Streamline your property accountability and generate real-time, ground-truth readiness data for the enterprise.
Hello, I’m Kenden Peeks, the Head of Implementation at Adyton. Before joining the team here, I led NATO collaboration efforts at Palantir. Prior to that, I served as a Ground Intelligence Officer in the Marine Corps, where I was responsible for the training, operational employment, and equipment readiness of around 250 Marines in an infantry battalion.
That experience informs a lot of how we’ve built Log-E, our equipment management module within the AOK: the Adyton Ops Kit.
What is Log-E?
Log-E is designed to support multiple use cases depending on the user's role:
For the individual soldier, Log-E digitizes the traditional hand receipt. It allows them to add context, the kind of details they would normally scribble in notebooks or annotate on printed PDFs.
For leaders and their staff, it enables a hierarchical, force-wide view of where equipment is located, who’s using it, and what condition it’s in. This creates flexibility to align equipment with the real-time demands of the mission and evolving force structure.
Tactical Context and Real-World Utility
When I was a Lieutenant, I remember constantly running around trying to figure out what certain gear was, often encountering equipment I had never seen before. With Log-E, that problem goes away. I can attach contextual data like photos showing the item’s condition, notes on its function or deficiencies, and exact location all of which would otherwise live in my notebook and disappear after a staff briefing. For example, let’s say a piece of comms gear is missing cables. With Log-E, I can note that the item is currently non-functional, flag it accordingly, and ensure that everyone in my chain of command can see the issue and act on it.
From Ground Truth to Enterprise Insight
Each item in Log-E pulls in standard details like the national stock number and official descriptions. Still, we know that’s not always enough for users to identify what gear actually is or whether it’s usable. That’s why we allow structured tagging for example, marking an item as missing, broken, or not mission-essential.
That’s powerful because it feeds up into broader organizational needs:
Units can flag unneeded gear, aligning with Army initiatives to reduce excess equipment on property books.
Administrative time is drastically reduced. Instead of manually preparing a packing list for training in California, the app can generate it instantly based on what's tagged for movement on your go list.
Command-Level Oversight
If I’m the Alpha Company Commander, I can quickly get a top-down view of all equipment across my formation. For instance, I can filter to see everything tagged as broken, maybe several radios, and know exactly which platoon they belong to.
If 1st Platoon, led by James, is scheduled for a training event and one of their critical radios is down, it's my responsibility to ensure that the gear is either fixed or replaced. Log-E helps kick off that supply or maintenance workflow seamlessly.
Laying the Groundwork for AI and Readiness Insights
One of the most exciting parts of Log-E is that it builds structured equipment data from the ground up, something that historically hasn’t been captured at the individual soldier level. This structured, contextual data can power large language models and AI tools that help senior leaders and logisticians query real-time readiness across the force.
We're giving the enterprise something it’s never had before: true ground truth, in real time.
This has been a quick overview of how Log-E supports both the individual soldier and the enterprise, digitizing property accountability, reducing administrative burden, and enabling real-time readiness insights for leaders at every level.
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