Featured Photo
Updates
- Congratulations to GRIME Lab team member Ken Chapman, who defended his dissertation and will graduate this month. Great job, Ken!
- GRIME-related Proposals: two full proposals and a preproposal that involved GRIME software were submitted in November and December.
- Check out the latest updates on our blog and let us know if/how we can support you project.
Software Information
What is GRIME?
GRIME (GaugeCam Remote Imagery Manager Educational) is open-source commercial-friendly software (Apache 2.0) that enables ecohydrological research using ground-based time-lapse imagery. The first GRIME software for measuring water level with cameras was developed in François Birgand’s lab at North Carolina State University.
What are GRIME2 and GRIME-AI?
GRIME2 and GRIME-AI are the two desktop applications developed by Ken Chapman and John Stranzl, respectively.
- GRIME2 is software dedicated to quickly and easily measuring water level with time-lapse imagery. See more and download GRIME2 at https://gaugecam.org/grime2-details/.
- GRIME-AI is intended for a much broader class of problems and research questions. See more at https://gaugecam.org/grime-ai-details/.
Who is involved in the GRIME Lab?
See the growing list at the bottom of our home page: https://gaugecam.org/
We collaborate closely with Mary Harner at University of Nebraska at Kearney: https://witnessingwatersheds.com/