ModernizingDisaster Response

by Safeall

Advanced drone and sensor data integration platform that connects, understands, and acts on real-time situational awareness during disasters.

The Problem

Current disaster response technology is failing when it matters most

Integration Challenges

It's extremely difficult to integrate data during disasters. Current software doesn't play well with the sensors, drones, and communication tools that first responders actually use.

Outdated Information

Information in disasters is sparse and quickly becomes outdated. Most drones just put video on a screen with no intelligent processing or integration.

Manual Processes

Current tools like TAK (Tactical Awareness Kit) rely on extremely manual processes. Unhelpful sensors feeding into unhelpful maps.

Unnecessary Risk

This leads to unnecessary danger and wasted resources. The rapid “do what you can with what you have” approach conflicts with current geospatial software practices.

Our Solution

Intelligent integration of drone and sensor data with AI-powered reasoning

Data Integration

Seamlessly integrate drone and sensor data from any source, whether cloud-based or on-premises.

AI Reasoning

Advanced AI analyzes building volumes, estimates rubble, calculates travel times, and generates actionable reports.

Situational Awareness

Real-time, human and machine-readable situational awareness with dynamic mission planning capabilities.

Why Clearwing

Built for the modern disaster response landscape

Current Solutions

  • ×Expensive and slow to deploy
  • ×Difficult to integrate with existing systems
  • ×Limited or forced ML pipelines
  • ×Siloed - only works with their ecosystem

Clearwing Approach

  • Fast deployment in any environment
  • Open integration with any tools and sensors
  • Support for open-source models and APIs
  • Works with MCP servers, local sensors, any data source

Founder

Experienced leadership in AI and disaster response

Leandra T

MIT

Previous founder with successful exit

Founded the largest AI Hacker club in Cambridge