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Weekly Startup News – Australia

A Y Combinator-backed food delivery startup has climbed the App Store charts by doing what many established brands struggle with: going viral on TikTok.

Sara Jones by Sara Jones
July 26, 2025
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Hadrian Raises $260M to Expand Automated Factories for Space and Defense Parts

Hadrian, a fast-rising aerospace and defense manufacturing startup, has raised $260 million in a Series C funding round to scale its network of automated factories designed to produce precision parts for satellites, rockets, and military systems.

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The round was led by Lux Capital and Andreessen Horowitz, with participation from Founders Fund, Construct Capital, and Lachy Groom. The funding brings Hadrian’s total raised to over $450 million and reinforces investor confidence in reshoring critical defense manufacturing to the U.S.

Founded in 2020, Hadrian is rethinking how aerospace and defense parts are made by building highly automated, software-driven factories. These facilities use robotics and advanced machine learning to cut lead times and increase reliability for components vital to national security and space infrastructure.

Hadrian raises $260M to build out automated factories for space and defense  parts | TechCrunch

“We’re building the industrial base that America needs,” said CEO Chris Power. “This funding allows us to expand production capacity and support both legacy defense primes and next-generation startups working on hypersonics, space, and autonomous systems.”

Hadrian currently operates factories in Los Angeles and Atlanta, and plans to use the funding to open additional sites near key defense and intelligence hubs. The company’s parts are already used by major players including SpaceX, Anduril, and Palantir.

As geopolitical tensions rise and the Pentagon pushes to strengthen domestic supply chains, Hadrian’s mission has taken on greater urgency. Defense officials have identified precision machining as a critical vulnerability, particularly in fast-evolving sectors like hypersonics and space.

With this latest funding, Hadrian aims to double its workforce, deepen its work on classified programs, and continue building what it calls the “AWS for manufacturing” — a scalable infrastructure layer for defense and aerospace hardware.

The future of national security, Hadrian argues, may be built in code-powered factories.

How a Y Combinator Food-Delivery App Used TikTok to Soar in the App Store

A Y Combinator-backed food delivery startup has climbed the App Store charts by doing what many established brands struggle with: going viral on TikTok.

Targeting college students and young professionals, the app offers low-cost, fast meal delivery with a Gen Z twist. But rather than relying on expensive ads or influencer deals, the company leaned into relatable, meme-driven TikTok content — and it worked.

Its breakout came from a series of short, lo-fi videos showing students reacting to late-night food drops, poking fun at student life, or unboxing surprise meals. One clip featuring a student screaming in delight over free mac and cheese racked up over 3 million views. Each viral video led to spikes in downloads, propelling the app into the top 10 in the App Store’s food & drink category.

“We didn’t have a massive marketing budget, so we treated TikTok like our main storefront,” said the company’s co-founder. “We focused on authenticity, humor, and just making content that feels native to the platform.”

How a Y Combinator food-delivery app used TikTok to soar in the App Store |  TechCrunch

The startup also engaged micro-influencers on college campuses, offering free meals in exchange for TikTok shoutouts and discount codes. This peer-to-peer strategy fueled organic word-of-mouth and boosted local traction in college towns.

The result? Thousands of daily downloads, high retention among younger users, and a surge of investor interest — all driven by social media savvy rather than traditional growth tactics.

While many food delivery startups struggle with customer acquisition costs and brand differentiation, this YC company has shown that cultural fluency and platform-native content can deliver viral success. With more features and cities planned for launch, the app is betting that TikTok isn’t just a marketing channel — it’s the engine behind the next wave of consumer apps.

Former Y Combinator, a16z Experts Host Invite-Only Summit for Startup Founders

A team of former Y Combinator and Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) insiders is launching a new, invite-only summit aimed at helping early-stage founders build their brands without relying on expensive PR firms or giving up equity.

Called the To Do List Summit, the one-day event will take place on August 9, 2025, and is limited to just 80 founders. Organized by ex-YC events leads and a former a16z social media strategist, the summit is designed to offer hands-on training in media outreach, personal branding, and viral content creation — key skills often overlooked in early-stage startup life.

With a modest ticket price of $600, the organizers aim to make high-impact media education more accessible. “Founders shouldn’t have to spend $10,000/month on a PR firm or give away part of their company just to get noticed,” said one of the summit’s co-creators. “This event is about teaching them to own their story.”

Former Y Combinator, a16z experts hold invite-only summit for founders |  TechCrunch

The event comes as many of Y Combinator’s former media and events staff were laid off in recent years, prompting them to reimagine what a founder-focused event could look like outside the YC ecosystem.

