Built by a dad.
For his own family.
"I don't write code. I have a nonverbal autistic child and a mother recovering from a stroke. I needed something that worked — so I figured out how to build it."
Luke didn't set out to build an AAC company. He set out to help his nonverbal autistic son say "I want juice" and his mom — recently recovering from a stroke and diagnosed with dementia — say "my head hurts." When he saw what commercial devices cost — and how limited the options were — he decided to build something better.
The result is a complete, production-grade AAC system built from the ground up. 377 Kotlin source files. 159+ communication boards. 2,600+ tiles. Not a prototype — a deployed system running on real devices, used by real families and classrooms.
TinkySpeak was built on a simple principle: the ability to communicate shouldn't depend on your family's income. Every device arrives pre-loaded and ready — recycled tablets that would otherwise end up in a landfill, given a second life as a dedicated communication tool. Schools deploy Classroom Kits with rugged cases, QR signage, and sync tools. Recycled hardware. Purpose-built software.