I disappeared for a month to build something.
No posts. No updates. Just locked in.
Here’s what happened:
I kept noticing this pattern. Corporate scouts would tell me about some “new” battery breakthrough they just heard about. Exciting stuff.
Then I’d check. The research paper came out 14 months ago. Pilot plant opened 8 months ago. Strategic partnerships signed 4 months ago.
They were 18 months late.
Same thing with VCs. “Did you see this quantum computing startup?” Yeah. I saw the research months ago when it was just a paper nobody was paying attention to.
The people winning aren’t smarter. They just see things earlier.
So I’m building something to fix that.
DeepRadar Terminal.
Right now, version 1 tracks scientific research papers across quantum computing, fusion energy, AI hardware, batteries, and biotech.
These are pre-publication papers from researchers, before peer review, before patents, before startups form around them.
It’s the earliest public signal you can get.
The terminal goes live next week. You can see new breakthroughs and export reports. Interface is rough but it works.
Prediction tracking is coming in a couple months (I’m building that feature next).
What else is coming:
Patent filings. University commercialization offices. Startup tracking. Conference proceedings.
I’m not waiting until it’s “complete” to launch. I’m building this in public.
Here’s the deal:
I’m opening beta access next week. Free for 30 days. No credit card.
You’ll see exactly what I have right now. Real signals.
After 30 days, if it’s valuable: $99/month founding member rate.
If not, walk away.
To get access:
Reply to this email with:
Your name
Your role (corporate scout / VC / researcher / other)
One sentence: what you’d use this for
Access emails go out next week.
Starting next week, I’m making 10 public predictions. Timestamped. On the record. You’ll see what I get right and what I get wrong.
That’s the deal.
If you want early access to something I’m building from scratch, reply.
If you want a complete product, wait 6 months.
— Eden Djanashvili

