One stream. Every view a function of it.
Pear isn't a suite of tools bolted together — it's one append-only record of what happened, and every screen (the risk register, the ICS-201, the daily report, the map) is a live projection of that one stream. Enter a fact once; it appears everywhere it belongs, and the record cannot quietly disagree with itself.
One fact. Everywhere it belongs.
Log a boom deployment during an incident, and the same fact writes itself into the ICS-214 unit log, the ICS-204 assignment, the ICS-201 briefing, and the common operating picture — at once, because each is a projection of the one stream. No double entry, no reconciliation, no version that's out of date.
Integrity, by construction.
A deterministic engine — not an AI — checks the record for contradictions and flags them. And an AI-proposed value physically cannot be sealed into a signed form-of-record: the freeze step throws on anything a human hasn't accepted. The machine can frame the prose; only a human signs the record.
Run only what the work demands.
Twenty-eight modules sit on the one spine — risk, CAPA, competency, permits, spill response and more. Switch off what a contract doesn't carry and its card disappears. And because a projection can't tell a human-entered row from an API-fed one, the platform is designed to take data straight from the software you already run — proven today for the PyGNOME spill-trajectory feed.
The same system, when it matters most.
In steady state, Pear MS keeps the management system honest — registers, daily progress, competency, audits, all live from the stream. When an incident opens, Pear EM picks up from the SAME stream: the Incident Commander starts the first hour with the org, the roster, the hazards and the context already on screen, and drives it to a single signed IAP packet built only from signed forms.
The app, in a curated fixture.
Two illustrative, non-live fixtures rendered from sample data — the incident common operating picture (air-gapped: self-hosted basemap, "external calls: 0") and the management-system evidence dashboard — so you can see the surfaces before a live demo.