A navigation platform built for drivers and logistics - surfacing what's actually on the road and projecting weather to your arrival. Available as an iOS app and a Developer API.
It started back in 2019 with research - I was curious about road-surface quality and what a car's suspension really goes through on real roads. No navigation app exposed any of that, and I wanted the data for myself. Early on it was just about helping navigation understand the road a bit better.
Then February 2022 happened. We each made the same drive, at different times: fleeing the war, crossing the whole country on roads we didn't know, where a bad surface or a sudden storm could genuinely put you in danger. Loaded cars, suspensions we wrecked, a tire that almost blew on a mountain road at night. Afterwards we sat down and talked, and it clicked - this is a safety problem, not just a comfort one. And between us, we happened to have the exact skills it would take. We could actually build the thing we wished existed, and we believed in it.
Driving later in Europe and the US, we kept noticing the same thing from the other side. The roads were far from perfect, conditions kept changing, and every app still routed us down the shortest line and showed the weather for right now instead of for when we'd actually arrive. This wasn't about one country at war. It was everywhere, and no one was really fixing it.
So we built navigation specifically for drivers and logistics, where the car is treated as a real object on a real road rather than a dot on a screen. It begins with what's under the car and around it: the surface quality, the conditions you'll meet at your arrival time, the signs and turns actually coming up. The routing engine is our own, built from scratch over years - not a layer on top of someone else's map.
What we're after is moving navigation forward: putting the physics of the vehicle into the equation, and pulling together the scattered road and weather data that's never been in one place. We're opening that up through both the app and a developer API.
It began in 2019 as research into road-surface quality and vehicle suspension - just genuine curiosity about what navigation kept ignoring.
Navigation for drivers, and increasingly for logistics. It begins with the road surface under the car - road-quality analysis works today, and it's the basis for treating the vehicle as a real object on a real road rather than a dot on a screen.
Our own routing core, built over years rather than wrapped around someone else's map. That's what lets us surface data layers others don't.
Putting vehicle physics into routing and bringing scattered road and weather data into one place - available through both the app and a developer API.
Questions, partnerships, or feedback - we're happy to hear from you.