Advanced Modeling
Data Analytics +
Project Management

Specializing in modeling for wireless communication, remote sensing, and risk management since 2004.

Located in Massachusetts and Connecticut, Seknion specializes in modeling of sound and radio waves for wireless communication and remote sensing and in analyzing Big Data for financial planning, greenhouse gas (GHG) accounting, and risk management.

Seknion also has extensive experience in scientific and technical project management for academic, government, and industrial R&D.

Contact Us

seknion@gmail.com

Areas of Practice + Recent Projects


Modeling

Seknion develops advanced mathematical models of radio- and sound-wave propagation for understanding wireless communications and remote sensing in complex settings. The company also holds a collection of proprietary algorithms and IP for adding a physical layer of security, independent of encryption, to all forms of wireless communications including mobile phone and WiFi networks and Bluetooth, RFID, and NFC protocols.


Data Analytics

Seknion helps companies analyze massive quantities of data (Big Data) using both deterministic and probabilistic methods to develop predictive models and scenarios for strategic planning and risk management.

Our services include helping companies and organizations do comprehensive greenhouse gas accounting according to Scope 1, 2, and 3 protocols for financial reporting and planning through a partnership with Value(s) Management and Investing.


Technical Project Management

Our team has helped academic institutions, companies, and government labs manage a range of small- to large-scale R&D projects involving advanced scientific computation for geophysical remote sensing, underground reservoir management, and carbon capture and storage.

Recent work includes several collaborative projects involving major oil and oilfield service companies studying large-scale Earth modeling and applications of machine learning in applied Earth science as part of the SEG Advanced Modeling initiative called SEAM.


“Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.”

– William Bruce Cameron (1963). Often attributed to Albert Einstein.