A next-gen handheld field analyzer built for explorers, scientists, and responders. Offline. Rugged. Ready.
An all in one handheld that monitors radiation, air quality, weather, and identifies objects, plants, insects and more with AI. Built by engineers, for real fieldwork.
ATLAS merges AI, environmental sensing, and portable computing into a single handheld device — the kind that would make even Star Trek’s tricorder jealous. This is not a proof-of-concept. It is a rugged, field-ready instrument for scientists, engineers, emergency responders, and explorers who need real data in real environments.
Specs — subject to change. A Pico 2 powers 13+ precision sensors: SCD41 (CO₂ / temperature / humidity), SGP41 (VOC / NOx), BMP581 (pressure), TSL2591 (light), BNO085 (IMU), MLX90640 (thermal imaging), Pocket Geiger (gamma radiation), dedicated H₂S and CO gas sensors, a 5MP camera for real-time AI object recognition (Pro only), GPS, and a custom AS5600 wind sensor.
All driven by a 4000mAh battery, 6 industrial-grade switches, and fully offline processing — a rugged field lab in your hands.
ATLAS does not just collect data — it turns sensor streams into usable field intelligence. Trends in CO₂, TVOC, light, radiation, system load, and temperature are logged, analyzed, and presented in a way that makes decisions easier when conditions start going sideways.
That means one device can function as a portable lab, a data logger, a warning system, and an AI-assisted field assistant without needing cloud dependence to feel useful.
Navigation, redefined. With precision heading, situational awareness, and satellite tracking built in, ATLAS is your compass and trusted guide. It blends IMU fusion with GPS and light, sound, and CO₂ signals to determine your exact context — even indoors.
It does not just show where you are going. It knows where you are.
ATLAS is built to tell you something useful before the problem becomes obvious. It analyzes pressure drops, humidity, light, gas signatures, thermal clues, and radiation activity so the device can speak up when conditions change fast.
ATLAS analyzes pressure drops, humidity shifts, and wind changes to detect incoming weather before it catches you off guard.
Whether it is a campfire hotspot, vehicle exhaust, or a toxic gas leak, ATLAS sounds the alarm so you can act instead of guessing.
On supported configurations, ATLAS uses its onboard camera and local AI to help identify objects, plants, insects, and surrounding context without sending data to the cloud.
Every run can be logged for later review, trend analysis, and mission records — which means the device is just as useful after the event as it is during it.
ATLAS will launch with three tiers so the same platform can reach classrooms, citizen scientists, and demanding field professionals without splitting the architecture into three different products.
ATLAS is being built as a serious tool — not a fake sci-fi prop. If you want updates, partnership discussions, or early interest conversations, get in touch.