DiveOS is made by people who ran dive shops — for people who run dive shops. The whole company points at one morning, done right.
DiveOS started on a dock at 6am, with a whiteboard, three WhatsApp groups and a tide that doesn't wait. We build the tool we wished we'd had that morning — quiet, exact, and trusted with the day.
Dive shops run on judgement, not dashboards. The owner knows which guide takes the nervous students, which boat is overdue for service, and which booking hasn't paid. That knowledge lived in their head and a stack of paper — and it walked out the door at the end of the season.
Every tool we tried was built for a SaaS demo, not a dock at dawn. Foreign gateways we had to fight. A timezone five hours off. A status that meant something different on every screen. None of them respected that the person opening the app is mid-task, with a boat to load in twenty minutes.
So we built DiveOS the way a dive computer is built — one trusted reading, the same everywhere, every time. It does the counting so the shop can do the diving.
A small team that has loaded the boat, signed the waivers and chased the unpaid balance. We build for the job because we've done it.
Free for a single boat, set up in an afternoon. Built on the dock, for the dock.