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Parry Labs – Weekly Recap

Parry Labs is a defense technology company focused on open systems software and autonomous command-and-control solutions for uncrewed air and ground systems, and this weekly recap highlights a series of developments underscoring its growing role in U.S. Army modernization efforts. Over the past week, the company announced two notable milestones: selection for a key U.S. Army Transformation in Contact (TiC) initiative and an enterprise software licensing agreement that expands the footprint of its STRATIA platform.

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On the operational side, Parry Labs was selected by the U.S. Army’s xTech program and the T2COM Army Applications Laboratory to support the TiC initiative at Fort Hood, Texas, over an 18‑month period. This selection follows a Project Overwatch Soldier Evaluation at College Station, Texas, where Parry Labs, working with industry partners, rapidly deployed an integrated beyond-line-of-sight command-and-control node in under five weeks. The solution enabled coordinated control of multiple air and ground uncrewed systems and provided soldiers with a real-time common operating picture of enemy positions beyond direct-fire and mortar range. Parry Labs was one of 20 winning innovators chosen for autonomous overwatch solutions, with its STRATIA, GEMMI, and Phantom technologies serving as core elements of its offering. This performance reinforces the company’s credentials as a systems integrator capable of delivering field-ready, scalable autonomous C2 capabilities under tight timelines.

Commercially, Parry Labs reported an enterprise license agreement with AV for its STRATIA open systems software. Initially, STRATIA will support AV’s P550 unmanned aerial system in the U.S. Army’s Long Range Reconnaissance program, but the structure of the deal positions STRATIA as a digital backbone across AV’s wider product portfolio. The software is intended to integrate command-and-control, autonomy, and AI applications, reducing implementation costs and timelines while improving interoperability and enabling a modular, future-ready architecture. This aligns closely with the Department of Defense’s push toward Modular Open Systems Architecture and suggests the potential for recurring software revenue, higher-margin business, and deeper strategic alignment with a key platform provider.

Taken together, the TiC initiative selection and the AV enterprise license agreement indicate growing traction for Parry Labs’ software and integration solutions in critical Army programs. While neither announcement discloses specific financial terms or contract values, both developments enhance the company’s visibility in autonomous warfare and C2 markets, strengthen relationships with Army stakeholders and industry partners, and may support future program-of-record opportunities and broader deployments. Overall, the week marked a constructive period for Parry Labs, with progress on both operational validation and long-term software positioning within the defense ecosystem.

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