Final form of the headset is being born.
After hundreds of models and hundreds of 3D printed prototypes, the final form is taking shape.
Augmented reality that reads the eye and the mind — built first for the people the world stopped building for, then carried all the way to the brain.
Coming soon · Designed in Romania
He stole fire from the gods and put it in the hands of those left in the dark.
Prometheus paid for that gift in chains — yet humanity rose out of the dark, forging tools and reaching for the stars. PrometheusAR is that same fire, carried into a new century: a glance, a blink, a thought.
A deliberate path — from giving a voice back, to guarding those in danger, to dissolving the line between intention and action.
The interface follows your gaze in real time. Look at what you want — it already knows.
A custom electro-oculography system reads every open and close of the eye as a deliberate click. Accurate, tireless, and entirely yours.
Compose with your eyes and let the glasses speak for you. Your voice, back in the room.
A warm, high-contrast, retro OS designed for clarity over flash.
The Sentinel listens with a three-microphone array and pinpoints the origin of incoming fire in real time — no aiming, no thinking, just a direction painted onto your view.
Three spatially-separated microphones on the unit capture the muzzle blast of incoming gunfire.
The sound reaches each mic a fraction of a millisecond apart. From those tiny timing differences the system computes the exact bearing the shot was fired from.
The danger direction is mapped into your field of view, so reaction time drops to a single glance.
Further specifications are yet to be revealed.
A sensor array reads the electrical signatures of the eyes and brain at once — an interface that responds before a single muscle moves.
These are working prototypes: the earliest sparks of the final Promethean flame. A long road lies ahead, and we intend to walk every step of it.
The same ocular and neural signals that drive the glasses can drive a prosthetic limb — letting the wearer move an artificial hand or arm by intention alone.
Paired with a powered exoskeleton, the interface aims to let a paralysed person stand and walk on their own — the eyes and mind setting each step in motion.
The eye is a tiny battery — a standing voltage between cornea and retina. Our own electro-oculography front-end, built from scratch on a breadboard, reads that signal and turns each blink into a clean, intentional click.
This is our first working prototype of EOG detection — the bench build where the system first read a real blink.
Progress, prototypes and milestones as they happen.
After hundreds of models and hundreds of 3D printed prototypes, the final form is taking shape.
Our custom electro-oculography board now distinguishes intentional blinks from natural ones with near-perfect reliability in bench testing.
The Phase 03 sensor headset is recording clean combined EOG + neural signals. The mind-interface era has begun.
I'm deeply passionate about robotics and neuroscience.
My research explores how technology can help us understand the brain — its functions, our behaviours, and the workings of human consciousness. That enthusiasm keeps me chasing the connections between technology and the human mind.
PrometheusAR is being built right now, in Bucharest. For collaborations, press or questions, reach out directly.
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