Ferrum Audio arrives at CanJam NYC 2026 with a new iteration of one of its most talked about digital components: the WANDLA GoldenSound Edition Gen 2 DAC/Preamp. Building on the original WANDLA platform and the first GoldenSound Edition, the new model refines the design with updated processing features while retaining the core architecture that helped put Ferrum on the map with serious headphone and personal audio enthusiasts.
Can the Polish manufacturer stand out in a very crowded high end DAC category dominated by Chord Electronics, RME, TEAC, and Schiit Audio? Recent performance suggests the answer may very well be yes.
Since emerging as an independent brand in 2022, Ferrum Audio has quickly become one of the most recognizable names in high end personal audio to come out of Poland. The company made a particularly strong impression at CanJam NYC 2022, where its early products drew attention for combining advanced digital engineering with a modular ecosystem designed to work seamlessly with its power supply and headphone amplification lineup. The WANDLA platform continues that trajectory.
At its core, all WANDLA models share the same fundamental architecture:
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SERCE Module: Ferrum’s proprietary DSP engine designed for high performance digital signal processing and system control.
DAC Chipset: ESS Sabre ES9038PRO, one of the most widely respected DAC chips used in high end digital playback.
Hi-Res Audio Support: Native decoding of DSD512 and PCM up to 32-bit/768kHz.
Connectivity: A wide range of digital and analog connections including HDMI ARC, I2S, USB, coaxial and optical inputs, alongside both balanced XLR and unbalanced RCA outputs.
However, the Gen 2 takes things a step further with significant upgrades to three key capabilities within Ferrum’s Sweet Spot Tuning platform: Impact+, Tube Mode, and Spatial Enhancement.
Sweet Spot Tuning
Sweet Spot Tuning is designed to give listeners greater control over the sound while preserving the precision, transparency, and musicality that define the WANDLA platform. The goal is straightforward: help listeners find their personal sweet spot.
Whether adding weight and authority in the low frequencies, introducing the warmth associated with classic valve designs, or expanding the sense of space within a recording, the WANDLA GoldenSound Edition Gen 2 offers a wider range of customization while maintaining the performance expected from a high-end digital to analog converter.
Impact+
Impact+ is Ferrum’s advanced low frequency enhancement system. In the original GoldenSound Edition, Impact+ used a carefully tuned bass shelf combined with an additional peak to deliver a more realistic and powerful low end presentation.
With the GoldenSound Edition Gen 2, the system has been expanded to include seven selectable sound profiles, allowing listeners to tailor bass response and overall tonal balance to their preferences or specific headphones and systems. The available profiles include:
Reference
Ref+ Smooth
Kick+
DD Comp
DD Comp+
Sub Bass
Each of the new profiles is designed to deliver a distinct combination of bass shaping and dynamic response, allowing the sound to be tailored to different headphones and speaker systems.
Rather than relying on a single fixed enhancement, listeners can select the profile that best suits their system and then adjust the overall Impact+ level from 10% to 130%. This makes it possible to fine tune the balance between subtle reinforcement and more pronounced low end impact.
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All processing is handled internally with 64-bit precision, ensuring that these adjustments remain smooth, controlled, and faithful to the original recording. With Impact+ and Ferrum’s Sweet Spot Tuning, low frequency performance becomes something listeners can shape with far greater precision.
Tube Mode
In the previous GoldenSound Edition, Tube Mode introduced the musical sweetness associated with second harmonic distortion, subtly enriching the sound in a way reminiscent of classic valve (tube) amplification.
Building on that concept, Tube Mode in the GoldenSound Edition Gen 2 has been expanded to allow users to match the WANDLA’s sonic character to the tonal signatures of specific tube types. Rather than simply adding a harmonic component, the updated Tube Mode now models the sound characteristics of five classic valve designs: EL34, KT88, 300B, 2A3, and 7062.
