DataNET in action.

Six layers of the data fusion engine — climate, land, water, aquifers, quality, wells. What feeds every MAGNET4WATER simulation.

Coming soon. Recorded sessions for this layer of DataNET are being prepared and will appear here as they're ready.

Title

Lead sentence.

More detail.

In DataNET, the visualization streams as the data layers fuse onto the active domain. What you see is the data assembly itself, frame by frame as it queries and resolves — not pre-rendered output. Each clip above is a recording of one such session.

1 / 14

What you're looking at.

For decades, the slowest part of every water modeling project was getting the data. Hunting down DEMs, soil maps, hydrography, climate records, well logs, water-quality measurements — from a dozen agencies in a dozen formats — and then aligning them all in a single coordinate system. DataNET inverts that. The data is already fused. The Earth is already modeled. You just zoom in.

Above, a library of recorded sessions covering six layers of the global base model — climate and weather, land and soil, water and ecosystems, aquifer and lithology, water quality and contamination, and wells with static water levels. This is the foundation underneath every IGW-NET, StormNET, SwaNET, and ConduitNET simulation.

Ready to see your data?

Every layer above is queryable on demand, anywhere on Earth. Open the platform, draw a box, and watch the data assemble itself — no downloads, no format conversion, no coordinate-system gymnastics.

Open DataNET