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Accelint and Vitesse Systems Unite as Lyntris to Power the Connected Battlespace

  • 3 days ago
  • 3 min read

In an era where milliseconds can determine mission success or failure, a new defense technology player is stepping into the spotlight with a bold ambition: connecting sensing to action across the modern battlespace.

Lyntris has officially launched as the unified identity of Accelint and Vitesse Systems, bringing together advanced sensor hardware, mission software, AI-enabled decision systems, and resilient communications technologies under a single defense-focused organization.

The announcement marks more than a rebrand. It formalizes a long-term integration strategy designed to address one of the most urgent operational challenges facing modern militaries: how to sense threats earlier, process complex data faster, and enable coordinated action across contested, multi-domain environments.

Headquartered in Washington, D.C., Lyntris positions itself as a “sense-to-act” technology company built specifically for the realities of modern warfare, where adversaries operate simultaneously across Space, Air, Land, Sea, and Cyber domains, and where fragmented legacy systems increasingly struggle to keep pace.

“Most defense systems operating today were built for a different kind of fight,” said Brian Morrison, CEO of Lyntris. “Today’s threats move faster, operate across multiple domains at once, and demand technology that the legacy approach can’t deliver.”

The company’s strategy centers on creating seamless operational connectivity between sensing, intelligence processing, command-and-control, and mission execution. By combining Accelint’s expertise in AI-enabled mission systems, autonomy, and decision support with Vitesse Systems’ capabilities in high-performance sensing hardware, multi-band RF technologies, and satellite payloads, Lyntris aims to deliver interoperable solutions capable of operating in degraded, denied, and disconnected environments.

That capability is increasingly critical as defense organizations confront peer and near-peer threats that challenge traditional operational models.

Modern military operations now depend on the rapid fusion of data from distributed systems, resilient communications under electronic warfare conditions, and the ability to execute coordinated actions at machine speed. Delays in sensing, processing, or decision-making can create operational vulnerabilities with strategic consequences.

Lyntris says its technologies are engineered to close those gaps through modular, open-architecture systems designed to integrate into existing defense ecosystems rather than replace them outright. The company’s offerings span AI-enabled data fusion, mission software, resilient sensing architectures, ISR capabilities, maritime domain awareness, satellite payload technologies, and air and missile defense support systems.

The newly unified company already has a significant operational footprint. Lyntris currently supports more than 200 defense programs across all branches of the U.S. Department of War and multiple allied nations, providing technologies that support both national-level command authorities and operators at the tactical edge.

Matthew Alty, President and Vice Chair of Lyntris and former CEO of Vitesse Systems, emphasized that the company was built specifically to address the Defense Department’s evolving operational priorities.

“Lyntris was purpose-built to deliver sense-to-act connectivity solutions for the modern connected battlespace,” Alty said. “The opportunity ahead is about execution, continuing to serve our customers while delivering on ever greater and expanded missions aligned to the DoW’s top priorities.”

The company’s growth strategy has also been shaped through significant investment and acquisition activity. David Stinnett, Partner at Trive Capital, described Lyntris as a foundational technology layer designed to accelerate operational connectivity across defense architectures.

“We built Lyntris to offer the mutually enabling sublayer of technology that creates sense-to-act connectivity,” Stinnett said. “Our foundation in resilient, proven technologies, built through strategic acquisitions and significant organic investments into capacity and new capabilities, drives our ability to rapidly field and deliver next-generation technologies.”

As military modernization efforts accelerate globally, companies capable of bridging hardware, software, AI, sensing, and operational integration are becoming increasingly central to future defense architectures.

Lyntris’ emergence reflects a broader shift underway across the defense sector: the move toward highly connected, interoperable systems capable of operating across multiple domains simultaneously while maintaining resilience under contested conditions.

For defense and allied nation customers, the company’s message is clear: future operational advantage will belong to forces that can transform fragmented sensing into coordinated action faster than their adversaries.

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