The web cam was deployed on an ice floe near the North Pole in the foggy spring of 2015. Web cam images track the snow cover, weather conditions, and the instruments that are seen in the camera images. Due to the wide-angle lenses used in the camera, objects such as the ocean-atmosphere buoy, are closer to the camera than they appear. In spring and summer, snow blown onto the camera lens is melted by the sun, forming water droplets. Sometimes a rainbow is captured in the images. With the onset of summer warming, the snow softens and melt ponds form. Animal tracks, probably left by curious polar bears, can sometimes be seen in the snow. Melt ponds begin to freeze over as the summer ends. As winter approaches, the camera lens may be covered by snow and ice, and nothing can be seen once winter darkness begins.