We believe in harmonising chaos.
At the intersection of technology and nature, where data meets intuition and the digital world connects with the physical.
Why we exist
Life on Earth is entering an age where every wild place is shaped by forces that are invisible: markets, algorithms, climate systems, distant political decisions. The forests, deserts, ice sheets and oceans that sustain us are increasingly monitored from afar, yet rarely known — reduced to reports, simulations and headlines that arrive long after the damage is done.
We refuse the idea that nature must disappear quietly in the background of human progress, or that technology's only role is to extract, optimise and replace.
Geome exists to make the living world continuously present — to turn remote ecosystems into shared spaces of attention, care and responsibility.
Our core belief
For nature to survive in a planetary, computational age, machine and ecosystem must learn to co-evolve.
Not as master and subject. Not as observer and spectacle.
But as partners in a feedback loop that protects life.
That means robot birds and quiet devices navigating protected areas as respectful guests, not intruders. It means constellations of sensors and cameras that listen more than they intrude, tuned to the rhythms of migration, drought, regrowth, and recovery. It means digital twins of deserts, ice sheets and jungles that anyone can enter — not as tourists consuming scenery, but as witnesses bound to its fate.
We see computation not as the opposite of wilderness, but as a new layer of perception laid gently over it.
What we are building
Geome turns the planet into a living network of field studios and digital twins.
Autonomous field studios in remote parks and reserves that transform Starlink, solar power and edge computing into always-on windows into the wild.
Digital twins of ecosystems that stream landscapes in real time — deserts, rainforests, ice, rivers — synchronised with data on weather, wildlife, and human activity.
Tools for stewards, researchers and communities that turn raw streams into insight: for conservation, tourism, education and local livelihoods.
New revenue models for protection where attention, storytelling, science and philanthropy converge to fund ecosystems directly and transparently.