Why does a 7-year-old defense startup terrify companies that have dominated warfare for decades? Because Anduril isn’t building better weapons — it’s building the operating system of modern war.In this video, we break down Anduril’s autonomous kill web revolution and explain why legacy defense giants like Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Boeing are facing something far more dangerous than competition: irrelevance.At the center of this shift is Lattice, Anduril’s AI-powered command-and-control platform that fuses sensors, drones, weapons, and data into a real-time 3D battlespace. Unlike traditional systems that rely on slow, human-centric decision loops, Lattice collapses detection, tracking, and engagement into machine-speed timelines — with humans supervising instead of micromanaging.We explore how Anduril:-Integrates new sensors and weapons in hours, not years-Replaces platform-centric warfare with network-centric kill webs-Uses software and autonomy to outscale trillion-dollar defense primes-Builds mass-produced, expendable systems instead of exquisite platforms-Turns factories into hyperscale weapon foundries-Compresses the kill chain beyond human reaction timeFrom Ghost and Ghost Shark to Altius loitering munitions, Collaborative Combat Aircraft, and space-based autonomy, Anduril is expanding across air, land, sea, cyber, and space — all coordinated through the same software architecture.This isn’t about drones.It’s about decision speed.It’s about software velocity beating steel.And it’s about why the defense industry’s old business model is breaking in real time.If future wars are decided before the first shot is fired, Anduril is building the system that decides them.
Why Anduril Terrifies the Defense Industry (And Nobody Can Stop It
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