OrbitronAI launches NovaOS
OrbitronAI introduced NovaOS, a platform aimed at regulated industries that emphasises persistent observability, evidence export and traceability while supporting bring‑your‑own‑cloud deployments on AWS, Azure and GCP. The product frames governed AI as a deployable category for businesses that must produce audit trails and compliance evidence. (aerotime.aero)
Most companies can get an artificial intelligence chatbot running in a week. A bank, airline, or defense contractor can spend months on one harder question: who approved it, what data it touched, and what proof exists if an auditor asks six months later. (aerotime.aero) OrbitronAI’s new product, NovaOS, is built around that paperwork problem. The company says the platform keeps persistent observability, which means a continuous record of what each artificial intelligence agent did instead of a one-time log captured after the fact. (orbitronai.com) NovaOS also centers on traceability. In plain English, that means a company can follow one decision back through the model, the prompt, the data source, and the human approval step like tracking a package through every warehouse scan. (orbitronai.com) The other key feature is evidence export. OrbitronAI says customers can turn system activity into compliance-ready records, so an internal risk team or outside regulator does not have to reconstruct events from scattered screenshots, emails, and server logs. (aerotime.aero) That pitch is aimed at industries where old software never really goes away. OrbitronAI says NovaOS sits on top of legacy enterprise systems in aerospace, energy, government, and industrial operations instead of forcing a full replacement of the infrastructure already running payroll, maintenance, procurement, or safety workflows. (comparethecloud.net) The cloud angle matters too. OrbitronAI says NovaOS supports bring-your-own-cloud deployments on Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud, which lets a customer keep the system inside the cloud account it already uses for security controls and procurement rules. (aerotime.aero) OrbitronAI is selling this as governed artificial intelligence, not open-ended automation. Its product page describes NovaOS as a control plane for autonomous enterprise operations, with trust, controls, and visibility designed for human-supervised deployment at enterprise scale. (orbitronai.com) That wording lines up with how the company has talked about aviation and other tightly regulated sectors before this launch. In an October 2025 company announcement, founder Saul Adomaitis said NovaOS was built for humans and artificial intelligence to work side by side, and AeroTime later described the platform as an agentic bridge across compliance, maintenance, logistics, and commercial operations. (zawya.com) (aerotime.aero) So the launch is less about a flashier model and more about a different category of software. OrbitronAI is betting that in regulated industries, the winning artificial intelligence system is the one that can show its work on demand, export the receipts, and run inside the customer’s own cloud without ripping out the old machinery underneath. (aerotime.aero) (orbitronai.com)