Valley of Depth

Payload | Ignition | Tectonic

Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies.

  1. VOR 13 STD.

    Autonomy at the Edge, with Scott Sanders (CGO of Forterra)

    Scott Sanders has seen the defense tech industry from just about every angle. As a Marine officer, he watched promising capability stall somewhere between a program office and the field. As an early employee at Anduril, he helped build one of the companies that bet it could do better.   Now, as Chief Growth Officer at Forterra, he's making that same bet on autonomous ground systems, a market that's been promised for years and is only now being put to the test. In this episode of Valley of Depth, we press Scott on what's actually working, what isn't, and where the hype is running ahead of the hardware.   We get into: Why the gap between a cool tech demo and a real defense business is wider than most founders think What investors still fundamentally misunderstand about defense timelines and business model risk Why most defense startups won't become primes and what the ones that do have in common How Forterra is approaching autonomy, mesh networking, and distributed operations at the tactical edge What it looks like to actually get capability to operators, not just into a program of record The procurement dysfunction that everyone in the room knows about and almost no one fixes   • Chapters • 00:00 – Intro 00:50 – Sun Valley 03:14 – Scott’s time in the Philippines 09:04 – Why Scott joined Anduril 14:01 – Working with the government: then vs now 17:34 – What investors should look for in defense tech 20:27 – Forterra in 2022 vs 2026 25:12 – Forterra’s products today 26:39 – Autonomy-as-a-service model 30:13 – Hardware and software 32:36 – Commercial end users 33:52 – Why acquire mesh networking from goTenna? 37:27 – Current programs and contracts 40:55 – Fully autonomous systems in contested environments 44:30 – Hiring in a competitive defense tech industry 47:25 – How many SVDG companies could become primes? 47:52 – Exciting technologies for investors 51:46 – Forterra in 7–8 years 53:34 – What Scott does for fun   • Show notes • Forterra’s website — https://www.forterra.com/ Forterra’ socials — https://x.com/ForterraDrive= Mo's socials — https://x.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Ignition’s socials — https://twitter.com/ignitionnuclear /   https://www.linkedin.com/company/ignition-nuclear/ Tectonic’s socials  — https://twitter.com/tectonicdefense / https://www.linkedin.com/company/tectonicdefense/ Valley of Depth archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/   • About us • Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies. Payload: www.payloadspace.com Tectonic: www.tectonicdefense.com Ignition: www.ignition-news.com

    56 Min.
  2. VOR 5 TAGEN

    The Early Innings, with Mark Boggett (CEO of Seraphim)

    In this episode of Valley of Depth, we sit down with Mark Boggett, CEO of Seraphim Space, to break down one of the biggest questions in the industry right now: are we still early in the space economy, or has the easy money already been made? Mark has built one of the first dedicated space-focused venture firms, before the category became institutional. We discuss how the market has evolved from uncertain capital availability to a more mature ecosystem where large-scale funding is now expected and why that shift is unlocking a new phase of growth. We cover: Why the space economy is still in its early innings of value creation How capital availability has transformed space investing over the last decade Seraphim’s strategy and why they avoid launch, space travel, and lunar markets The rise of European defense demand and the emergence of “neo-primes” How space companies are becoming real, profitable businesses Where the market may be overbuilt vs. underinvested Why vertically integrated constellations remain the core opportunity What the next phase of the space economy looks like   • Chapters • 00:00 – Intro 00:38 – What current moment are we in in the space economy? 01:33 – Mark's history with the space industry and the changes he's seen 02:50 – What prompted Mark to start taking bets on the space industry? 07:52 – Early pushback in space investing 10:27 – How do you convince investors to invest in space companies if the biggest company (SpaceX) is still not public? 13:27 – Seraphim's strategy for their funds 21:23 – Seraphim's competitive moat 24:52 – Where does Seraphim go from a founder's focused approach to a more guided one? 30:31 – IC EYE 36:34 – Space investment trends that Mark sees in Europe 41:54 – US vs Europe future investments 45:50 – Understanding American vs European aerospace company valuations 47:56 – Where are we currently overbuilt? 54:34 – Why doesn't Seraphim invest in the Moon and Mars and will this change? 01:00:00 – What Mark does for fun   • Show notes • Seraphim’s website — https://seraphim.vc/ Seraphim’s socials — https://x.com/seraphim_space Mo's socials — https://x.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Ignition’s socials — https://twitter.com/ignitionnuclear /   https://www.linkedin.com/company/ignition-nuclear/ Tectonic’s socials  — https://twitter.com/tectonicdefense / https://www.linkedin.com/company/tectonicdefense/ Valley of Depth archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/   • About us • Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies. Payload: www.payloadspace.com Tectonic: www.tectonicdefense.com Ignition: www.ignition-news.com

