One Organism.
Two Bodies.
CrowdSmith Foundation is a Wyoming 501(c)(3) that builds facilities, runs workforce cohorts, and credentials people through SmithFellow — a workforce readiness credential built on behavioral observation and sustained human-AI collaboration. No multiple-choice tests. No self-report questionnaires. A trained facilitator works alongside an AI to document what you do, not what you say about yourself. The credential does not measure what you memorized. It documents whether you crossed.
Anti-A Industries is a Delaware C corporation that holds the intellectual property — forty-four invention concepts, the CrowdSmith.com platform, and the token architecture that connects investors, inventors, and the community that evaluates their ideas.
The foundation builds people. The platform builds ideas. Same forge. Same fire.
Five Stations.
One Continuum.
Station One is hand tools. A saw, a plane, a chisel. Material literacy — the understanding of how wood, metal, and plastic behave under your hands. Every station that follows depends on this.
Station Two is power tools and welding. Speed, repeatability, precision. The bridge from one object to many.
Station Three is the AI Café. Six workstations. Free coffee. A facilitator who doesn’t assign tasks — the facilitator asks one question: “What did you notice?” The participant brings what their hands learned at Stations One and Two. The AI explores it. Career pathways emerge from the conversation, not from a test. This is SmithTalk’s Day One curriculum — the person discovers who they are through the methodology.
Station Four is digital fabrication. CNC, laser cutter, 3D printer — plus a comprehensive survey of the full digital fabrication landscape. The machines on the floor and the machines that exist everywhere else. Only the people whose exploration at Station Three pointed them here arrive. CNC is a path, not a prerequisite.
Station Five is robotics and emerging technology. A robot arm learns to assemble what the human designed and fabricated at earlier stations. The thirty-second video of a robot assembling your invention is the most powerful document in a patent application.
The stations are not parallel offerings. They are physically dependent. The hands produce behavioral data. The AI explores it. The machines serve whoever the AI identified. This interdependence is the pedagogy.
SmithFellow
The SmithFellow Core is a 24-to-30-hour workforce readiness credential delivered in-person over eight to ten sessions. A trained facilitator observes each participant across ten behavioral dimensions — inquiry quality, iteration behavior, correction capacity, collaboration pattern, and six more — while an AI tracking framework captures engagement data in real time. $2,000 per seat. WIOA-aligned. No degree required.
Five elective modules — Fabrication, Research, Entrepreneurship, Facilitation, and Systems — extend the credential when the building opens. Each module is $2,000 and applies the Core methodology to a specialized domain. The Facilitation module produces CrowdSmith’s next generation of facilitators. The program creates its own workforce.
The SmithFellow credential does not test whether you know things. It documents whether you spent enough time in the room that the room changed you. A person who earns the SmithFellow has not passed a test. They have been witnessed.
SmithWorks
CrowdSmith’s portfolio holds forty-four invention concepts across multiple sectors — each evaluated through SmithScore, a ten-category proprietary scoring methodology developed through the same human-AI collaboration that built everything else.
SmithWorks is the pipeline that takes a concept from evaluation through development to a filing-ready patent package. SmithScore evaluates — free. SmithForge develops — $99. The Patent Ledger documents — $500. A donor funds the filing. The inventor keeps 100% ownership.
The Builder
CrowdSmith was founded by a man who sold ten thousand membership contracts across a twenty-year fitness career, stocking shelves at midnight because he needed the check. He was on his own at sixteen. He survived a cancer so rare that his gene mutation makes him the only documented case in history. Two knee replacements. Spinal surgery. An eight-foot fall from an attic. He builds on disability income.
He is not a technologist. He is not an academic. He is a builder who figured out the room he needed didn’t exist and decided to build it. Then he looked at the wave coming and decided one room wasn’t enough.