look at the grass near the pool on the bottom right of the image?)
You would need 100,000 $ thermal camera for capturing such details...
You would need 100,000 $ thermal camera for capturing such details...
I wouldn't say that, I'm pretty sure any high quality 640x480 camera could capture that for
only $20k or so.
However I have a problem with this scene too (50 seconds)
https://youtu.be/S-KhPE5ca6Y?t=50sIf you look carefully, you can see the "thermal image" is actually just blobs of colour motion tracked to the guy's face. Especially look at the cold spot on the nose (stays the same shape) and the outline of his face (the tracking seems to lag behind his motion just slightly). You would've thought that they could've at the very least use a actual thermal camera...
You would need 100,000 $ thermal camera for capturing such details...
I wouldn't say that, I'm pretty sure any high quality 640x480 camera could capture that for only $20k or so.
However I have a problem with this scene too (50 seconds)
https://youtu.be/S-KhPE5ca6Y?t=50s
If you look carefully, you can see the "thermal image" is actually just blobs of colour motion tracked to the guy's face. Especially look at the cold spot on the nose (stays the same shape) and the outline of his face (the tracking seems to lag behind his motion just slightly). You would've thought that they could've at the very least use a actual thermal camera...
I think the sale and marketing run way ahead of production nowsaday. To reduce inventory, warehouse, etc , many are selling and taking in payment even before the first piece is even rolled out of the production floor. Needless to say, they have no actual camera onhand when they are preparing the sale material.
Sorry but i do not buy that. Engineering and QA would have plenty of images to provide to Marketing.
Sorry but i do not buy that. Engineering and QA would have plenty of images to provide to Marketing.
Agreed, their marketing department is making a choice to use simulated images. Though I'm surprised they're not obligated to post a small disclaimer to say that they are.
Simulated images were very common on pocket LCD TV's due to the difficulties of photographing an LCD panel (moire patterns) but there was always a small warning adjacent stating that they were simulated.
I have no time for deceptive advertising. If SEEK Thermal are not honest with their customer base, they will be seen as treating customers with contempt. That isn't generally a good idea in this world of social media.
Tom's guide posted a "Hands On" with the reveal.
http://www.tomsguide.com/us/seek-reveal-rugged-thermal-camera,news-21665.htmlThe image quality doesn't appear improved at all (also the screen isn't rectangular, the edges are curved for whatever reason).
Looks like the advertising of "Screen Resolution" has already fooled a review site... I wonder how many customers think the sensor is 320x240 now too....
The sensor has been upgraded to a larger 320 x 240-pixel resolution with a max range of 500 feet.
Come on seek... you're intentionally putting the resolution of the LCD front and centre for the express purpose of misleading customers into thinking that's the sensor resolution.
I was fooled at first too until I spent some more time reading the specifications.
Aaannnddd... they just
disabled commenting on all of their videos on YouTube. There were some comments there accusing them of false advertising etc.
Also look at these pictures on their Amazon page for the reveal.
I don't even... those image look to be beyond 320x240, probably 640x480? Also ironically the glow / red colour pallete they use in all of their "sample images" isn't even available in the Seek app... so it's literally impossible to take these images with the seek, even if we ignore the issues with resolution.
I totally agree that they're misrepresenting their product. There's always got to be some wiggle room for marketing, but they are starting to take it over the edge a little. I too was almost fooled into thinking the Reveal was a new 320x240 sensor, until I read the fine print so to speak. A few others on this thread were too, and if we were, you can bet your average-joe consumer will most definitely be. They're gonna be pretty let down and angry when they realize their Reveal's quality doesn't come close to those "simulated images" posted online and on their box. I foresee some customer backlash and a few returns in Seek's future unfortunately.
Did anyone else notice how extremely fake that sink image is? Both the visible light and the "thermal" version. Just have a look at the direction the floor tiles are oriented compared to the angle of the wall... Talk about cut and pasting. All the elements in that picture look like they're from separate sources and were slapped together
The laundry sink one in the last series of images seems to be absolute BS. It can be seen in the normal image the sections of the pipe are made of same white plastic. But in the thermal image the pipe section that goes into the wall is not heated at all and is at ambient temperature. And the thermal gradient is abrupt on that connection.
In the other image you can see shadows of the cabinet handles on the cabinets doors, and a reflection of the carpet on the wall in front of it.
Wow, I never really paid attention those images. If that "footprints" image were truly thermal, I'd be tearing open those cabinets to the right to see what was so hot inside them -- and then trying to find what was making the floor so cold directly beneath them.
I do not think it would be possible to get such crisp thermal images of footprints. Footprints fade away fast, the ones at the picture front would become faded blobs before the person would reach the far side of the room.
Not to mention the mirrored detail along the bottom margin, and the big cloud of erased detail to the left...
So this is the old Seek website where most of these images were used. Note the footer at the bottom. I think it's reasonable to assume that any disclaimers would be included in the footer (after all, their copyright notice is).
As I scroll through, the footer remains the same.
However it's only when I reach the really bottom does the "images are simulated" disclaimer appear.
If you have a footer that doesn't move with the page, it's entirely reasonable to assume that all of the disclaimers that normally appear at the bottom of the page are included in it (and the footer shouldn't ever change). You shouldn't have (one of the most important) disclaimers appear in this fixed footer only when the bottom of the page is reached. Additionally, even if someone scrolls to the bottom of the page, they probably won't notice it as it's assumed that the footer doesn't change.
I'm probably getting this thread a bit off topic, but I think it's pretty bad that seek uses these "simulated" images that aren't even remotely close to the real thing. While for people who are vaguely familiar with Thermal imaging it is clear that the pictures are fake / not produced with a $200 device, do note that the Seek is targeted at people who may have never seen / used thermal imagers. In fact, I come across a lot of people who still think you can do thermal imaging by removing the IR Cut filter in front of a CCD - to them a 4 megapixel thermal image coming out of a $250 device doesn't seems impossible at all - after all, some cheap $100 point & shoot could probably do that. And the problem I think is that those people can be easily mislead by Seek's "simulated images" of this kind.
I figured that for legal purposes a disclaimer would be included somewhere, and when companies do this they're usually small and hard to spot at first, but that trick with the scrolling footer is very sneaky. Very bad form. And you're right encryptededdy, their customer base is made up of primarily first time thermal camera users that have only seen thermal images in Predator or Desert Storm smart bomb footage on CNN. Seek knows it too. I just hope Seek is working on their next imaging sensor and that it'll be released somewhat soon, I'm looking forward to seeing what they can do with a little more time and polish.
Simulated thermal images? Why would you ever do that? It's like selling 320x480 webcam (of the normal, visible-light variety) and using 16MP DSLR images in the site, with a small "images are simulated" disclaimer. Unless your product is absolutely horrible...
Is the pseudoholographic display also "simulated"...?
A Seek style "thermal" image . A cat just returned from a walk, and since it was a cool October night the footprints are colder than the floor.
The laundry sink one in the last series of images seems to be absolute BS. It can be seen in the normal image the sections of the pipe are made of same white plastic. But in the thermal image the pipe section that goes into the wall is not heated at all and is at ambient temperature. And the thermal gradient is abrupt on that connection.
In the other image you can see shadows of the cabinet handles on the cabinets doors, and a reflection of the carpet on the wall in front of it.
Fake imagery aside, the reason the heat in the pipe ends abruptly is because they're simulating a clogged drain and that their product can find it.