From the depths, to your fingertips.
Most management systems are a filing cabinet no one can navigate — thousands of documents, and no one can find what's required, or even what exists. Pear is built the opposite way: one stream, everything a function of it, the important pieces cached locally, and answers you can ask for in plain language.
Everything, everywhere — findable by no one.
A risk assessment here. An ICS-201 there. A safety flash in an inbox. "30 CFR 254" inside a PDF someone saved as SiteSafetyPlan_final_FINAL_v3. The knowledge exists — scattered across tools that don't talk to each other, entered many times, audited rarely. When the question comes, the answer is buried.
One stream. Everything a function of it.
Pear refuses the fragmentation. There is one append-only stream of what happened, and every view — the risk register, the ICS-201, the daily report, the map — is a projection of it. Enter a fact once and it appears everywhere it belongs. Nothing is filed twice, and nothing is lost.
Ask. Get a cited answer.
CHART reads the manual for you. Ask in plain language and it answers only from a corpus it can cite — every claim links to the exact passage, and if the answer isn't there it says so rather than guess. Every answer carries a visible "LLM-assisted" mark and an epistemic tier, so you always know how much to trust it.
What worst-case discharge must a 30 CFR 254 oil-spill response plan address?
Under 30 CFR 254.47, your response plan must be able to respond to the worst-case discharge for your facility — for a production facility, the largest volume from an uncontrolled blowout, calculated per §254.47 and used to size your response resources.
When is our support vessel's next dry-dock?
That's not covered in the CHART corpus.
The important pieces, cached locally.
Alongside CHART, a standing analyst runs entirely on-box — zero external calls — continuously reading and indexing the sources that matter, so the knowledge is there even offshore with the network down. It has already been running for weeks.
Pull the cable and it still answers. The air-gapped on-box analyst is a separate system from the cloud-backed CHART assistant above — together they mean the knowledge is both instant and resilient.
Figures as of 2026-07-05 and growing.