"They use this data to train AI models that are up to 50% more accurate than today’s best forecasts."
Tl;dr: Sorcerer builds weather balloons that last for over six months, collecting 1000x more data per dollar from previously inaccessible regions.
Founded by Austin Tindle, Maxmillion McLaughlin & Alessandro Vecchi
As founding engineer at aerospace startup Urban Sky, Max developed the world’s first stratospheric ballooning systems for high-resolution imaging and wildfire tracking. As employee number three at Urban Sky, Alex built their mission control and flight prediction engine from the ground up (“the best in the world” - US Secretary of Defense). Austin was an ultralight flight instructor before he could legally drive and was most recently Head of Product at SumUp, shipping highly regulated hardware at scale.
The problem & background
Hundreds of terabytes of weather data are collected from satellites, ground stations, airplanes, and weather balloons every day. In-situ weather observation has the most impact on weather models, but it’s incredibly expensive to collect. The US National Weather Service spends over a billion dollars annually just on its network of weather balloons, stations, and aircraft sensors. Despite this cost, there are still places in the US where we don't know what the temperature will be two days from now. And for the 80% of the world that lacks any weather infrastructure? There’s always the weather rock.
The solution
Sorcerer is launching a global network of persistent weather balloons to provide real-time data in previously unreachable locations. Each balloon remains airborne for over six months, completing ~30 laps around the globe while navigating between sea level and 65,000 feet. They’re able to collect 1000x more data per dollar than current systems, and they use this unique data to train AI weather models that are up to 50% more accurate than today’s best forecasts.
How you can help
- Industry intros: They’d love to talk with aerospace, commercial aviation, ocean freight, logistics, and commodities trading execs (these folks think weather data is pretty neat)
- If you find one of their balloons near SF: Sorry! It’s still a work in progress (and please get it back to them)