As warehouses race to automate, connectivity has emerged as the critical enabler separating pilot projects from scalable success. Autonomous mobile robots, AI-driven picking and real-time inventory systems all depend on networks that are resilient, secure and always on. Rajant Corporation, pioneer of Kinetic Mesh® wireless networking, is redefining how industrial environments connect people, machines and data at the edge. With the forthcoming release of its enhanced Cowbell solution, Rajant promises seamless, zero-downtime connectivity without the constraints of fixed infrastructure. In this TechBullion interview, Paul Hellhake discusses the future of autonomy, edge computing and how warehouses can modernise operations without network overhauls.
Please tell us more about yourself.
My name is Paul Hellhake, and I am the Co-Founder, President, and Chief Technology Officer of Rajant Corporation. Throughout my career, I have focused on the development and leadership of advanced technologies. At Rajant, this work centers on solving complex communications challenges related to mobility, autonomy, and network resilience. I collaborate daily with an exceptional team of engineers, developers, solution architects, and with Rajant’s manufacturing and quality organizations to bring these innovations to life.
Prior to founding Rajant, I established and led several technology companies. These include the nation’s first interactive digital broadcast provider, which became part of Verizon, and a digital satellite service that was acquired by the telecom company, MCI. I hold multiple patents, including some that have been licensed by major technology companies.
For those unfamiliar, can you introduce Rajant and explain the evolution of the company since you co-founded it?
Bob Schena and I founded Rajant in 2001 in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks because we unfortunately saw the shortcomings of traditional, high-risk wireless technology. We worked with engineers and business experts to identify the need for private networking that could effectively support mobile wireless communications under emergency conditions, without vulnerable, centralised infrastructure. Born from this was the Kinetic Mesh® network, a patented technology that redefines what mobile, self-healing communication can achieve in mission-critical environments.
Our mission has always been to provide essential frontline personnel and first responders with dependable communication networks to operate and keep them safe. Today, Rajant has grown to a global leader in intelligent edge networking, empowering autonomy, safety, and efficiency in more than 80 countries. Our solutions serve multiple industries, including mining, heavy construction, oil and gas, manufacturing, warehouse automation, and defense.
Rajant solutions integrate distributed computing, AI capabilities, edge solutions, and more, creating a unified ecosystem where real-time data drives smarter operations across every industrial setting.
As President and CTO, how do you balance long-term technology vision with real-world deployment and customer needs?
At Rajant, we prioritize meeting the customer where they’re at to get real perspectives from the field. Customer challenges are what drive our solutions framework, whether it’s a miner 3,000 feet underground or a logistics operator managing thousands of autonomous systems. We continuously test and refine our solutions in live industrial settings, which keeps us grounded in what truly delivers value for the end-user. At the same time, we invest heavily in forward-looking R&D to anticipate the needs of tomorrow’s industrial ecosystems. This balance between innovation and field validation helps to ensure that Rajant’s platforms remain adaptable and future-proof.
Autonomous systems have come a long way in recent years. How have you seen autonomy evolve across industrial environments, and what key milestones stand out to you?
Autonomy has shifted from controlled environments to fully integrated, production-scale operations. Ten years ago, most automation relied heavily on central control rooms and wired, fixed infrastructure. Today, we’re seeing self-coordinating fleets of robots, vehicles, and sensors operating independently at the edge. A major milestone for us was demonstrating that mobile, self-healing networks could enable this level of autonomy in dynamic, obstructed environments such as open-pit and underground mines and other places where fixed infrastructure is costly and simply insufficient for the job.
Looking ahead, how do you see autonomy shaping industrial IoT strategies and business operations for your customers?
Autonomy will continue to push intelligence closer to where data is generated. Instead of routing everything to the cloud, organizations are deploying distributed computing platforms to make instant, localized decisions. That shift changes how organizations think about industrial IoT (IIoT), from simple device connectivity to a system of collaborative intelligence, where machines, sensors, and software interact to optimize decision-making in real time. For Rajant’s customers, that means more agile supply chains, safer work environments, and reduced downtime. Our role is to ensure that data and decision-making flow seamlessly, securely, and instantly across every layer of the operation.
With warehouse automation accelerating, robotics, AMRs, and AI systems rely on resilient connectivity. How does Rajant’s Kinetic Mesh® architecture enable real-time mobility and autonomy without the limitations of fixed infrastructure or traditional Wi-Fi?
Rajant’s Kinetic Mesh® was purpose-built to adapt. Each node, or BreadCrumb®, communicates directly with multiple other nodes in the configuration, forming a fully mobile, self-healing network that maintains a continuous, mobile connection and intelligently routes data along the most optimal path. That means vehicles, drones, and robots can stay connected as they move through dense, metal-rich, or rugged environments where Wi-Fi or traditional networking often fails. Because our system doesn’t depend on a single access point, there’s no central bottleneck or handoff delay. The result is continuous, low-latency communication that keeps automation running smoothly even in complex layouts or harsh conditions.
Rajant’s upcoming enhancements to Cowbell aim to further support autonomous vehicle performance and operational continuity. Can you share what makes this next generation so transformative?
The next generation of Cowbell expands its role as a distributed computing platform, which we call “MLOps-in-a-box.” It integrates AI processing, orchestration, and edge networking into a single deployable ecosystem, allowing autonomous systems to analyze, decide, and act locally. For customers, this translates into faster insights, less data congestion, and more operational uptime without adding costly layers of IT complexity. The system’s modular design also means it can scale easily across new devices or sites, adapting to evolving workloads while simplifying management across the entire edge environment.
Edge computing is becoming central to supply chain digitisation. What role does edge intelligence play in warehouse resilience and decision-making at the network edge?
Edge intelligence allows warehouses to react in real time. Instead of sending every data point to the cloud, systems equipped with Rajant’s platforms, like Cowbell and Reios, process information locally, enabling near-immediate action. This local decision-making capability not only reduces latency but also keeps operations running even if external connectivity is lost or interrupted. It also improves safety and resource utilization by synchronizing data between humans, robots, and infrastructure control systems.
Many facilities fear that embracing automation means overhauling their entire IT network. How can organisations deploy autonomous technologies using Rajant without costly rip-and-replace upgrades?
One of Rajant’s biggest differentiators is that our systems integrate, not replace. Our technology can layer directly onto existing systems, whether that’s Wi-Fi, LTE, or private 5G. This approach minimizes disruption and maximizes ROI by extending the life and capability of current systems. It’s a plug-and-play path to autonomy that doesn’t require starting over from scratch or undertaking a full rebuild. This allows organizations to scale automation at their own pace while maintaining operational continuity.
As we look towards 2026, what industry shifts or technological breakthroughs do you expect will define the next phase of autonomous logistics and industrial connectivity?
The industry is heading toward greater collaboration between networks, edge systems, and AI. The most successful organizations will be those that combine autonomy with intelligence, using distributed computing to make their operations not just automated, but nimble and adaptive. As industries move toward greater use of automation, the focus will shift from automation alone to continuous, self-optimizing operations that can learn, adapt, and evolve in real time. For Rajant, that means continuing to evolve our ecosystem to enable real-time insight and action — wherever our customers operate.


