Radeus Labs Blog

Modern Day Marine 2026: Modernization and Tactical Edge Compute

Written by Radeus Labs Team | May 12, 2026

Radeus Labs attended Modern Day Marine 2026 at the end of last month in D.C. The event is the largest military equipment, systems, and technology exposition exclusively targeted to the Marine Corps. With over 300 exhibitors across 84,000 square feet of floor space, the event draws Marine Corps leaders, defense organizations, and industry partners.

 

This year's show carried a fitting theme: From American Shores: 250 Years of Fighting Forward and the floor reflected it. The overarching message was unmistakable: a broad, accelerating push to modernize legacy systems across the military. For Radeus Labs, that trend directly validates our focus on rugged, high-performance edge compute for next-generation missions.

Driving Greater System Integration

A primary focus of the event was the push for greater integration across disparate data systems to achieve a Common Operating Picture. This movement is centered on several key frameworks:

  • C2, C4ISR, and C5ISR: Integrated command, control, communications, computers, cyber, and ISR systems designed to talk to one another for enhanced battlefield awareness and coordinated decision-making.

  • BAE Systems ICS: A standout example of this integration was the BAE Systems Integrated Cockpit Sensing (ICS) system, displayed inside a large amphibious armored ground vehicle. It was a vivid demonstration of how sensor data and operator awareness are becoming more tightly coupled at the platform level, not as an afterthought, but as a core design principle.

Unmanned Systems Were Everywhere

Drones and other autonomous platforms were all over the show floor, reflecting a shift toward missions that are increasingly software-defined and sensor-driven.

  • Rugged Ground Platforms: Polaris showcased unmanned, four-wheel off-road vehicles, or UGVs. Those platforms depend on edge compute to process mission data close to the operator and in contested environments.

    These modular, fully autonomous platforms are designed without passenger occupancy, serving as rugged assets for reconnaissance or specialized mission payloads.

  • Aerial Integration: Numerous aerial platforms from multiple vendors were featured across the floor, underscoring that unmanned systems are no longer isolated tools. They are becoming deeply integrated into broader mission architectures, tasked, coordinated, and exploited through common software layers.

Focus on the Future

Modern Day Marine provided an excellent venue to reconnect with industry leaders and long-term collaborators:

  • General Atomics (GA): It was great to connect with the General Atomics team. Our conversations touched on their Charlottesville-based division (acquired several years ago) which focuses on software platforms that integrate directly with GA unmanned systems.

    We reviewed advanced ISR data management solutions including STAIR (System for Tasking and Real-time Exploitation) and OPTIX C2. These tools allow operators to task drones to specific areas of interest, refine data signatures, and disseminate that intelligence across a shared military database, exactly the kind of sensor-to-decision pipeline that defines modern expeditionary operations.

  • Darley: We also had a productive conversation with Darley, a distributor with a deep and distinguished history serving the defense community across specialized mission requirements. We discussed shared history, complementary strengths, and future opportunities.

Tactical Edge Compute: The Radeus Advantage


One of the most consistent takeaways from the show, and from 250 years of Marine Corps history, is that the mission only succeeds when the hardware doesn't fail. As military systems become more connected, the need for rugged computing becomes even more critical.

Radeus Labs has spent over two decades building rugged, long-lifecycle, high-performance, mission-critical computing, including the ground control station servers that power General Atomics platforms. Whether it is counter-UAS, ISR data fusion, or edge-enabled decision making, we build the hardware that keeps those systems running when it matters most.

These conversations don't stop at the show floor. The same questions around modernization, lifecycle planning, and reliable infrastructure are just as relevant in the aerospace world, and that's exactly what we'll be bringing to San Diego next month.

Next Up: AIAA AVIATION Forum 2026 in San Diego

June 8–12, Booth #521 - We're looking to connect with operators evaluating end-of-life systems, antenna control unit upgrades, satellite control systems, and long-term infrastructure support, including the Radeus Labs 8200. Conversations about antenna control unit upgrades and satellite control systems are a natural extension of the same modernization themes.

Stop by, meet the team, and enter our LEGO® drawing. Or schedule time with us at the show to talk through your current setup, upgrade timeline, and options. Hope to see you there!