Mining fleets, farm machinery, warehouse robots, delivery drones, inspection robots, port cranes, maritime vessels. Every one of them is becoming autonomous. None of it ships without a software layer to make it work.
Fleets going autonomous on incompatible vendor stacks. None of them talk to each other.
Every OEM needs an autonomy story. Most build from scratch and ship underbaked.
Federated AI across institutions, with provable privacy and decision provenance.
High-stakes deployments where autonomy has to be trusted, governed, and proven.
Deploy Acre once. Get a system that sees the world through any sensor, plans and rehearses missions, coordinates fleets across patchy comms, defends itself against cyberattack, and records the evidence behind every decision.
Customers running autonomous machines need them to actually work as one fleet, in every environment, without rebuilding the software stack themselves. Acre is what they buy instead.
Stop being locked to a single OEM. Run mixed-vendor haul fleets as one system. Drone inspection in the same stack. Fleet productivity up, vendor leverage up, integration cost down.
Mixed machinery works together per-field. Spray drones operate one-to-many. The whole farm keeps running when the cellular drops.
Mixed-vendor fleets coordinate as a single system. Ports automate across acres of yard with comms that survive dead zones.
Embed Acre inside the platform instead of rebuilding years of foundational software. Time-to-market collapses; the OEM differentiates on hardware.
Banks pool fraud-detection signal without exposing customer data. Hospital networks pool clinical model signal with provable privacy.
Teams stop rewriting the autonomy stack for every deployment. Operators get full provenance, policy control, and local ownership of sensitive data.
Any one of these is a defensible product. Together they define the category.
Perception, planning, coordination, cyber, federation. All first-party, all production-grade. Customers buy a system, not a parts bin.
Run Acre on the edge hardware you already own. We don't sell hardware, and we don't lock customers to one vendor stack.
Mines, ships, farms, contested zones. No critical-path cloud call. Identity, policy, audit, decisions all local. Syncs when comms return.
Decisions produce verifiable evidence. Give review teams a clear record of what happened, why it happened, and who approved it.
A signed deployment manifest declares what the system needs. Acre starts with every requested capability identified, connected, and governed by policy. The same configuration moves from development to production without changing how the system is controlled.
A single signed manifest describes the deployment. Reproducible across development, staging, and production.
Capabilities declare what they produce and consume. Policy is enforced at the system boundary, not bolted on after deployment.
Customers extend the platform with their own sensors, algorithms, and simulators through a small, stable SDK.
Acre brings the core capabilities an autonomous system needs into one deployable platform, governed from a single signed manifest.
Before autonomous systems move into critical operations, teams need to know what ran, why it acted, who approved it, and whether it can be trusted again tomorrow. Acre is built around that evidence.
Identity, policy, isolation, and cyber resilience are built into the platform so autonomy can run where networks, hardware, and operators cannot be assumed trusted.
Commands, sensor inputs, plans, and operator actions can be recorded in a form that supports review, audit, and incident reconstruction.
Signed manifests make it clear what is running, where it is running, and which policy governs the system.
Technical teams can run acceptance tests and benchmarks on their own hardware before moving from evaluation to production deployment.
Acre supports the evidence security, safety, procurement, and compliance teams need when autonomous systems move into critical operations.
Customers can bring sensors, models, and specialist systems into Acre while keeping policy, provenance, and operator control consistent.
If you're running autonomous machines, building them, or regulating them, we should talk.
Talk to sales →