This is the official YouTube channel of Persistent Systems. For more information about Persistent Systems and our products, go to www.persistentsystems.com
Persistent Systems offers a secure and "true" mobile ad-hoc networking system (MANET) with its Wave Relay® product line. Since inception, the company's core products have been most utilized by the government sector as well as some by some industrial clients. Their Wave Relay® system features advanced self-healing properties. It is a wireless scalable communication network that provides data, video and voice. It provides a dynamic, reliable, and secure wireless networking solution beyond the mesh network.
Persistent Systems' rugged design for its products make it functional for a wide range of markets and environmental conditions which include UAV, UGV, Robotics, Mining, Oil & Gas, Agriculture, and Government.
Persistent Systems
"Nobody gets here alone." -Spiritus Systems
5 days ago | [YT] | 449
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Persistent Systems
"Realizing it is my choice and my choice alone to be a Reconnaissance Marine, I accept all challenges involved with this profession. Forever shall I strive to maintain the tremendous reputation of those who went before me. Exceeding beyond the limitations set down by others shall be my goal." | Marine Recon Challenge 2026
1 week ago | [YT] | 325
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Persistent Systems
“The side that can change the game fastest wins.” — John Boyd
1 week ago | [YT] | 263
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Persistent Systems
We’ve been to a lot of training. This was definitely one of the best CQB/breaching course we’ve ever been a part of.
1 week ago | [YT] | 470
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Persistent Systems
First time a Boston Dynamics Spot robot has exited an aircraft during a military free-fall operation.
Part of a week spent training alongside @forwardobservations2.0 @paratec_defense and @a_life_in_freefall during the SG-7 course. A good reminder that the future of operations isn’t one piece of technology.. it’s people, platforms, and networks learning to work together.
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 441
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Persistent Systems
The ugly truth about modern warfare is that sensors are everywhere. The side that wins is the side that can move that information fast enough to matter.
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 446
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Persistent Systems
This one’s about scale. And scale is where the truth comes out.
Think about everything on the network during a real operation. Radios. Vehicles. UAS. ISR feeds. Loitering munitions. Targeting data. PLI. ATAK. Sensors. Supporting elements. SWARMING!... That list isn’t getting shorter, it’s getting longer every other day.
Wave Relay was built around the assumption that operations grow, terrain degrades links, and nobody has time to manually re-route a network mid-mission.
Most networks have a ceiling and you’re going to find that ceiling when your operation scales past what the architecture was designed to handle. Feeds cut out. UAS fail. PLI is gone. Guys start working around the technology instead of through it.
Wave Relay was built around a different assumption entirely. Every node that joins isn’t just a device consuming bandwidth.. it’s a router, a relay, a new path for data to move through. More nodes means more paths. More paths means it the network becomes more capable. That’s not a feature that showed up in a firmware update. That’s the architecture.
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 297
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Persistent Systems
“A system that is optimized for perfect conditions becomes fragile under stress.”
One thing people still get wrong when they talk about tactical communications is they still think in terms of individual radios talking to each other. Like… “can this radio reach that radio?”
That’s kind of an old way to look at the problem now.
Because modern operations aren’t just voice anymore. You’ve got drone feeds, ATAK traffic, PLI, ISR, chat, targeting data, all moving at the same time. And all of it is moving through environments that are constantly changing your RF conditions.
And RF is physical whether people like it or not.
A building changes it. Steel changes it. Terrain changes it. Teams moving around changes it. A guy walking inside a ship or going below a deck changes it. A vehicle turning a corner changes it.
So if your whole plan depends on maintaining one perfect radio-to-radio link, eventually that link is going to suck. Or disappear entirely.
That’s really the reason networks matter more than radios now.
The value is not the individual connection. The value is the network’s ability to keep finding another path when the geometry changes.
That’s what Wave Relay is really doing.
Every node becomes another possible route. Another relay. Another option for traffic to move through. So instead of trying to preserve one fragile connection, the network adapts around the problem.
That’s also why node density actually helps you in a lot of environments.
More nodes means more available paths. More opportunities for the network to reroute traffic around terrain, structures, movement, or interference.
So the real objective isn’t “maintain this one link.”
The real objective is “keep information moving no matter what the environment is doing.”
3 weeks ago | [YT] | 336
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Persistent Systems
“He who can handle the quickest rate of change survives.” — John Boyd
3 weeks ago | [YT] | 530
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Persistent Systems
“Speed alone has never won a war. Understanding the fight before the enemy does, that wins wars.”
#MPU5 #WaveRelay #SpeedSurpriseVoA
1 month ago | [YT] | 365
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