Listeners can also adjust the strength of each Tube Mode profile with a variable range from 10% to 200%, making it possible to apply anything from a subtle hint of warmth to a more pronounced tube-like character.
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With Tube Mode and Ferrum’s Sweet Spot Tuning, the WANDLA GoldenSound Edition Gen 2 provides a flexible way to experience classic valve tonality within a modern digital platform, giving listeners the kind of tonal shaping options often used in recording studios when shaping the final sound of a performance.
Spatial Enhancement
The next upgraded feature is Spatial Enhancement, Ferrum’s technology designed to expand the soundstage and improve the three dimensional presentation of music.
Originally, Ferrum’s implementation of Spatial Enhancement offered two dedicated modes, one optimized for loudspeakers and another for headphones. With the GoldenSound Edition Gen 2, Ferrum introduces a new spatial audio refinement called Transient Compensation, or T Comp, which fine tunes the spatial processing algorithm to better manage high frequency transients.
The result is a more convincing sense of depth and instrument placement, creating a clearer three dimensional soundstage without the imaging shifts often associated with traditional crossfeed systems.
Users can independently toggle the spatial processing, select the appropriate output mode for headphones or loudspeakers, and engage T Comp to further refine the spatial presentation.
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The Complete WANDLA Experience
Alongside these new capabilities, the WANDLA GoldenSound Edition Gen 2 retains the features that helped establish the original platform’s reputation. These include the SERCE DSP module, WANDLA’s fully balanced architecture, proprietary amplification stage, optimized digital inputs, carefully tuned digital to analog conversion, and Dynamic Digital Filtering.
Ease of operation remains central to the design thanks to the intuitive touchscreen interface, while Ferrum Streaming Control Technology ensures seamless integration into modern digital audio systems.
When paired with Ferrum’s HYPSOS power supply, WANDLA also benefits from 4TSD voltage sensing capabilities, further optimising performance.
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WANDLA Specifications Comparison
WANDLA GoldenSound Edition Gen 2 (2026)
WANDLA GoldenSound Edition (2024)
WANDLA DAC/Preamp (2023)
Product Type
DAC/PREAMP
DAC/PREAMP
DAC/PREAMP
Price
$3,295
$3,295
$2,795
DAC Chip
ESS Sabre ES9038PRO
ESS Sabre ES9038PRO
ESS Sabre ES9038PRO
DAC resolution
768 kHz / 32-bit, DSD512
768 kHz / 32-bit, DSD 512
32-bit/768k, DSD256
Digital inputs
USB Type-C (up to PCM 768 kHz / 32-bit, DSD512, DoP256)
4.65V RMS unbalanced at 0 dBFS, 1kHz Sine Wave – 9.3V RMS Balanced.
Frequency Response
10 Hz – 200 kHz +/- 0.1 dB (analog inputs)
10 Hz – 200 kHz +/- 0.1 dB (analog inputs)
10Hz to 200kHz +/- 0.1dB (analog inputs)
DAC THD
-121 dB (0.00009 %)
-121 dB (0.00009 %)
-121 dB (0,00009%)
DAC THD+N
-118 dB unweighted
-115 dB unweighted
-115 dB unweighted
Analog Input THD
-123 dB @ 2 VRMS
-123 dB @ 2 VRMS
-123 dB @ 2 VRMS output level
Dynamic Range (A-weighted)
Analog 127 dB Digital 119 dB
Analog 127 dB Digital 119 dB
Analog 127 dB Digital 122 dB
Crosstalk
-120 dB at 1 kHz, better than -100 dB for 20 Hz – 20 kHz
-120 dB at 1 kHz, better than -100 dB for 20 Hz – 20 kHz
-120dB for 1kHz better than -100dB for 20Hz to 20kHz
Output Impedance
22 Ω unbalanced 44 Ω balanced
22 Ω unbalanced 44 Ω balanced
22 Ω unbalanced 44 Ω balanced
Power Consumption
10 W idle, 15 W max
10 W idle, 15 W max
0 watts idle/15 watts max
Power inputs (22-30 VDC)
5.5/2.5 mm DC connector, centre positiveProprietary Ferrum Power Link (FPL) 4-pin DC connector
5.5/2.5 mm DC connector, center positive proprietary Ferrum Power Link (FPL) 4-pin DC connector
