Warfare is complicated.
Winning is
orchestrated.

[ Proven where proof is everything ]

Warfare is complicated.
Winning is orchestrated.

NODA is the original platform- and hardware-agnostic autonomy orchestrator — operationally deployed, tactically trained, and architecturally distinct from every other platform in the autonomy stack. NODA doesn't build platforms or their autonomy. It puts them to work.

[ WHAT WE DO ]

What an orchestrator is — and what it is not.

Several defense autonomy companies describe their products as orchestrators. They are not.

They are sophisticated and serious collaborative autonomy products. It says so on their websites. The major difference? Collaborative autonomy defines what platforms can do. Orchestration decides what they will do. Orchestration owns the fight.

When a strategic guided missile destroyer appears, a collaborative stack will execute the plan it's given. But those plans come from a human, working through layers of cognitive load at a speed the destroyer does not have to match.

NODA's orchestrator knows everything about it: hull classification, current heading and speed, fire control radar emissions, close-in weapon system cyclic rate, surface-to-air missile loadout, and active electronic warfare profile. The orchestrator assesses what effects are required to exploit critical vulnerabilities and meet desired end-states. It generates the tasking: target discrimination, engagement sequencing, time-on-target coordination, and platform-to-target pairing across the full joint force, irrespective of vendor.

Interoperability is resilience doctrine, not a procurement preference.

NODA was built to meet that requirement from the ground up — founded inside the Pentagon, not a boardroom.

  • Proprietary orchestration creates seams the adversary will exploit through electronic warfare, supply chain interference, or a product roadmap that doesn't survive contact with operational reality.

  • Proprietary systems put software and hardware aboard platforms, changing performance characteristics.

  • Proprietary systems are good for business at the expense of the warfighter. Business development has no place between warfighters and the platforms they choose for their missions.

The distinction is critical. One is disruptive. One is decisive. Victory demands that we know the difference.

[ TAMPA, FL — MAY 18–21, 2026 ]

Meet Us at SOF Week

We'll be on the floor. If you're thinking about how autonomous platforms get commanded, coordinated, and trained to fight — that's the conversation we're built for.

The game has changed. NODA changed it.