More imagery than analysts
Daily collection over an area of interest produces more scenes than any team can screen by eye. Automated change detection triages the take so analysts spend their shift on what changed, not on what didn't.
Collection is no longer the bottleneck — analysis is, and the answer that arrives late is no answer at all. Automated change detection and a common operational picture move analysts from searching pixels to briefing decisions.
These are the problems that show up in our first conversation — and where the map starts paying for itself.
Daily collection over an area of interest produces more scenes than any team can screen by eye. Automated change detection triages the take so analysts spend their shift on what changed, not on what didn't.
An observation that takes days to move from sensor to decision-maker arrives as history. Pipelines that push finished geospatial products directly into the operational picture close that gap to hours.
Terrain, infrastructure, and activity layers held by separate teams can't be fused when the mission needs them together. A common spatial foundation makes every cleared layer discoverable and layerable.
The mix of platform, sensors, and people we reach for most in defense and intelligence work.
Tasked and archive collection over areas of interest, delivered on schedule with change detection built in.
A common operational picture where terrain, infrastructure, and activity layers fuse and stay queryable.
Integration of geospatial pipelines with mission systems, built by a team accustomed to controlled environments.
An analysis cell put automated change detection in front of its daily collection feed, so morning briefs opened with what changed overnight instead of which scenes were still unreviewed.
Tell us what you need to see, measure, or connect in your territory — we'll bring the right mix of platform, sensors, and people.
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