Border agencies provide the sensors, radar systems, and patrol platforms. Varindor fuses the data into a continuous border picture, coordinates autonomous drone patrols, and detects anomalies across land and maritime boundaries.
Fused picture from the agency's radar, EO/IR, AIS, and other sensor systems. Multi-sensor correlation resolves duplicate detections and builds a single coherent border picture from disparate sources.
Coordinated drone patrol routes with physics-aware planning — accounting for terrain, weather, airspace restrictions, and RF interference. Persistent coverage with automatic handoff between platforms. Technical detail.
Pattern-of-life analysis across the border zone. Deviations from baseline activity — unusual movements, unexpected vessels, timing anomalies — are flagged automatically and presented with context.
AIS tracking correlated with radar and EO/IR for maritime border surveillance. Vessels that deviate from expected routes or AIS patterns are detected and tracked.
Autonomous drone dispatch to investigate anomalies. When something is detected, a drone is tasked automatically with physics-aware routing to the location. The operator authorises or overrides.
Live border picture streamed to command centres, patrol vehicles, and field devices. The same fused picture is available at every level — from the operator in the field to the national coordination centre.
Border control agencies receive a deployment configuration matched to their operational mandate. The platform scales from surveillance and anomaly detection through to engagement capabilities where authorised by the agency's legal framework. Full audit logging at every level.
When border control operates on the same platform as the armed forces and national security, border surveillance data contributes to the national intelligence picture. A pattern detected at the border — unusual maritime activity, coordinated crossings, drone incursions — is visible to national security agencies as part of the broader situational awareness. The border agency benefits from military-grade sensor fusion and AI reasoning applied to their surveillance mission.