    1 Std. 2 Min.
  3. 25. FEB.

    Networks in Motion, with Brian Barritt (CTO of Aalyria)

    In this episode of Valley of Depth, we dive into Aalyria’s newly announced $100 million raise at a $1.3 billion valuation with cofounder and CTO Brian Barritt and unpack why investors are betting big on the future of networks that don’t sit still. Aalyria is building two core technologies born inside Google: Spacetime, a software orchestration layer designed to manage networks in motion, and Tightbeam, a laser communications system delivering fiber-like speeds through the atmosphere. Together, they aim to solve one of the hardest infrastructure challenges in aerospace and defense: how to coordinate satellites, aircraft, drones, ships, and ground systems into a seamless “network of networks.” The conversation spans laser physics, diffraction challenges in space-to-ground links, feeder link bottlenecks in mega-constellations, and why routing data across moving infrastructure is fundamentally different than routing across fixed networks. We cover: Why Aalyria’s $100M raise signals a shift from R&D to deployment What “network in motion” really means and why it’s so hard How laser communications can reach 100 gigabits per second through atmosphere The technical challenge of Earth-to-space vs. space-to-Earth optical links Why interoperability has been a 40-year ambition inside the DoD How open APIs could become the connective tissue for JADC2 and beyond What resilience and roaming look like in hybrid satellite architectures Why optical ground stations require orchestration software to scale   • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:59 – The history of Aalyria 02:47 – Aalyria's Spacetime 06:09 – Building the connective software stack that links all of Aalyria's technology together 07:12 – The non-geostationary network problem 11:12 – The rebirth of Loon Technology 14:50 – How Tightbeam ties in to Aalyria 17:21 – 100gb/s through the atmosphere 19:42 – Brian's mandate as CTO when Aalyria forms 20:37 – State of Tightbeam at formation of Aalyria 22:17 – Why can't other companies do what Spacetime does yet? 26:05 – The significance of having different architectures with different source codes talk to each other without modification 28:21 – How Aalyria integrates a new customer's network 31:05 – What is a long distance for Tightbeam and customer reaction to demos 32:48 – Who has Aalyria surprised the most with their demos? 34:28 – What has prevented the government from making a network of networks? 39:14 – Why wouldn't a space version of the Tightbeam terminal not work? 42:01 – How Aalyria is thinking about customer adopting Tightbeam 45:15 – Aalyria in the defense industry 47:05 – Aalyria's commercial aspects 48:30 – Aalyria's latest investment round 51:39 – Next milestones 53:00 – What keeps Brian up at night? 54:00 – Longterm vision for Aalyria 56:16 – What does Brian do for fun?   • Show notes • Aalyria’s website — https://www.aalyria.com/ Mo's socials — https://x.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Ignition’s socials — https://twitter.com/ignitionnuclear /  https://www.linkedin.com/company/ignition-nuclear/ Tectonic’s socials  — https://twitter.com/tectonicdefense / https://www.linkedin.com/company/tectonicdefense/ Valley of Depth archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/   • About us • Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies. Payload: www.payloadspace.com Tectonic: www.tectonicdefense.com Ignition: www.ignition-news.com

    58 Min.
  4. 11. FEB.

    Thermal Breakthrough, with David Tearse (CEO of Karman Industries)