22-30 VDC proprietary FPL 4-pin DC connector (FPL) 5.5/2.5 mm DC connector centre positive
Power Adapter
100-240 VAC to 24 VDC
100-240 VAC to 24 VDC
100-240 VAC to 24 VDC
Remote control
Included
Included
Dimensions
21.7 x 20.6 x 5 cm
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8.6″ x 8.1″ x 2.0″
21.7 x 20.6 x 5 cm
8.6″ x 8.1″ x 2.0″
21.7 x 20.6 x 5 cm
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8.6″ x 8.1″ x 2.0″
Weight
1.8 kg / 3.97 lb
1.8 kg / 3.97 lb
1.8 kg / 3.97 lb
The Bottom Line
Ferrum Audio continues to make serious waves in the DAC and preamp category with the WANDLA series, and the GoldenSound Edition Gen 2 pushes that momentum even further. By expanding its Sweet Spot Tuning platform with deeper control over bass response, spatial presentation, and tube inspired harmonic shaping, Ferrum is giving listeners tools that are rarely seen in a modern digital component.
For headphone listeners and two channel enthusiasts building a high performance digital front end, the WANDLA Gen 2 offers a flexible control center that can feed external amplification, powered speakers, or a dedicated headphone chain. To get the most out of it with headphones, however, Ferrum clearly intends it to be paired with the Ferrum OOR Headphone Amplifier, which completes the company’s reference signal path.
It is not inexpensive, but for listeners looking for a highly configurable DAC and preamp platform designed to integrate into serious personal audio systems, the WANDLA GoldenSound Edition Gen 2 looks like a compelling option.
Price & Availability
The WANDLA GoldenSound Edition Gen 2 is priced at $3,295 (£3295 / €3295) through Ferrum and Authorized Dealers.
Amazon has secured a temporary win in its fight with Perplexity over the use of AI shopping bots. Bloomberg reported that a San Francisco federal court has determined that Perplexity must stop using its Comet web browser’s AI agent to make purchases for users on Amazon’s marketplace. The AI company will have a week to appeal the decision, otherwise it has been ordered to stop accessing any password-protected areas of Amazon’s systems and destroy its copies of Amazon’s data while the two companies continue to argue their cases.
“Amazon has provided strong evidence that Perplexity, through its Comet browser, accesses with the Amazon user’s permission but without authorization by Amazon, the user’s password-protected account,” District Judge Maxine Chesney wrote in placing the temporary block.
“The preliminary injunction will prevent Perplexity’s unauthorized access to the Amazon store and is an important step in maintaining a trusted shopping experience for Amazon customers,” an Amazon spokesperson told Bloomberg.
Amazon sent a cease-and-desist letter to Perplexity over the AI company’s shopping bots in November. According to Amazon, use of the Comet agent to make purchases is a violation of its terms of service. “Perplexity will continue to fight for the right of internet users to choose whatever AI they want,” a representative from Perplexity said of this week’s decision.
Dash cams have become one of the most sensible additions you can make to a car, and Botslab has spent the past few years building a range that punches well above its weight on resolution, sensors and software.
Spring Deal Days has brought three of the brand’s strongest models down to their lowest prices yet, covering everything from a compact dual-camera setup to a full four-channel system that watches every angle simultaneously.
BOTSLAB G300H Plus 4K Dual Dash Cam
The G300H Plus is the entry point here, but the STARVIS 2 sensor it runs on is anything but entry-level, delivering double the low-light sensitivity and colour accuracy of the standard STARVIS chip found in most cameras at this price. That means you’ll get better footage from wet nights and unlit roads from most cameras around the £80 mark.
