A decade of building
at the intersection of
human and machine.
Founded in 2014, Unlimited Tomorrow designs and manufactures advanced wearable technology — from bionic prosthetics to haptic interfaces — that extends what the human body can sense, do, and connect to.
To pioneer the hardware layer between human and machine — designing wearable systems that extend what the body can sense, do, and connect to.
Advanced technology should not be gated by price. Every product we build is engineered to deliver at a fraction of the cost of incumbent alternatives — without compromising performance.
We design, engineer, manufacture, and support every product under one roof. Owning the full stack lets us iterate faster, control quality, and keep costs down.
Technology is only as good as its fit to the person using it. Our development process starts and ends with the human body — its geometry, its biomechanics, its needs.
Easton LaChappelle
At 14, Easton LaChappelle built his first robotic hand in his bedroom in rural Colorado — using LEGOs, fishing wire, and electrical tubing. A year later, he taught himself 3D printing and built a brain-controlled prosthetic arm that won second place in Engineering at the International Science and Engineering Fair.
That project led to a handshake with President Obama at the White House Science Fair, an internship on NASA's Robonaut team at Johnson Space Center, and a TEDx talk that caught the attention of Tony Robbins — who called Easton "the next Elon Musk" and provided seed funding to launch Unlimited Tomorrow in 2014.
But the real catalyst was quieter. At a science fair, Easton met a young girl wearing an $80,000 prosthetic that could barely open and close. She would outgrow it within a year. That encounter — the gap between what was possible and what was accessible — became the company's founding purpose.
Over the next decade, Easton built Unlimited Tomorrow from a one-person operation into a vertically integrated hardware company with a proprietary technology stack spanning 3D scanning, additive manufacturing, embedded sensors, haptic systems, and machine learning. The same platform that began with prosthetics now powers the company's expansion into wearable human-machine interfaces.
Key moments.
International Science Fair
Easton's 3D-printed, wirelessly controlled prosthetic arm wins second place in Engineering — launching a series of events that would define the company's trajectory.
White House & NASA
Presents to President Obama at the White House Science Fair. Interns on NASA's Robonaut team at Johnson Space Center, building humanoid robots for the International Space Station.
Unlimited Tomorrow Founded
After a TEDx talk catches Tony Robbins' attention, Easton receives seed funding and founds Unlimited Tomorrow to build accessible, high-performance prosthetics.
Microsoft R&D Partnership
Selected by Microsoft to work within their R&D facility, advancing remote prosthetic fitting technology and cloud-connected device architecture.
TrueLimb Launch & Inc. Recognition
TrueLimb launches as a fully personalized, 3D-printed bionic prosthetic arm. Named to Inc. Magazine's inaugural Best in Business list.
Fast Company World Changing Ideas
Honored by Fast Company in the North America category for TrueLimb's impact on prosthetic accessibility.
Medical Design Excellence Award
Silver winner in Rehabilitation & Assistive Technology — the medtech industry's premier product design competition.
FedEx × Annie Leibovitz
One of three businesses selected nationally for FedEx's 50th anniversary "Driving Passions" campaign, photographed by Annie Leibovitz.
TactraFlex Development
The company's proprietary sensor, actuator, and manufacturing platform expands beyond prosthetics into haptic wearables with TactraFlex — a force-feedback glove for virtual and mixed reality.
Covered by the world's leading publications.
Let's talk.
Whether you're interested in our products, our technology, or exploring a development partnership — we'd love to hear from you.