Building the operating system for physical environments
Miradoris started from a simple observation: the physical world is getting smarter, but the tools to manage it are still fragmented.
Balint Horvath
Founder
I have been obsessed with technology and the future for as long as I can remember. I started coding at nine years old. I also played every game and used every piece of software I could get my hands on: strategy games, simulation tools, creative applications. Growing up immersed in well-designed interactive systems shaped how I think about building products today. Since then I have done a bit of everything: online marketing, CTO and CPO roles, sold software, sold baby products, ran IT services. I have always been building things and figuring out how to bring them to market.
The more I studied physical operations, the clearer one pattern became: companies deploy robots, drones, sensors, and field teams from different vendors, and then struggle to make them work together. The hardware is getting better every year. Humanoids are becoming real. Autonomous drones are already flying. IoT sensors are everywhere. But the software layer that ties it all together barely exists.
Right now, Miradoris is a passion project that I am building alongside other work. I am doing market research, talking to people across energy, logistics, and industrial operations, and refining the platform design based on real conversations. The goal is clear: a single platform where every asset, every task, and every rule lives in one coherent data model. Where the data flows in from any vendor, gets mapped automatically, and becomes part of a shared operational picture.
I believe orchestration and multi-vendor interoperability are the future of physical operations. But you cannot orchestrate what you cannot model. Without a solid data platform and clear operational rules, there are no serious operations. I also believe that enterprise software for physical operations deserves the same level of spatial intuitiveness, responsiveness, and comfort that the best interactive software has always delivered. That is why Miradoris starts with the ontology, not the UI. I want to make something impactful, and I am looking for the right investors and team to make it happen.
The thesis
The next decade will see an explosion of autonomous systems in physical environments. Warehouses, farms, energy plants, construction sites, logistics hubs. Every one of them will run dozens of robots, drones, and smart devices from multiple manufacturers.
Right now, each vendor ships their own control software. That works when you have one or two systems. It falls apart when you have twenty. You end up with twenty dashboards, twenty data formats, twenty ways to define a "zone" or a "task." Nobody has a complete picture.
Miradoris is the layer that sits above all of it. A vendor-neutral platform that ingests data from any source, maps it into a unified semantic model, and lets operators manage everything from a single interface. Think of it as the operating system for physical operations.
Where we are
Miradoris is in its earliest stage. A working prototype of the real-time operational interface exists, and I am actively doing market research and talking to people across energy, logistics, and industrial operations to shape the product direction. The platform architecture is being designed based on these real conversations.
I am looking for investors who share the conviction that the vendor-neutral intelligence layer for physical operations is a massive opportunity, and who want to back it before the category forms.
Get in touch
If you are interested in what we are building, whether as an operator, a partner, or an investor, we would love to hear from you.