IIrvine, California, USA. Gottlieb has launched the first working version of its Engineering AI system, putting verified part-approval in the hands of engineers. The system reads a complete production-approval submission and flags the issues a customer's auditor would catch, before the supplier ever sends it.
What is live today
Users log in with Google or an existing account and start straight away. A side panel groups the system's functions: Agent, Safe, Expertise and Director. Agent is active now. It lets an engineer run and manage interactions, save chats, and organize them into projects.
Two views sit alongside the work. A Contextual Memory holds what the system has established about a submission, and a Reasoning Chain shows how it reached each conclusion, set against a full view of the part-approval process. Both are visible by design, so the engineer can see the basis for every flag rather than taking a verdict on trust.
How it works for an engineer
The clearest case is a final submission. An engineer uploads a part file, for example an ABS sensor, and Gottlieb analyzes it and shows its reasoning as it works. The result comes back quickly: where the package holds together, and where it does not. The engineer then resolves the flagged issues directly in the system, instead of waiting weeks for a rejection to come back from the customer.
Getting better with use
Gottlieb sharpens as it is used. With each submission it works, the system builds a clearer picture of how engineers make decisions and where packages tend to break, and applies that back to the next review.
What comes next: Director
The next function is Director, a multi-agent orchestrator. It coordinates domain-specific engineering agents so a single submission can be checked across every standard that applies to it at once, rather than one at a time.
Gottlieb is live on automotive PPAP/PPA today, with the same verification thread set to extend across the wider built world.
Engineering AI Corporation is an AI-native technology company building Gottlieb, a system that verifies engineering documentation against the standards regulated industries enforce. It runs today on automotive part-approval (PPAP/PPA), with the broader aim of making physical engineering significantly faster. The company is headquartered in Irvine California, USA.