Built, shipped, running.
Some of what we have built for clients and for ourselves, in the field and in production.
Voice banking for every accent on the line
THE GROUNDVoice interfaces fail the moment they expect studio audio and one accent. Real customers speak many languages, switch mid-sentence, and call from noisy places on basic phones.
WHAT SHIPPEDSpeech models tuned to local accents and mid-sentence language switching, sturdy enough for noisy lines and basic handsets.
Predictive intelligence for renewable energy assets
THE GROUNDAssets in the field degrade in ways the spec sheet never predicted, and downtime is usually discovered after it has already cost money.
WHAT SHIPPEDPredictive models that read asset telemetry and flag failures before they happen, so maintenance follows the forecast instead of the breakdown.
Biometric systems for African faces and environments
THE GROUNDGlobal face models struggle with darker skin, harsh light, budget phone cameras and documents that have lived in wallets for a decade.
WHAT SHIPPEDWe built Tani to verify faces, documents, fingerprints and liveness with models trained on African data from day one.
AI powering B2B commerce at continental scale
THE GROUNDContinental B2B trade runs on fragmented data, thin margins and infrastructure that cannot be assumed. Intelligence has to survive all three.
WHAT SHIPPEDMatching, pricing and demand intelligence embedded inside a B2B commerce platform operating across African markets.
Diagnostic AI running in European markets
THE GROUNDThe test of engineering built for hard conditions is whether it holds up anywhere else.
WHAT SHIPPEDThe same diagnostic stack we build at home now runs in European healthcare markets and holds its own there.
Agents that work while operators sleep
THE GROUNDMost automation breaks the moment reality deviates from the script. Agents have to hold up against the deviation.
WHAT SHIPPEDProduction agents that handle customer conversations, move money and keep watch on infrastructure overnight.
Building something serious?
In Africa, or for Africa from anywhere in the world, we should be in conversation.