Satellite intelligence and ground truth in precision agriculture
Remote sensing identifies where stress occurs; soil labs confirm what to apply. Combining both reduces waste and improves farmer outcomes at scale.
CropSense was built on a simple principle: satellite bands show where to look; soil and field evidence show what to do. NDVI and stress zoning narrow the search space; labs and agronomists close the loop.
Farmers need mobile surfaces that work offline in the field. Analysts need command views that scale across regions. The same platform must serve both without duplicating data.
Enterprises adopting precision agriculture should plan for steward roles, quality checks on ingest, and clear retention rules — the same discipline we bring to security data programs.
More articles
Why unified cyber defense reduces SOC tool sprawl
Organizations running six or more point solutions face slower response times and higher total cost. A unified platform approach consolidates detection, investigation, and response without sacrificing depth.
Read articleGovernance frameworks for entity intelligence programs
Authorized investigation programs require clear policy, audit trails, and role separation. We outline practical controls for enterprise and government deployments.
Read article