Built-in GPS logs your speed, route, and location into every clip, the 5GHz Wi-Fi transfers footage to the Botslab app in seconds. There’s also voice commands, which let you snap a photo or start recording without lifting your hands from the wheel.
This model steps things up by pairing a 4K front camera with a dedicated 2K rear unit, so you get sharp coverage of what is happening both in front and behind the car, with a six-layer F1.5 aperture lens that pulls in enough light to capture license plates clearly at 15 metres.
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It’s also the only camera in this roundup with a full ADAS suite, adding lane departure warnings, forward collision alerts, close-following reminders, and a two-hour fatigue prompt that nudges you to pull over and rest.
The super capacitor design also means it handles extreme temperatures in both the winter and summer.
The G980H is the most comprehensive of the three dash cams, running four 3k cameras simultaneously to cover 560 degrees.
Its Sentry parking mode goes further than most – triggering the moment someone edges close to the car rather than waiting for an impact. It also pre-records and stores eight seconds of footage before a G-sensor event fires, giving you the full picture of any incident rather than just the aftermath.
And with wa 128GB card included, you can get the camera up and running without any additional costs.
The report shows that women in Ireland, raising funds, have outshined their European peers.
TechIreland, the all-island portal that showcases start-ups and the Irish innovation landscape, has released the Female Founder Funding Review 2026, which tracks investment into women-founded startups throughout 2025.
The report shows that last year, 82 Irish start-ups being led by women raised a total of €131m, which was recorded as the highest number of women-led start-ups funded in any given year. For comparison in 2025 there were 36 organisations that raised between €0.1m and €0.3m but only eight in 2024. 11 companies raised €18.7m.
Despite this positive figure however, the average deal size was shown to have significantly declined. In 2024, the average raise was €3.9m, dropping to €2.3m in 2025, with the report suggesting that this is as a result of an increase in the volume of deals being made.
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The median figure also dropped to just €100k last year, compared to €1.5m in 2024, indicating that the divide between the smaller group of large rounds and the large number of very small rounds is widening. The report does say however, that even in this landscape Irish female founders are outshining their European peers in the raising of early-stage funding.
“While the Dealroom startup ecosystems portal shows a decline in the number of early-stage rounds for women founded start-ups, the trend in Ireland represents a nearly two-fold increase in the number of rounds raised by women founded start-ups last year. Thanks to the heavy lifting by Enterprise Ireland through their focused support for women entrepreneurs.”
TechIreland’s research suggested that angel networks, for example HBAN and AwakenAngels, as well as early-stage accelerator programmes such as Fierce and NextWave, alongside flagship supports such as Enterprise Ireland’s PSSF and HPSU, play a critical role in building a strong platform for women founders.
The report also highlights a key sectoral influence. Funding into the life sciences and healthcare sectors made up almost 70pc of the total funds raised. This was mirrored in wider Europe where health remains a top sector among female founders.
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The enterprise software sector also performed well, growing from €10.7m raised by 10 start-ups in 2024, to €30.7m raised by 22 companies in 2025. Other sectors experiencing growth included the agri/food space, consumer and e-commerce, while cleantech and fintech continue to decline.
Funding was also disproportionate regionally. Similar to previous years, companies in Dublin dominated the overall figures. More than 90pc of all funding into start-ups established by women took place at Dublin locations. The report attributed this to the fact that ProVerum, which accounted for nearly half of all funding raised, is a company based in Dublin.
Commenting on the findings of the report, the chair of TechIreland, Brian Caulfield said, “2025 was an interesting year for female founders from a fundraising perspective. On the face of it, the numbers held up pretty well.
“While it’s encouraging to see so many female founded companies raising capital, it’s a concern that the market has bifurcated, a very small number of companies raising large rounds, and a very large number of companies raising very small rounds, largely led by Enterprise Ireland. The mid-market of seed and Series A raises is being hollowed out.”