    In this episode of Valley of Depth, we sit down with David Tearse, co-founder and CEO of Karman Industries, to explore a piece of the AI boom that rarely gets attention: thermal infrastructure. As hyperscale data centers grow into multi-gigawatt “AI factories,” the limiting factor is no longer just chips or capital — it’s how efficiently we can move and reject heat. David explains how Karman’s Heat Processing Unit (HPU) reimagines cooling from first principles, bringing aerospace-grade turbomachinery and modern power electronics to a decidedly unglamorous but critical layer of the AI stack. The conversation moves from the physics of heat to the politics of data centers, and ultimately to why thermal efficiency may become a quiet national security advantage. We discuss: Why thermal management—not chips—may be the next bottleneck in the AI stackHow Karman’s HPU replaces traditional chillers and dry coolers outside the data centerHow much additional compute Karman can unlock from the same power inputWhy CO₂ refrigerant de-risks data center builds from a regulatory standpointHow Karman thinks about reliability, uptime, and “aerospace-style” engineeringWhy data centers are becoming a national security issueWhere Karman could expand beyond data centers—nuclear, geothermal, and beyond…and much more. • Chapters • 00:00 – Intro 00:51 – Elara Nova ad 01:21 – Karman Industries mascot 02:28 – How would David describe himself? 05:01 – The original insight that became Karman Industries 06:31 – What do people underestimate about thermal management? 07:26 – The story behind the name 08:21 – How David and co-founder CJ Karla ended up working together 11:15 – Why is now the right time to be solving thermal management? 15:13 – Where does the heat go today? 16:31 – Energy usage for compute vs cooling 17:32 – Energy Savings with Karman's heat processing units (HPUs) 18:05 – Why C02? 20:48 – Replacing vs integration 21:37 – Regulatory side 24:42 – Karman's customer pipeline 26:33 – Reliability 28:59 – Engineering challenges 30:39 – What comes next for Karman 31:55 – Is thermal management a national security issue? 33:21 – David's thoughts on rerouting heat 36:23 – HPUs in space 37:58 – The company culture that allows for building relaiable solutions quickly 44:35 – Milestones for Karman in the next couple of years 47:00 – What does David do for fun?   • Show notes • Karman’s website —https://www.karmanindustries.com/ David’s socials — https://x.com/7earse Mo's socials — https://x.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Ignition’s socials — https://twitter.com/ignitionnuclear /  https://www.linkedin.com/company/ignition-nuclear/ Tectonic’s socials  — https://twitter.com/tectonicdefense / https://www.linkedin.com/company/tectonicdefense/ Valley of Depth archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/   • About us • Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies. Payload: www.payloadspace.comTectonic: www.tectonicdefense.comIgnition: www.ignition-news.com

    49 Min.
  5. 4. FEB.

    SpaceX Road to IPO, with Jack Kuhr (Research Director of Payload Pro)

    In this episode of Valley of Depth, we sit down with Jack Kuhr, Payload Pro’s Research Director, to unpack what SpaceX has become on the eve of what could be the largest IPO in history. What began as a launch company has evolved into a vertically integrated platform spanning launch, satellites, global connectivity, and potentially AI and compute in space.This is the first in a series of conversations where we’ll regularly update our audience on the latest developments shaping SpaceX and its impact on the broader space economy. We discuss: How Starlink has overtaken launch as SpaceX’s primary growth engineWhy Starlink’s constraints are more likely terminals, regulation, and physics—not satellitesHow international markets are powering the next phase of Starlink’s expansionWhy aviation and maritime are the most underappreciated Starlink verticalsWhether Starlink “Lite” can meaningfully take share from traditional ISPsHow Starship and Starlink V3 could upend Falcon 9 economicsWhy the SpaceX–xAI merger points to a fully integrated space, connectivity, and AI stack• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 01:09 - Jack's role at Payload and what is it 04:06 - Jack's revenue model for SpaceX 08:06 - Launch and Starlink 09:23 - Is SpaceX privatizing launch or is there less demand? 12:07 - Starlink's current revenue runway trajectory 14:31 - 2026 projects and potential growth pains 16:41 - Starlink constraints 19:00 - US vs international customers 19:53 - Starlink terminal sales 21:10 - What is currently under appreciated about Starlink's verticals? 22:52 - Starlink Light 24:34 - Competition from GEO broadband providers 33:07 - Starship 34:45 - When will Starlink launch their first commercial, non Starlink payloads 38:22 - Is SpaceX serious about space based data centers? 42:06 - SpaceX x Tesla x xAI   • Show notes • Payload Pro’s website — https://pro.payloadspace.com/ Jack’s socials — https://x.com/JackKuhr Mo's socials — https://x.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Ignition’s socials — https://twitter.com/ignitionnuclear /  https://www.linkedin.com/company/ignition-nuclear/ Tectonic’s socials — https://twitter.com/tectonicdefense / https://www.linkedin.com/company/tectonicdefense/ Valley of Depth archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/   • About us • Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies. Payload: www.payloadspace.comTectonic: www.tectonicdefense.comIgnition: www.ignition-news.com

