Apollo is a mission-driven platform for building smarter projects.
Next stop? The Moon—launch your ideas, track progress, and reach new heights.
Apollo turns vague project ideas into clear engineering decisions.
It helps you choose the right systems, understand the tradeoffs, and execute with a structured, build-ready plan—so you spend less time guessing and more time building.
Designed specifically for engineering projects—IoT, embedded systems, and real hardware constraints.
Compare subsystems, components, and tradeoffs before you build anything.
Get structured project blueprints: architecture, components, steps, testing, and extensions.
AI that works inside your project context—no generic chat, no hallucinated advice.
Engineering theory explained exactly where it applies in your project—not as lectures.
From idea → decisions → blueprint → build guide. No inspiration dumps, just execution.
Subsystem-based structure lets you swap sensors, MCUs, power, and comms without chaos.
How Apollo Thinks
Apollo doesn't jump straight to code. It forces you to slow down where it matters most—making the right engineering decisions, early.
Decision Matrix
Decision Matrix
"What systems does this project need?"
Apollo breaks your project into subsystems (sensing, control, power, communication) and forces you to make deliberate choices before building anything.
- List realistic options for each subsystem
- See tradeoffs: cost vs complexity vs availability
- Understand why each option works
- Catch incompatible choices early
Blueprint
Blueprint
"Given these choices, what does the project look like?"
Once your decisions are locked in, Apollo generates a coherent system architecture that shows exactly how everything fits together.
- System architecture diagram and component mapping
- Cost estimation and bill of materials
- Skills and time requirements
- Risks, constraints, and failure modes
Build Guide
Build Guide
"How do I actually build this?"
Only after you've locked in the blueprint, Apollo gives you the execution plan—everything you need to actually build and test.
- Wiring, pin mappings, and physical assembly
- Code structure and configuration steps
- Calibration, testing, and validation procedures
- Common failure points and how to debug them
Old Way vs Apollo
No fluff. Just contrast.