Kuvaka started in Bhopal. This week, we're back in Madhya Pradesh — now operating out of Indore — with a booth at the Madhya Pradesh Tech Growth Conclave 3.0, showing two products we've spent the last several months building in the open.
What's actually going on the table
We had to make a call on what to bring, and we didn't bring everything. Decrackle is on full display — it's the most thoroughly benchmarked thing we've built, and a state-level tech pavilion is exactly the audience that cares about hitting a 2.04% word error rate, +10.6dB SI-SDR gain, and 28–32x real-time speed, fully self-hosted. From the HealthTech suite, we're showing Medical History Taker and Clinic Pro.
One product we deliberately left off the table: Senior Care Monitor. It's real, it's on the roadmap, but it isn't at a stage where we'd stand behind a live demo of it in front of a public-sector audience. Open-source-first doesn't just mean releasing code for free — it also means not showing something before it's ready, even at an event that rewards a full product wall.
Clinic Pro isn't a solo-doctor tool — we had to say that plainly
Somewhere in drafting the copy for this event, we caught ourselves undersizing Clinic Pro. It's easy to describe it as "an operations platform for independent physicians," because that's where the first version shipped. But that framing undersells what it's actually meant to do: help digitise Indian healthcare more broadly — clinics, hospitals, and the doctors and patients inside them — with AI handling the unglamorous parts of the job (record keeping, diagnosis support, prescriptions) so the doctor keeps the final call. We keep it free and open-source specifically so access isn't gated by a hospital's IT budget.
We're using our own product to run the booth
This is the part we're most excited about. Kuvaka's Note Taker app — built directly on Decrackle's audio AI stack — is going to record and transcribe conversations at the booth, live, in real time.
It's not a staged demo video; it's the actual product, running on whatever the hall throws at it — background noise, overlapping conversations, all of it. That's the exact audio environment Decrackle is built to handle, so this isn't a stretch for the product. It's the point.
Why show up to a government pavilion with open-source code
The Madhya Pradesh Pavilion isn't a typical SaaS trade show — it's public-sector-adjacent, and the questions we get are different from a typical enterprise buyer's. People want to know what happens to their data, who owns the code once the engagement ends, and whether they're locked into a vendor five years from now.
Our answer has been the same since we started the sprint model: it's free, it's open-source, you can read it before you pay for anything, and every sprint ends with the client owning what we built.