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$ONDS If you’re still confused about what Omnisys does, keep reading… 👾
Omnisys announced on their official LinkedIn today that BRO has been selected by a global customer for airborne EMSO mission planning.
Most investors will see the contract announcement and move on due to all the technical jargon, but let me help demystify it for you:
The customer operates what are called Multi-Mission Aircraft carrying four simultaneous capabilities:
COMINT — intercepting enemy communications.
ELINT — detecting and analyzing enemy radar emissions and electronic systems.
COMJAM — jamming and disrupting enemy communications networks.
RADARJAM — degrading enemy radar systems.
Planning a mission that maximizes the effectiveness of all four capabilities simultaneously — against multiple targets, across a dynamic threat environment, within a defined mission window — is an arduous and technically difficult task.
Here is what BRO actually does for this customer:
BRO-EW aggregates data from sensors, C4I systems, intelligence systems, and enemy operational patterns simultaneously.
It optimizes the utilization of every electronic warfare asset available and finds operational gaps the mission planning team might miss.
It doesn’t just produce a static pre-mission plan, it provides recommendations and insights in real time, enabling decision-makers to anticipate events and take action as the mission unfolds.
The official Omnisys announcement confirms that without BRO, conventional mission planning for these aircraft results in many hours of downtime while assets wait to be tasked.
BRO eliminates that bottleneck by increasing sortie rates and enabling mission commanders to achieve the best possible coverage of their intelligence priorities.
After each mission, BRO also supports the “After-Action Review,” assessing mission success and preparing the planning baseline for follow-on flights.
In short, BRO tells pilots exactly when to fly, where to fly, and how to use every piece of equipment on their aircraft to listen to the enemy, jam their radios, and blind their radar (all at the same time) so they stop wasting hours planning and start flying more missions that actually work.
Orchestration and optimization, that’s the name of the game 👊🏼
The market has not yet priced what a proven, sticky, continuously-learning battle optimization system across air defense, electronic warfare, and border security is actually worth.