Our Story
We're building the future of invention.
Seer is building the operating system for inventors: a platform where ideas don't just stay ideas.
From concept to design, protection to prototyping, we're creating a unified system that makes hardware innovation accessible to anyone, anywhere.
I grew up as an inventor who never truly had the chance to bring ideas to life, mainly due to regional and logistical barriers.
From a young age, I was fascinated by how things worked. I loved taking ideas apart and putting them back together in new ways. At 9 years old, I sketched my first orthographic design for a mini air conditioner. By 13, I had designed a pressure-powered ship. For both, I built rough prototypes using whatever primitive materials I could find.
I entered engineering school with the dream of becoming a full-time inventor. But along the way, I faced a difficult reality: pursuing a career as an inventor in my region was incredibly challenging, almost impractical. That realization pushed me toward the software industry, where I could still design systems without being limited by geography.
Still, I never disconnected from hardware innovation. I kept following independent inventors like Stephen Key, especially his ideas around licensing inventions to companies instead of manufacturing them alone.
The seed of this platform was planted during my final year of university. I kept asking myself: why isn't there a place where inventors can share their ideas and connect with companies? At the time, AI hadn't yet reached its current level, but the idea stayed with me.
There was always a major challenge: even if such a platform existed, how would inventors trust it? How could their ideas be protected? And more importantly, how could you attract people to share something as valuable as an invention?
Everything changed with the rise of AI, especially agent-based systems. As I started learning and experimenting with this technology, a new vision emerged: not just a platform where people share ideas, but one that actively helps them create those ideas.
The concept evolved into something much bigger: a system that assists inventors in designing, developing, and refining their ideas from scratch, then supports them in presenting and licensing those ideas.
But there was another problem: the tools I needed didn't fully exist. Generating CAD models, creating blueprints, and translating imagination into structured designs weren't mature enough. So I started pushing the limits, engineering workflows, refining prompts, and building intelligent agents capable of handling these complex tasks.
Once I reached a point where the system became truly capable, I began building the platform itself.
For areas outside my core expertise, like web design and user experience, I leveraged tools like Replit. It helped me shape the interface, improve performance, and optimize the platform for usability and reach.
Finally, I added a community layer: a space where inventors can showcase their work, share ideas, and inspire each other.
And that's how this journey came together: from a kid building prototypes out of scraps, to creating a platform designed to remove the very barriers that once held me back.