Autonomy Studio: the Future of Building Lifecycle Management
PassiveLogic is creating the future in building management with a single platform seamlessly managing every stage of the building lifecycle.
PassiveLogic is creating the future in building management with a single platform seamlessly managing every stage of the building lifecycle.
Missed our September Swift Meetup? You can read more about what was discussed with Scott Marchant in this recap.
Our buildings already have some of the pieces in place to enable this autonomous future. It’s time we reframe buildings as infrastructural robots and recognize their potential for optimal comfort and efficiency.
Building the first platform for generative autonomy requires not only brand new consumer-focused technologies but also the next generation of advanced artificial intelligence (AI).
A recap from our June Swift Meetup about performance metrics & measure blocks in Swift.
PassiveLogic’s truly autonomous control of buildings and more is enabled by the use of physics-based digital twin simulations. To match these simulations to the real world and use them to make optimal control decisions, we need to be able to run these simulations faster than real-time.
Members of the PassiveLogic compiler team at the 2023 LLVM Developers’ Meeting. This blog dives into some of the insights they gleaned while attending.
While the bulk of controlled systems operate within the built world, only cars have received any attention (and funding) from the world of autonomous systems. Yet there are no platforms for autonomy for the built world.
When building an ecosystem of hardware and software products that enable generative autonomy, it’s all hands on deck. Every line of code and every unit test is a necessary piece to achieving the goals in PassiveLogic’s product architecture (the masterplan, if you will.)
At PassiveLogic, a key component of our product evaluation process is asking ourselves, “Have we met the objectives of the original design?” If we develop tools that enable people to solve problems in an elegant and straightforward way, then we’ve done our job. If not, we go back to the drawing board.
The iPhone App Store launched 15 years ago, and transformed the way that we make, use, and obtain software. Read this reflection from Brad Larson, Head of Compiler at PassiveLogic.
For the vast majority of programmers, when our code doesn’t build or doesn’t run correctly it’s almost always our fault. The compiler is pretty much the last thing we blame. However, at PassiveLogic, we push the limits of the Swift programming language by using an experimental language feature and helping in its evolution.