    47 Min.
  6. 28. JAN.

    Future of Signal Intelligence (LIVE @ NYSE), with John Serafini (CEO of Hawkeye 360)

    We’re excited to launch a very special edition of Valley of Depth, recorded live from the historic vault deep beneath the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Going forward, we’ll be returning to the NYSE each month to host a series of conversations from the heart of global capital markets with the leaders building the next generation of critical infrastructure. In this installment, we sit down with John Serafini, CEO of Hawkeye 360, a company quietly reshaping how governments see and understand the world. While many space companies focus on imagery or communications, Hawkeye 360 is doing something different: listening. By mapping radio-frequency emissions from orbit, the company is turning invisible signals into actionable intelligence, revealing patterns of human behavior that imagery alone can’t capture. We discuss: How space-based RF mapping changes what “global transparency” actually meansWhy signals intelligence is uniquely tied to human activity and intentHow Hawkeye’s multi-satellite architecture enables precise geolocation at scaleWhat it takes to detect dark vessels, GPS jamming, and spoofing in near real timeWhy RF data, software, and proprietary signal libraries form a durable competitive moatHow commercial SIGINT is becoming core infrastructure for governments globally• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:58 - What makes Hawkeye 360's satellites so special? 02:45 - Why is having RF capability important today 04:51 - What were the limitations of RF satellites before now? 06:38 - Why are there so few companies in the RF space? 08:35 - What Hawkeye is able to detect 13:46 - Satellites in a trio formation 17:21 - Fingerprinting points of interest 18:14 - What can Hawkeye 360 track? 21:33 - GPS jamming and spoofing 22:19 - How John got into this business 24:37 - Market size for RF capability 28:00 - Data licenses 30:56 - Next steps for Hawkeye's revisit rate 32:33 - China's capabilities 33:17 - Why did Hawkeye 360 acquire Innovative Signal Analysis (ISA)? 34:28 - Buy vs build 36:43 - John's stance on datacenters in space 37:55 - Investor confidence around Hawkeye 39:50 - The impact of SpaceX going public 42:02 - Is 2026 the year Hawkeye goes public? 44:59 - Will countries start building RF shields? 45:39 - Ultimate goal of Hawkeye • Show notes • Hawkeye’s website — https://www.he360.com/ Hawkeye’s socials — https://x.com/hawkeye360 Mo's socials — https://x.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Ignition’s socials — https://twitter.com/ignitionnuclear /  https://www.linkedin.com/company/ignition-nuclear/ Tectonic’s socials  — https://twitter.com/tectonicdefense / https://www.linkedin.com/company/tectonicdefense/ Valley of Depth archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/ • About us • Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies. Payload: www.payloadspace.comTectonic: www.tectonicdefense.comIgnition: www.ignition-news.com

    47 Min.
  7. 21. JAN.

    Data Center Debate, with Philip Johnston (CEO of Starcloud)

