Engineering Human Potential.
Acomi Oy is a Finnish mobile app studio building at the intersection of sports science and cognitive wellness.
Core Principles
- 01
Privacy by Design
Data minimization is built into our software foundation.
- 02
Offline-First & Local Processing
On-device data storage and local-first architecture minimize cloud dependency.

SpectoVelo
"The One-Eyed Laboratory"
A mobile wind tunnel for cyclists. On-device computer vision turns a single smartphone video into biomechanical metrics, bike fit feedback, and aerodynamic drag (CdA) estimates.
Avalokya
"Thoughts are like clouds"
A mindfulness app centred around the practice of mindful noting. Observe, categorize, and release thoughts in real-time, with AI-driven insights to understand your cognitive patterns over time.
Strict European Infrastructure
Acomi Oy processes minimal personal data. Data is hosted on EU-based servers in Finland/Germany. We do not sell user data. Encryption-at-rest is standard. Users retain full rights to data portability and deletion as per GDPR Articles 15-22.
Data Processing Agreement
Telemetry is anonymized. SpectoVelo processes video on-device for side-view sessions — raw video stays on your phone. Frontal-view sessions additionally upload a single still frame to our own EU-hosted backend for a higher-accuracy processing step (no third-party AI provider is involved). Avalokya session data is encrypted in transit (TLS) and stored securely on EU servers. AI-powered insights are generated server-side for Pro subscribers.
Terms of Service
Usage of Acomi applications constitutes agreement to our non-misuse policy. SpectoVelo outputs are informational estimates for training and fit guidance — not a substitute for a professional bike fitting, sports medicine, or safety advice. Intellectual property of algorithms remains with Acomi Oy. Disputes governed by the laws of Finland.
App Store & Google Play Compliance
This entity operates as a legal corporation in Finland. DUNS: 368936281. Applicable developer policies and EU data transparency requirements are strictly upheld.