FLIR First Mate, thermal in your hand

A significant product introduction at the NMEA Conference was the FLIR First Mate, a hand held thermal camera that's truly designed for marine use and will list for a hair under $3,000. Mind you, it does not use light intensification technology, or a near IR illuminator, like most every other marine night vision monocular. This is the real thermal deal, able to see long wave infrared radiation that has nothing to do with visible, or near visible, light. Like the FLIR M-636 I've begun testing, it can see in total darkness, and even in broad daylight it often sees in a usefully different way than your eye. For instance, a MOB is going stand out like a light bulb regardless of water or skin color. FLIR being FLIR, they took us all out on San Carlos Bay with a boat load of First Mates and other thermal cams...
I believe both the screens below, gotten from FLIR, were taken from the same high vantage point, and have had their resolution bumped up from the thermal sensor's 240 x 180 pixels (maybe that happens right in the First Mate), but the detail seems quite close to what my eye saw through the monocular from the boat's top deck. The day beacon in the first image is reported to be 650 yards away, and is probably right across from the resort we stayed in (visible, along with the mangrove islands, here on Google Maps).

I have little doubt, though, that a First Mate could be useful to navigation, and also to security around a marina or waterfront. And maybe for other uses. If I get to try one up here, for instance, I'd see if it would reveal the heat leaks in my house, or the skunks and coons in my back woods, and I'd also look for hot spots around Gizmo's power panels and battery banks. But FLIR makes no claims for these sort of uses, particularly the latter, noting that while the thermal sensor is the same as used in some of its thermography products, the First Mate's optics are optimized for objects beyond 30 feet and its image processing for contrast. Still, who wouldn't want one (given a generous gadget budget)?

Ben, the images were both taken from my 7th floor balcony with a "First Mate Pro" at approximately 5pm the afternoon of the cruise. Except for the reflection of the sun on the water in the top picture, the image looked the same at night.