Every warehouse has cameras. Almost none have early warning.
A Los Angeles cold-storage warehouse burned for eight days. The hard lesson for safety teams isn't about fire codes: it's the gap between a camera that records an incident and one that catches it early enough to matter.
Nobody answers the alarm anymore
When most camera alerts are shadows, rain, and headlights, your team learns to ignore all of them, including the one that mattered. Why alarm fatigue is a detection problem, not a discipline problem.
Use the guide, then validate it on your cameras.
Don't let the guide be the end of it. Take the checklist, a clear deployment path, and a direct line to ask implementation questions.
The checklist is built for operators evaluating a live pilot in the next 30 days.
Request a demo
See the flow on a real operating scenario and scope a pilot around one facility or corridor.
See deployment architecture
Review camera ingest, edge inference, alert routing, and what stays on-premises.
Get the implementation checklist
Download the deployment checklist buyers use before green-lighting an industrial AI pilot.
Talk to an engineer
Bring camera count, VMS constraints, latency expectations, and privacy requirements to a technical review.