    As constraints on energy, water, and permitting collide with exploding demand for AI and compute, a once-fringe idea is moving rapidly toward the center of the conversation: putting data centers in space. Starcloud believes orbital infrastructure isn’t science fiction—it’s a necessary extension of the global compute stack if scaling is going to continue at anything close to its current pace. Founded by Philip Johnston, Starcloud is building space-based compute systems designed to compete on cost, performance, and scale with terrestrial data centers. The company has already flown a data center–grade GPU in orbit and is now working toward larger, commercially viable systems that could reshape where and how AI is powered.   We discuss: How energy and permitting constraints are reshaping the future of compute Why space-based data centers may be economically inevitable, not optional What Starcloud proved by running an H100 GPU in orbit How launch costs, watts-per-kilogram, and chip longevity define the real economics The national security implications of who controls future compute capacity   • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:50 - The issue with data centers 02:20 - Explosion of the data center debates 04:58 - Philip's 5GW data center rendering and early conceptions of data centers in space at YC 08:16 - Proving people wrong 11:17 - The team at Starcloud today 12:29 - Competing against SpaceX's data center 14:42 - Sam Altman's beef with Starlink 16:52 - Economics of Orbital vs Terrestrial Data Centers by Andrew McCallip 21:33 - Where are we putting these things? 23:50 - Latency in space 25:59 - Political side of building data centers 28:36 - Starcloud 1 30:16 - Space based processors 30:51 - Shakespeare in space 32:00 - Hardening an Nvidia H100 against radiation and making chips in space economical 34:43 - Cooling systems in space 36:01 - How Starcloud is thinking about replacing failed GPUs 38:46 - The mission for Starcloud 2 40:05 - Competitors outside of SpaceX 40:49 - Getting to economical launch costs 44:35 - Will the next great wars be over water and power for data centers? 46:25 - What keeps Philip up at night? 47:11 - What keeps Mo up at night?   • Show notes • Starcloud’s website — https://www.starcloud.com/ Philip’s socials — https://x.com/PhilipJohnston Mo's socials — https://x.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Ignition’s socials — https://twitter.com/ignitionnuclear /   https://www.linkedin.com/company/ignition-nuclear/ Tectonic’s socials — https://twitter.com/tectonicdefense / https://www.linkedin.com/company/tectonicdefense/ Valley of Depth archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/   • About us • Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies. Payload: www.payloadspace.comTectonic: www.tectonicdefense.comIgnition: www.ignition-news.com

    50 Min.
  8. 14. JAN.

    Sovereignty in Orbit, with Hamdullah Mohib (CEO of Orbitworks)

    As more nations realize that space is no longer just a scientific domain but a foundation of economic power and national security, a new question is emerging: who will actually build the infrastructure that underpins it? Orbitworks believes the answer lies in sovereign capability: designed locally, manufactured locally, and operated with speed and control. Founded by Hamdullah Mohib, a former national security advisor and diplomat who spent years operating at the highest levels of geopolitics, Orbitworks sits at an unusual intersection of statecraft and space manufacturing. Based in Abu Dhabi, the company is building one of the region’s first commercial satellite manufacturing facilities and developing Altair, a native constellation designed to move beyond raw imagery and toward information-driven services for both sovereign and commercial customers. We discuss: How Orbitworks is building a commercial satellite industry from scratch in the UAEThe strategic logic behind flexible architectures over fixed hardwareHow the Middle East is positioning itself as a serious node in the global space economyWhat it takes to build talent, supply chains, and culture in a brand-new space ecosystem  • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:59 - Hamdullah's journey from government and geopolitics to space 05:11 - What is Orbitworks? 06:25 - Partnerships with Orbitworks 08:43 - A joint venture 09:40 - Partnering with Loft Orbital 17:09 - Differences that founders experience in the Middle East 21:26 - Altair constellation 23:29 - Dual use commercial and government 26:34 - Building a facility in KEZAD 33:02 - Cultivating and nurturing talent 34:30 - How the Middle East is thinking about space 40:21 - Priorities of sovereign wealth funds 42:33 - Lessons in leadership 47:08 - Fundraising plans/goals 48:47 - Hamdullah's vision for space in the Middle East 50:46 - What excites Hamdullah the most about the space industry?   • Show notes • Orbitwork’s website —https://www.orbitworks.space/ Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Ignition’s socials — https://twitter.com/ignitionnuclear /  https://www.linkedin.com/company/ignition-nuclear/ Tectonic’s socials  — https://twitter.com/tectonicdefense / https://www.linkedin.com/company/tectonicdefense/ Valley of Depth archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/   • About us • Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies. Payload: www.payloadspace.comIgnition: www.ignition-news.comTectonic: www.tectonicdefense.com

    56 Min.

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Valley of Depth is a podcast about the technologies that matter — and the people building them. Brought to you by Arkaea Media, the team behind Payload (space), Ignition (nuclear energy), and Tectonic (defense tech), this show goes beyond headlines and hype. We talk to founders, investors, government officials, and military leaders shaping the future of national security and deep tech. From breakthrough science to strategic policy, we dive into the high-stakes decisions behind the world’s hardest technologies.

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