Findability

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.

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The problem

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.

The Pear answer

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.

At your fingertips

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.

Cited · 30 CFR 254.47 ◇ LLM-assisted

When is our support vessel's next dry-dock?

That's not covered in the CHART corpus.

days  seconds
Time to answer
Illustrative. CHART is cloud-backed (it needs a network) and answers only from its cited corpus; it refuses rather than guess.
Even with the cord cut

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.

On-box · External calls: 0
979
Sources read
14 MB
Knowledge index
weeks
Running, uninterrupted

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.