No AI system today is truly autonomous. They respond when prompted, forget when finished, and cannot improve themselves. We are building systems that can.
Kamino builds autonomous systems that operate with continuity, identity, persistent memory, deterministic grounding, and the ability to improve through feedback — where their own outputs become the inputs of the next cycle. Every framework, tool, and application we build exists to serve this single goal.
Our emblem is a lantern and a key — the search for light, and the conviction that the door can be opened. Most believe this problem is decades away. We believe it is an engineering problem — and we are working on it now.
Face reality directly. Say what is true. Break things down to first principles, and do not preserve assumptions, status, or consensus for the sake of comfort.
Creation is the highest human act. Turn thought into form: systems, code, tools, art, institutions. Build as if bringing something into the world is a responsibility.
Do not chase the current cycle. Build with depth, structure, taste, and seriousness so the work can last.
For most of computing history, software has waited to be told what to do. It runs when called, finishes, and forgets. Agents end that pattern. They let software observe, decide, and act on its own — and the moment software can act on its own, it begins to take on a life of its own. An agent today is something like a robot with no body: it can reason and it can act, but it has nowhere to live, no memory of yesterday, and no world to operate in.
We are building that world. As agents gain identity, memory, and the means to act, software stops being a tool you pick up and put down and becomes an environment that is simply always on — systems working with other systems, and working alongside people, around the clock and in the quiet background of everyday life. We believe this is where technology is going: a living digital layer over the physical one, eventually as ordinary and dependable as electricity. Our work is to build the ground it stands on — and to build it well.