Most software is built like a building — rigid, static, slowly decaying. We think software should behave more like a forest. Interconnected. Responsive. Alive.
At Loom & Signal, we design systems that grow alongside the people who use them. Not through artificial intelligence alone, but through architecture that listens, adapts, and remembers.
We call this living infrastructure — software that develops richer behavior over time, like soil developing complexity with each season.
An adaptive learning platform that restructures itself based on how users think. It doesn't teach — it grows pathways between ideas, letting knowledge emerge like light through a forest canopy.
A decentralized knowledge graph that grows with every interaction. No hierarchy, no center — just an expanding web of connections that makes the invisible relationships between ideas tangible.
An ambient monitoring system that listens to infrastructure the way fungi listen to forests. It doesn't alert — it senses shifts in health before symptoms surface, whispering warnings through the network.
Before we design anything, we listen. To your users, your data, your instincts. We map the signals that matter and filter the noise. Every living system begins with attention.
We chart the territory — the flows, the friction, the hidden connections. Not a blueprint, but a living map that evolves as we learn. Architecture emerges from understanding, not assumption.
We build in layers, like soil forming. Each iteration adds depth and resilience. We ship early and often, letting real usage shape the system's growth direction.
Launch is not the end — it's germination. We instrument, observe, and adapt. The system develops new capabilities as patterns emerge from use. It gets better by being used.
Currently accepting new connections