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Sarah Walker, who oversees startups and entrepreneurship at Enterprise Ireland said, “The headline TechIreland figure, 82 companies raising in 2025, is almost double last year and the highest level of activity since 2017 which is cause for celebration.
“While the increased number of women led and co-founded companies raising is encouraging, TechIreland reports total funding levels of €131m in 2025, down from €145m in 2024, reflecting a challenging funding environment.”
Lorraine Curham, the founder of Fierce added, “For Ireland, the next challenge is what comes after that first cheque. In more mature ecosystems, founders are supported not just by programmes, but by strong networks, investor relationships and ecosystem layers that help companies move from early traction into follow-on capital and scale. Ireland has the pipeline. What it needs next is the infrastructure layer to scale it.”
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E-readers are an awesome creation allowing you to display digital information in a way that requires little battery life. While there’s plenty of very impressive models to chose from on the commercial market, it’s also possible to build one yourself — which is exactly what [kaos-69] did in his Mimisbrunnur project, creating a truly unique e-reader from scratch.
While looking through old junk at home, [kaos-69] came across a case that held a calculator and pen at one point in the distant past. The pen was gone and the calculator no longer functioned but the case held promise. He removed the calculator and got some parts on order. For the e-paper display he went with a 5.83-inch unit that just fit inside the spring-loaded case. The Mimisbrunnur is powered by a 2000 mAh LiPo battery, with a micro SD card reader for storing what will be displayed. The brains come from an RP2040 microcontroller on an Adafruit Feather breakout board, which worked out great as it already takes care of battery management and the 24-pin interface for the e-paper display.
There are also eight buttons that live below the display for user interface, and even some LEDs to aid in reading in the dark. The depth of the case allowed all this to be connected with the use of a perfboard and some risers to set the screen forward, allowing the battery to live behind it. Using the Mimisbrunnur is pretty straightforward with the eight buttons sitting below icons on the screen giving you clear guidance on how to turn the page, add a bookmark, or browse the SD card for another file to open.
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We’ve seen some impressive DIY e-readers over the years, such as the dual-screen Diptyx and the Open Book. But this project is an excellent reminder that a device doesn’t have to be complex to get the job done.
A new Android malware named BeatBanker can hijack devices and tricks users into installing it by posing as a Starlink app on websites masquerading as the official Google Play Store.
The malware combines banking trojan functions with Monero mining, and can steal credentials, as well as tamper with cryptocurrency transactions.
Kaspersky researchers discovered BeatBanker in campaigns targeting users in Brazil. They also found that the most recent version of the malware deploys the commodity Android remote access trojan called BTMOB RAT, instead of the banking module.
BTMOB RAT provides operators with full device control, keylogging, screen recording, camera access, GPS tracking, and credential-capture capabilities.
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Persistence via MP3
BeatBanker is distributed as an APK file that uses native libraries to decrypt and load hidden DEX code directly into memory, for evasion.
Before launching, it performs environment checks to ensure it’s not being analyzed. If passed, it displays a fake Play Store update screen to trick the victims into granting it permissions to install additional payloads.
The fake update message Source: Kaspersky
To avoid triggering any alarms, BeatBanker delays malicious operations for a period after its installation.
According to Kaspersky, the malware has an unusual method to maintain persistence, which consists of continuously playing a nearly inaudible 5-second recording of Chinese speech from an MP3 file named output8.mp3.
“The KeepAliveServiceMediaPlayback component ensures continuous operation by initiating uninterrupted playback via MediaPlayer,” Kaspersky explains in a report today.
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“It keeps the service active in the foreground using a notification and loads a small, continuous audio file. This constant activity prevents the system from suspending or terminating the process due to inactivity.”
Stealthy cryptocurrency mining
BeatBanker uses a modified XMRig miner version 6.17.0, compiled for ARM devices, to mine Monero on Android devices. XMRig connects to attacker-controlled mining pools using encrypted TLS connections, and falls back to a proxy if the primary address fails.
