Use Case: PVD Fest, Providence. September 9, 2023
When a storm hit mid-event,
one platform kept everyone aligned.
Police, fire, emergency management, and private security are all coordinating across a large public event. Then the weather changed everything.
1:15 PM
Lightning. Less than a mile away.
No warning on the radio. Thousands still on the footprint.
1:22 PM
They would have called it over the radio.
Hoped everyone heard. Hoped they knew where to go.
1:29 PM
Something was wrong in the garage.
Crowds backing up. Command couldn't see it.
All devices updated within 30 seconds
Eyes on the ground
Responder livestreams, director sees it, acts on it
Unauthorized vehicles spotted. Police dispatched before it became a crisis.
Vehicles spotted, police dispatched immediately
End of the day
38 incidents. A storm. A full evacuation.
After an event this complex, the after-action review usually means piecing together radio logs, scattered notes, and memory.
Immediate response
Storm visible on the map before it arrives
The map told the story — and the decision came fast because the picture was already clear.
Evacuation decision made in minutes
30 seconds
Every phone updated. Simultaneously.
Three shelters pinned to the map. No repeated calls.
The record
Every moment logged. Already exported.
The platform recorded the day. The team just ran it.
38 incidents · Full export · AAR-ready