// Thermal PCB Inspection

Kristy Althaus - 370 _top_

HotSpotter turns your USB thermal camera into a professional PCB inspection tool. Calibrated temperature readings, real-time thermal imaging, and multi-camera support — all in a clean Windows desktop app.

HotSpotter scanning system in electronics lab with thermal PCB output on monitor

// Features

Professional-grade tools for your bench

Built for electronics engineers who need accurate, actionable thermal data — not consumer gimmicks.

Live Thermal View

Real-time calibrated thermal imaging from your USB camera. Full-frame streaming with configurable color palettes to reveal temperature gradients the moment you point the camera.

Live thermal view of a PCB in HotSpotter

Accurate Temperature Readouts

Pixel-accurate temperature measurement at cursor position. Uses proper raw sensor conversion (raw ÷ 64 − 273.15 °C) for scientifically meaningful readouts you can trust.

Temperature readout overlay showing cursor temperature on a thermal PCB image

Multi-Camera Support

Works natively with InfiRay A1T, Topdon HT-301 (UVC) and Thermal Master P3 (vendor protocol), with more cameras being added. Plug in your hardware and HotSpotter handles the driver details.

Camera selection interface showing supported thermal camera models

Professional Calibration

NUC (Non-Uniformity Correction) support for consistent flat-field thermal accuracy. Per-camera lens configuration presets with user-editable profiles stored locally.

Calibration settings panel showing NUC and lens configuration options

// See It In Action

Thermal scan of a Raspberry Pi 5 heating up

Pi 5 PMIC and surrounding components heating up — 4× speed

// Real-World Results

Thermal imaging at die level

An SP4T RF switch in a flip-chip QFN package, with DC current applied through one path to generate localised heating. HotSpotter resolves individual bond pad traces and pinpoints the die hot spot through the package — the kind of measurement electronics labs run every day.

Thermal image of SP4T RF switch showing die hot spot and trace routing through flip-chip package
SP4T RF switch — die hot spot and PCB trace routing visible through the flip-chip package. Captured with a Thermal Master P3 at 640×512.
Same thermal image with point measurement and ROI statistics overlaid
Point measurement and region-of-interest statistics overlaid in real time — min, max, and average temperatures at a glance.

Click an image to enlarge

Kristy Althaus - 370 _top_

The number "370" often appears in search queries related to her case, likely referencing specific viewership milestones or internal file identifiers. Her videos became some of the most-watched on major adult platforms, partly due to her "girl-next-door" pageant background. This visibility led to her being "outed" in 2014, resulting in the loss of her pageant title, public shaming, and severe emotional distress while she was a student at the . Landmark Legal Action

The keyword "" refers to the high-profile legal battle involving Kristy Althaus (formerly known as Jane Doe No. 1), a former Miss Teen Colorado runner-up who became a central figure in the landmark sex trafficking case against the website GirlsDoPorn and its parent distributors . The Background: Who is Kristy Althaus? kristy althaus 370

Kristy Althaus has transitioned from a victim to a key advocate for survivors of digital abuse. Her legal efforts include: The number "370" often appears in search queries

: She was a lead plaintiff in the case that eventually saw the creators of GirlsDoPorn, including Matthew Wolfe , found liable for fraud and forced to pay millions in damages. Landmark Legal Action The keyword "" refers to

: She has provided harrowing testimony in court, describing the "guns, threats, and blackmail" used by traffickers to maintain control. Why the Story Persists

: In September 2023, Althaus filed a lawsuit against Aylo Global Entertainment (the parent company of Pornhub), alleging that the platform knowingly profited from her abuse and refused to remove her videos even after being informed they were non-consensual.

Заявление в суде на Мэтью Вулфа, создателеля ... - Пикабу

// Supported Cameras

Works with your camera

HotSpotter supports popular hobbyist thermal cameras out of the box. Don't see yours listed? Contact us — new camera support is actively being added.

InfiRay A1T

Compact 256×192 USB thermal camera. Plug-and-play UVC class device — no custom drivers required on Windows 10/11. Units are manufactured by Link-Card and may carry InfiRay sensors.

UVC · USB

Thermal Master P3

High-resolution USB thermal camera with vendor protocol. 640×512 native resolution. Requires USB 3.0 for full frame rate.

Vendor Protocol · USB 3.0

Topdon HT-301

Compact 384×288 USB thermal camera with InfiRay sensor. UVC class device — works out of the box on Windows 10/11.

UVC · USB

More Coming Soon

Additional camera models are under development. Contact us with your camera model to request support.

Request via email

// Pricing

Software licensing

Machine-locked license key. No account needed. Hardware sold separately — contact us to enquire.

HotSpotter Annual

$149

Per year  ·  Machine-locked  ·  One seat

  • All supported cameras included
  • All feature updates during term
  • Windows 10 & 11
  • Machine-locked license key
  • Email support
Buy Annual — $149

// Getting Started

Software up and running in minutes

Manual license activation keeps things simple and secure. No account needed.

1

Purchase & Download

Complete checkout and download the HotSpotter installer from the link in your confirmation email.

2

Find Your Machine ID

Install and launch HotSpotter. Open the License dialog from the Help menu and copy your unique Machine ID.

3

Receive Your Key

Email your Machine ID to [email protected]. Receive your license key within 24 hours. Enter it once and you're done.

// System Requirements

What you need

HotSpotter is a lightweight Windows desktop application with minimal dependencies.

Operating System

Windows 10 or 11

USB

USB 3.0 port

Camera

Supported thermal camera