Norse navigators read light no compass could. Centuries later, John Cabot's crew made the same crossing — and a lookout sighted land and named it plainly: a good view. That's Bonavista: a good view of work in the inference age, when everything else is fog.
Every navigator faces the same thing: open water, no fixed marks, and the pull of currents you can't see. Modern work is that crossing. More signals than ever, more motion, more ways to drift — and somewhere out there, the one thing you're actually trying to reach.
Bonavista is built for that passage. You supply the context — the bearings only you have. It reads the motion, sorts the currents, and holds a steady line through them. No guessing at the stars. No sailing in circles.
What comes back is a single point of truth: the land you were looking for. Bonavista doesn't just show you more — it shows you where you are, and the way through.
And the whole voyage stays in your waters. Bonavista runs in a sovereign context — your context, your jurisdiction, under your control end to end. The intelligence comes to your data; your data never has to leave. A good view, on your own ground.