Clint Winter

The pursuit of innovation

I'm less interested in technology for its own sake than in whether it actually solves the problem in front of a real person.

I'm a founder and inventor, and I don't stay in one lane. The fields I've worked in so far are only the start — wherever I run into an important problem with no good tool built for it, I tend to go build it.

Some of that work is software: AI platforms and apps that put real capability in people's pockets. Some of it is hardware I can patent and put in people's hands. What ties it together is a bias toward the practical — solutions people can use today, not roadmaps for someday. There are more companies on the way and more patents to file; this is a body of work in progress, not a finished list. Innovation, to me, is just problem-solving that refuses to accept "that's how it's always been done."

Based in Atlanta, Georgia  ·  edit this bio anytime

01

Start from a real problem

Usually one I've run into myself. If it isn't a genuine pain, it isn't worth building.

02

Build the tool that should exist

The obvious thing is often missing. I'd rather make it than wait for someone else to.

03

Put AI where it reaches further

Used to extend what a person can do — never bolted on for its own sake.

04

Keep it practical

Ship something usable now. A working answer beats an elegant theory every time.

See what this looks like in practice →