December 2023 GRIME Software Fans Update

Featured Photo

Photo credit: Mary Harner and Troy Gilmore, using a Platte Basin Timelapse (PBT) style camera on the South Branch Middle Loup River near Whitman, NE.

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.

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/

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