Miner deployment process Source: Kaspersky
The miner can be dynamically started or stopped based on device conditions, which the operators closely monitor to ensure optimal operation and maintain stealth.
Using Firebase Cloud Messaging (FCM), the malware continuously sends the command-and-control (C2) server information about the device’s battery level and temperature, charging status, usage activity, and whether it has overheated.
By stopping mining when the device is in use and by limiting its physical impact, the malware can remain hidden for a longer period, mining for cryptocurrency when conditions allow it.
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While Kaspersky observed all BeatBanker infections in Brazil, the malware could expand to other countries if proven effective, so vigilance and good security practices are recommended.
Android users shouldn’t side-load APKs from outside the official Google Play store unless they trust the publisher/distributor, should review granted permissions for risky ones that aren’t relevant to the app’s functionality, and perform regular Play Protect scans.
Malware is getting smarter. The Red Report 2026 reveals how new threats use math to detect sandboxes and hide in plain sight.
Download our analysis of 1.1 million malicious samples to uncover the top 10 techniques and see if your security stack is blinded.
Workers who excessively use AI agents and tools at work are at increased risk of mental fatigue, according to a recent Harvard Business Review study. In certain industries, more than 25% of hired professionals report increased mental strain due to their role in AI oversight — though these professionals also generally experienced less burnout than peers who aren’t using AI.
This phenomenon — which the researchers refer to as “AI brain fry” — is described as a “‘buzzing’ feeling or a mental fog” that caused study participants to develop headaches and difficulty focusing and making decisions. Individuals pointed to being overwhelmed by large amounts of information and to frequent task switching as the reasons for these feelings.
Studied individuals experienced more brain fry when they utilized AI agents to manage a workload beyond their own cognitive capacity. When participants used AI to replace mundane, repetitive tasks, managing the growing number of tools led to increased mental fatigue.
Crucially, the study found that fewer individuals who used these AI agents reported workplace burnout.
The researchers predict that this is because burnout testing assesses emotional and physical distress. In contrast, they report, acute mental fatigue “is caused by marshalling attention, working memory and executive control beyond the limited capacity of these systems.”
These are the processes that are taxed when study participants use multiple AI tools in their workflow, according to the researchers.
The Harvard study identifies several business costs incurred by workers suffering from AI brain fry. The foremost consequence is that these individuals may end up making lower-quality decisions. “Workers in [the] study who endorsed AI brain fry experience 33% more decision fatigue than those who did not,” the study reports. Workers who report AI brain fry were also more likely to self-report making both minor and major errors at their jobs.
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Another recent Harvard Business Review study similarly found that employees who use AI tools “worked at a faster pace, took on a broader scope of tasks and extended work into more hours of the day,” but warned that “workload creep can in turn lead to cognitive fatigue, burnout and weakened decision-making.”
Chinese smartphone-makers OnePlus and Oppo plan to raise prices on some existing models starting next week, according to a 9to5Google report citing GizmoChina and a notice posted on Oppo’s China online store.
In its notice, Oppo said it would adjust pricing after evaluating rising costs for several key components used in its mobile phones. The changes are expected to take effect around March 16 and will affect some of the company’s more affordable smartphones, as well as some OnePlus models.
Flagship devices — like those in the Find and Reno series — are not expected to be affected for now. The reported adjustments currently appear to be limited to China.
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The move highlights growing pressure across the smartphone supply chain as component costs climb. Analysts say prices for memory and storage chips used in phones have been rising in recent months as demand surges across the tech industry.
As manufacturers shift production toward higher-margin memory used in AI servers, supply for consumer electronics such as smartphones and laptops can tighten.
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If component costs continue to rise, manufacturers may face difficult choices later this year, including raising retail prices or adjusting device specifications to offset higher manufacturing costs.
