Anduril Industries is on a hot streak.

Why it matters: The neo-prime is biting off bigger and bigger chunks of the defense-contracting pie. • In 2019, it deployed a handful of sentry towers alongside U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Now, it's scheming to build and fly robo-wingmen for the military.

What they're saying: "Over the last eight years, Anduril has been consistent in our view of modern warfare: The physics of the battlefield have changed, permanently. Projecting power increasingly demands the ability to amass tons of effects over long distances," chief business officer Matt Steckman told Axios. • "Superior software and massive quantities of hardware are indispensable to this task," he said. • "We are not celebrating views shifting towards our way of thinking. The proof

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