MAIC
Mining

Ask your mine site's records what actually happened.

The problem

Shift reports, assay PDFs, maintenance notes, environmental files, and incident records rarely live in one place. When a question comes up — about a past event, a recovery trend, or a compliance obligation — the answer is usually buried in files that only one or two people know how to find.

What MAIC does

Bring those records into a MAIC project and ask for comparable events, recovery patterns, equipment context, or compliance evidence in plain language. Every answer cites the report, assay file, or note it came from, so the team can check the original record before acting.

Questions teams ask

  • Which past incidents match the conditions in last night's shift report?
  • How did recovery change after the reagent supplier switch?
  • What maintenance history do we have on the secondary crusher?
  • Where is the compliance evidence for the March water-quality inspection?

How answers stay grounded

MAIC never invents data. Every answer is assembled from excerpts retrieved out of what your team actually uploaded, with the supporting documents cited alongside — so people stay in control of the call, with the evidence in front of them. If the uploaded records don't contain the answer, MAIC says so.

Get started

Get early access, explore the other use cases, or read how MAIC protects project data.