OnePlus and Oppo didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The first step to fighting a war in space is knowing what’s happening tens of thousands of miles above the planet. Toward that end, defense tech darling Anduril is buying boutique data firm ExoAnalytic Solutions.
ExoAnalytic operates a network of 400 telescopes around the world, which it uses to track spacecraft in high orbits above the planet. The company’s engineers develop software that converts those observations into situational awareness tools for U.S. national security agencies watching adversary spacecraft and coordinating American assets on orbit.
“This is a company we’ve been working with closely for the last several years on a number of programs, and they are experts in space domain awareness and missile defense,” Anduril VP of engineering Gokul Subramanian told reporters. “We believe the [Department of Defense] deserves the best catalog of everything going on in space.”
The privately-held companies did not disclose the terms of the deal. Anduril is in the process of raising a $4 billion round from investors Thrive Capital and Andreessen Horowitz, Reuters reported last week.
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ExoAnalytics will be directly integrated into Anduril, not run as a separate subsidiary, though Subramanian said it would continue to serve existing and future outside customers. Currently, Anduril has 120 employees focused on space defense, a number that will more than double with the addition of 130 ExoAnalytics employees.
The company’s technology could help Anduril win government contracts supporting Golden Dome, the missile defense system that the US Congress has appropriated billions of dollars to build. That system is expected to include thousands of satellites to track and target enemy missiles, and maintaining real-time awareness and coordination among them will be a heavy lift.
Anduril is planning to launch three spacecraft this year as internally-funded R&D projects that will draw on capabilities gained in the acquisition. Subramanian said ExoAnalytic’s experience processing space data would be used in an infrared tracking satellite it plans to launch this year in partnership with Apex Space. The space tracking data will be used to execute two missions in high orbit expected to launch this year in partnerships with Impulse Space and Argo Space, respectively.
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There’s another potential angle to the acquisition — the machine vision algorithms ExoAnalytic has developed to spot satellites in orbit are also useful for interceptors trying to track and engage with incoming threats. Anduril received a contract from the Pentagon in late 2025 to begin developing a space-based missile interceptor.
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ExoAnalytic was founded in 2008 to adapt missile defense sensor technology to track spacecraft in orbit after U.S. military officials called for new and better ways to understand what was happening in space, CEO Doug Hendrix said in a 2024 interview. The company’s early growth was funded by grants and contracts from the federal government, including $26 million in SBIR grants since 2010.
U.S. Space Force officials have expressed deep concern about Chinese and Russian spacecraft that fly closely alongside American and European satellites, where they could potentially intercept communications or damage the satellite with electronic or other weapons.
“Two years ago, an [U.S. commander in the Pacific told] me that the fleet cannot leave the port without the space layer being secured,” Subramanian said. “We’ve been on a mission for the last several years to figure out how to be a part of that solution.”
A recent analysis by TrendForce casts a dark shadow over the future of the most popular machines in the portable PC market. According to the consulting firm, “mainstream” notebooks may soon cost as much as 40% more. Growing challenges in CPU manufacturing are adding yet another layer of uncertainty to… Read Entire Article Source link
Van Allen Probe A, a 1,300-pound (600 kg) NASA satellite launched in 2012 to study Earth’s radiation belts, is expected to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere this week. While most of it is expected to burn up during descent, “some components may survive,” reports the BBC. “The space agency said there is a one in 4,200 chance of being harmed by a piece of the probe, which it characterized as ‘low’ risk.” From the report: The spacecraft is projected to re-enter around 19:45 EST (00:45 GMT) on Tuesday the U.S. Space Force predicted, according to Nasa, though there is a 24-hour margin of “uncertainty” in the timing. […] The spacecraft and its twin, Van Allen Probe B, were on a mission to gather unprecedented data on Earth’s two permanent radiation belts. It was not immediately clear where in Earth’s atmosphere the satellite is projected to re-enter. NASA and the U.S. Space Force has said it will monitor the re-entry and update any predictions. […] Van Allen Probe B is not expected to re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere before 2030.