Seaweave time lapse turns slow change into something you can actually see and measure, not just guess at between site visits. Cameras on farms, vessels, rafts, in factories or on land capture images on a schedule, building up a visual record of growth, biofouling, habitat condition, infrastructure wear and key process steps over days, weeks and seasons.
Flow organises these sequences alongside sensor data and AI outputs, so you can scroll through time, compare periods side by side and jump straight to when something started to drift from normal. That might be the onset of net fouling, changes in algae or benthic communities, a gradual twist in gear, or a slow shift in how a line is running in the plant.
Because the system runs unattended, time lapse pairs naturally with Seaweave’s rugged camera hardware and off grid platforms. Marine grade housings, automated wipers, edge processing and solar or vessel power keep cameras running in hard to reach places for weeks or months at a time, capturing slow change without constant dives or manual photo surveys.
Combined with live streaming and alerts, this lets customers move from reacting to obvious problems to managing thresholds, cleaning windows, maintenance and stocking decisions with clear evidence of how their operation is changing over time. The same hardware and Flow software that support time lapse can also trigger AI analysis and notifications, so a single installation can watch quietly in the background, surface issues as they emerge and give teams the footage they need to understand what happened and when.