Offline Logistics for Degraded Theaters
Rune Technologies
Offline operation is not a product nice to have here, it is the reason the software can sit inside the actual decision loop of a forward unit. TyrOS is built to run on disconnected laptops at the edge, keep tracking fuel, ammunition, food, and parts locally, generate resupply plans without a live cloud link, then sync once radio, satellite, or cellular links come back. That makes it closer to mission software than standard ERP wrapped for defense use.
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The workflow only matters if it still works when the network does not. TyrOS pulls readiness files, inventory data, vehicle tracking, route databases, weather, and threat inputs into one local dashboard, then recommends loads and routes based on stock, vehicle capacity, danger, and timing, even in contested environments.
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The closest software rival, Adyton, also leans into disconnected operations, but through a phone based reporting flow. Traditional integrators like KBR, Leidos, and Booz Allen usually layer military interfaces on top of SAP or IFS style systems, which are stronger at enterprise back office workflows and weaker at laptop level edge use in broken networks.
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This design also fits Rune’s position in the stack. Palantir’s Army Vantage covers broad Army data and logistics use cases at enterprise scale, while TyrOS is being integrated as a narrower logistics application that can keep operating locally and feed data back upward when links return.
The next step is turning offline logistics from a unit level tool into part of a wider defense data fabric. If Rune keeps winning pilots, the edge node becomes the wedge, first for Army and Marine units in degraded theaters, then for allied militaries and industrial base planning where local execution and later sync are both essential.