We build technology that makes people more capable.

Technology should give you your life back.

We're building a better experience for being human.

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We're a small team of hackers, engineers, and designers. We build the things we wish existed.

We think the best technology gives you more and asks for less — more time, more attention, more room to be human — and then gets out of the way. Most technology today does the opposite. We're building the other kind.

Everything worth building looks impossible right up until someone builds it. That's the part we like.

human becoming machine
fig. 00 — the human
gaia live today
GAIA — wireframe planet
fig. 01 — gaia

Most assistants wait for you to ask, then forget you the second you close the tab. GAIA doesn't.

It reads your inbox before you do, watches your calendar, drafts your replies, and runs the multi-step work you'd never get around to — then remembers all of it, so it's sharper next month than it is today.

It's live, open source, and already doing this. → heygaia.io

Where it's headed: off the screen and onto your body. Paired with the glasses, GAIA goes everywhere you go — the goal is simple, and a little unreasonable: an assistant that can handle anything you'd handle yourself. Everyone deserves a Jarvis.

smart glasses in development
smart glasses — front blueprint
fig. 02 — front elevation

GAIA, on your face. A display only you can see, a camera that sees what you see, and an assistant you just talk to. It paints your directions onto the road ahead, picks up the call you don't want to take, and remembers the things you'd have forgotten by dinner. You run it with your voice, your eyes, and your hands — no controller, no phone in your palm.

Most smart glasses are bricks you'd never wear in public. These are meant to be light, cheap, and good-looking enough that you forget they're smart at all.

display visible only to you
voice "hey gaia"
navigation painted on the road, live
memory auto-captures what matters
control voice · eyes · blink · hands
audio bone conduction
lenses clear → sunglasses, one press
power solar across the frame
build light, affordable, not ugly
field of view classified
household robotics on the horizon

We're also drawn to what comes after the screen. AI learned to make art and music — the parts of being human we'd least want to give up — while the laundry still piles up. That feels backwards. The boring, physical work is exactly what machines should take off our hands.

We haven't started building it. It's just a future we believe in — and probably the hardest thing we'll ever attempt.

the march of progress — human to machine
human and robot hands almost touching

People ask why a software company is building glasses and robots. We don't really think of ourselves as a software company. We think most of what fills your day — the digital admin, the errands, the housework — is work you never should have been doing. GAIA takes the digital load. The glasses carry it with you. Robots take the physical load at home. The screen was just where we started.

"The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do." — Steve Jobs

If you want to help build this, we'd love to meet you.