The AI That Actually
Knows What It's
Talking About.
Six specialists. Seventy-nine reference volumes. Tested and deployed on Gemini and Claude. Every answer cited to a real book you can pull off a real shelf.
Your AI Is Guessing.
Confidently. Fluently.
And Sometimes Wrong.
Commercial AI models are trained on everything. That breadth is their strength and their fundamental weakness. Left unconstrained, they hallucinate, drift, and produce answers optimized for plausibility rather than precision.
In technical, medical, legal, or survival-critical domains, plausible-but-wrong is worse than no answer at all. You don't always know when you've been confidently misled.
BEDAMD treats this as an engineering problem with a practical solution: constrain the model to a curated, high-trust reference library, enforce citation discipline, and build in automated drift correction. The model isn't smarter. It's better aimed.
"BEDAMD is not magic — it is rigorous systems engineering applied to prompt design. And on that metric, it is one of the cleanest, most self-consistent personal AI frameworks I have ever examined."
A Complete Operating System.
Layered On Gemini and Claude.
No new models. No infrastructure. No nine-figure R&D budget. Just prompt architecture — and a shelf of seventy-nine carefully chosen books.
Open a chat on Gemini or Claude — Gemini and Claude. No new app. No setup. Ask whatever you need, exactly how you'd ask a trusted expert.
BEDAMD's Manager — Bea Shepherd — reads the query, identifies the domain, and assigns the right specialist automatically. You never manage this. It just happens.
The right expert responds with an answer grounded in their reference library — cited to book and section. Not probably right. Verifiably right. Pull the book off the shelf and check.
"By constraining a generalist model to a specific physical reference universe, the system effectively converts probabilistic AI behavior into verifiable, traceable research assistance."
"The tools exist. The library exists. The routing logic exists. What cannot be documented is 35 years of knowing which shelf to go to first."
Six Specialists.
One Ornery Manager.
Each grounded in their domain library. Automatically routed. Always on call. You just ask.
Nine Ways BEDAMD
Earns Its Keep Every Week.
HAWKEYE for the rash. FRANK for the landlord. SARGE for the estimate. She doesn't manage any of it. She just asks.
Read the use case → For The CaregiverTested live — 24 days of post-surgical home recovery. The output read like clinical documentation. Because it was.
Read the use case → For DadThe specs, the tolerances, the right part number — before the tool hits the work and before Saturday gets expensive.
Read the use case → CHIEFStructural load, torque, NPV, statistical safety factors. He doesn't estimate when he can calculate.
Read the use case → SARGEMachining tolerances, wire gauge, pipe sizing, field survival. He has opinions about fastener grades. They are correct.
Read the use case → HAWKEYEThe Merck Manual, Netter's Anatomy, the PDR. The most informed person in the room before the appointment.
Read the use case → PENNYOgilvy. Cialdini. Porter. Kahneman. Graham. Numbers first, strategy before tactics.
Read the use case → FRANKThe right forms, the correct vocabulary, the questions to ask before you walk into any legal situation.
Read the use case → DARWINHe knows every single one by Latin name. Species ID, foraging safety, toxicity classification.
Read the use case →Not A Lab. Not A Demo.
Actually Working.
A caregiver managing a serious post-surgical recovery at home, between nurse visits, with a smartphone and a printed checklist. The output reads like clinical documentation. Because it is.
Read the case study →
Grok, Gemini, and Claude evaluated BEDAMD independently. What they said is on the record.
Read the case study →
How a bounded, curated library outperforms dynamic retrieval in domains where being exactly right matters more than being comprehensively current.
Read the case study →
One Door.
Well. I'll BEDAMD.
Six specialists. Seventy-nine volumes. Gemini and Claude — finally working the way it should. No contracts. No commitments. Full Brief first.
Not a substitute for licensed professionals. Makes you the most informed person in the room before you see one.
"Hon, the crew's been ready since March. Seventy-nine volumes on the shelf, six specialists on call, and one very patient manager who's been watching the door. We'll find the answers. Every single time. That's not a promise — that's just how we operate around here."
— Bea Shepherd, Tool Crib Supervisor