Timelines make events readable.
Continuous footage becomes an ordered incident record. Each moment can carry a summary, detected objects, confidence, camera source, and a direct link back to the clip that produced it.
“View the incident as a sequence of events, then open the exact clips that explain each moment.”
Ask the footage directly.
When someone already knows the question, review should start there. Search for the person near the garage, the truck at the gate, or when the package disappeared, then open the exact moments that answer it.
“Show me anyone near the garage after 10 PM.”
Summaries, clips, and records.
Once the relevant moments are found, they can be reviewed as a sequence, described clearly, and tied back to the original clips. The result is a record that is easier to verify, explain, and share.
“Review the key moments, keep the clips attached, and leave with a record someone else can follow.”
What the product returns.
The point is not raw detection alone. The point is a usable record that someone can review, explain, search, and act on.
Prioritized observations tied to camera, timestamp, and source clip.
An ordered incident sequence instead of a long motion archive.
Plain-language scene descriptions grounded in observed footage.
Natural-language access to indexed people, vehicles, packages, areas, activity, and times.
Fits the footage you already have.
Scene Ledger works alongside existing cameras, NVRs, and recorded files. Connect live streams where needed, or process uploaded footage when review starts after the fact.
Walk through Scene Ledger on your own footage and review workflow.
We can review sample records, timeline and search workflows, camera fit, deployment options, and how Scene Ledger fits into the way your team already reviews incidents.