California-based space technology startup Antaris announced Wednesday that it has secured $3.5 million in a new seed funding round to accelerate the deployment of its software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform for satellite management. The investment aims to bring proven enterprise technology concepts to the rapidly expanding space economy, allowing operators to design, simulate, and operate orbital assets with unprecedented efficiency.
Early-stage investment firm Streamlined Ventures led the funding round. Venture capital firms HCVC and E2MC, which previously participated in the company’s earlier seed and extension fundraising efforts, also joined the round. The latest capital injection brings Antaris’s total seed funding to $10 million.
As part of the investment agreement, Ullas Naik, founder and general partner of Streamlined Ventures, will officially join the Antaris board of directors. Naik brings extensive experience in enterprise software to a company attempting to bridge the historical gap between traditional Silicon Valley tech and aerospace engineering.
The Antaris Platform and True Twin Technology
Founded in 2022, Antaris operates with a clear, ambitious objective: enabling companies to build and operate satellites at scale without reinventing the software wheel for every launch. The startup offers a comprehensive cloud-based platform designed to streamline the entire satellite lifecycle, from initial conception and design to final decommission.
The platform supports a wide variety of orbital applications. Whether a client is building communications arrays, earth imaging platforms, climate change monitoring tools, or military intelligence systems, Antaris standardizes the underlying software infrastructure. This approach drastically slashes the time it takes for aerospace companies to get their hardware into orbit.
A core component of the Antaris offering is its proprietary True Twin platform. This technology creates a high-fidelity digital twin of each physical satellite.
Operators can use the True Twin environment to simulate software updates, test system responses, and troubleshoot potential anomalies in a virtual space before pushing changes to the real-life counterpart in orbit. In an industry where hardware cannot be easily repaired once launched, this capability significantly reduces the risk of costly in-orbit malfunctions and mission failures.
Bringing Enterprise SaaS to the Space Economy
While SaaS and digital twin applications are novel concepts in satellite operations, they are foundational to the modern enterprise software ecosystem. Scalable, end-to-end technology has long been at the forefront of the terrestrial tech world.
Digital twins and modular software solutions serve as the fundamental building blocks for contemporary cybersecurity, cloud computing, and data analytics platforms. Antaris is betting heavily that the commercial space industry is finally ready for this level of software standardization.
Historically, satellite manufacturers relied on bespoke, proprietary software systems tailored to individual spacecraft. This highly siloed approach drove up manufacturing costs, extended development timelines, and severely complicated fleet management for massive constellations.





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