Recent success stories show the power of direct media strategy: coding startup Rork landed $2.8 million after a single viral post, while defense-tech firm Theseus secured funding and attention from U.S. Special Forces after going viral on X (formerly Twitter).

By combining insider media know-how with small-group sessions, the To Do List Summit hopes to empower founders to break through noise on their own terms. The event has already generated buzz within the startup community, and applications are being reviewed on a rolling basis — with spots filling fast.

Robot Guard Dogs Help Asylon Raise $26M Series B to Scale Automated Security

Asylon, a Philadelphia-based robotics security startup, has raised a $26 million Series B round to scale its fleet of robotic guard dogs and drones. The round was led by Insight Partners, with participation from Veteran Ventures Capital, Allegion Ventures, and the GO PA Fund. This brings Asylon’s total funding to roughly $45 million.

Founded in 2015 by MIT-trained aerospace engineers, Asylon started with drone-based surveillance but gained traction with its DroneDog units — robotic patrol dogs built on Boston Dynamics’ Spot platform and equipped with thermal cameras, gas sensors, and night vision. These robots conduct autonomous or remote-controlled patrols at critical infrastructure sites, warehouses, and logistics centers.

DroneDogs are often paired with Asylon’s aerial drone systems to provide 360-degree, multi-layered surveillance. The company offers its services as part of a Robotic Security-as-a-Service (RaaS) model, which includes hardware, software, monitoring, and compliance via its 24/7 Robotic Security Operations Center.

Asylon Secures $26M Series B Funding for Innovative Robot Guard Dogs |  BEAMSTART

The startup has logged over 250,000 autonomous missions and 150,000 miles of ground patrols, making it one of the most active robotic security platforms in the U.S. Clients include private companies and government agencies seeking scalable, cost-effective alternatives to traditional human guards.

Annual pricing for a DroneDog unit ranges from $100,000 to $150,000, making it competitive with full-time security staffing, particularly for sites that require 24/7 monitoring.

With the new funding, Asylon plans to grow its engineering and go-to-market teams, expand its robotic fleet, and enhance its AI capabilities. The company is positioning itself as a leading player in the $16.5 billion robotic security market, where demand is surging for automation-driven solutions.

Asylon’s robotic dogs may soon become a common sight — patrolling perimeters with precision, day and night.

OpenAI Veterans, $2B Chaos, and the Rise of Thinking Machines Lab

Mira Murati, former Chief Technology Officer at OpenAI, has made history with a $2 billion seed round for her new startup, Thinking Machines Lab — one of the largest early-stage funding rounds ever recorded. The deal reportedly values the stealth AI company between $10 billion and $12 billion, despite having no public product, roadmap, or business model.

The funding reflects a new era of venture investing dominated by “pre-plan” bets on iconic founders. Murati, known for helping lead OpenAI’s rise, attracted funding from a star-studded list of investors, including Nvidia, Jane Street, and top venture firms like Andreessen Horowitz and Sequoia.

What makes this round even more remarkable is its structure. Murati retains a supermajority board vote, effectively giving her full control of the company’s direction. According to reports, investors agreed to these terms based largely on her reputation and the strength of her hand-picked team — which includes several former OpenAI scientists like John Schulman, Alec Radford, and Bob McGrew.

OpenAI raises $2B for mysterious Thinking Machines Lab - Zamin.uz,  18.07.2025

The company has not revealed specific details about its goals, but insiders describe it as focused on building foundational AI systems beyond today’s large language models. That secrecy hasn’t deterred investors; it has only added to the mystique and media frenzy.

With over 70% of North American venture dollars now flowing into AI, Thinking Machines Lab has become the poster child for a new kind of high-stakes startup: one fueled by pedigree, vision, and capital — but not yet by product.

The $2B round underscores a growing trend in AI investing: when the right people are at the helm, the plan can come later. Whether this bold bet pays off remains to be seen — but the spotlight is firmly on.

Tags: $2B Chaosa fast-rising aerospace and defense manufacturing startupa16z Experts Host Invite-Only Summit for Startup Foundersand military systems.and the Rise of Thinking Machines LabFormer Y CombinatorHadrianHadrian Raises $260M to Expand Automated Factories for Space and Defense Partshas raised $260 million in a Series C funding round to scale its network of automated factories designed to produce precision parts for satellitesHow a Y Combinator Food-Delivery App Used TikTok to Soar in the App StoreOpenAI VeteransRobot Guard Dogs Help Asylon Raise $26M Series B to Scale Automated SecurityrocketsstartupStartup NewsStartup updatestech newstechstory
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