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Veea Inc. Launches TerraFabric, Paving the Way to Operate AI and Autonomous Systems at the Edge

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Veea (NASDAQ: VEEA) launched TerraFabric, a control plane to automate and govern distributed edge environments for operating AI and autonomous systems at scale. TerraFabric offers fleet orchestration, policy enforcement, and software lifecycle management built on prpl LCM, and is available for early pilot deployments.

It runs standalone, integrated inside VeeaONE, or in hybrid mode to unify multi-vendor, multi-site infrastructures with automated rollouts, health checks, and one-click rollback.

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Positive

  • Built on prpl LCM proven at scale across 12 million AT&T gateways
  • Available now for pilots, enabling early operator evaluation
  • Policy enforcement + one-click rollback for safer fleet updates
  • Multi-mode deployment: standalone, VeeaONE-integrated, or hybrid

Negative

  • Pilot-stage availability only; general availability timeline not disclosed
  • No pricing or SLA details provided for commercial deployments

Key Figures

Event dates: March 2–4, 2026 Current price: $0.4322 52-week high: $2.60 +5 more
8 metrics
Event dates March 2–4, 2026 Mobile World Congress 2026 demonstration of TerraFabric
Current price $0.4322 Pre-news trading level vs 52-week range
52-week high $2.60 Shares trading 83.38% below this level pre-news
52-week low $0.3828 Shares were 12.9% above this level pre-news
Market cap $22,085,744 Equity value before TerraFabric announcement
AT&T gateways managed 12,000,000+ Scale where prpl LCM lifecycle engine has been proven
Device fleet scale 10 to 10,000 sites TerraFabric positioning from small to very large deployments
Smart Villages sites 75 sites Prior Viasat Mexico collaboration footprint (edge deployments)

Market Reality Check

Price: $0.4322 Vol: Volume 32,481 vs 20-day a...
low vol
$0.4322 Last Close
Volume Volume 32,481 vs 20-day average 77,110 (about 0.42x typical activity ahead of this news). low
Technical Shares at $0.4322, trading below the $0.99 200-day moving average and 83.38% under the 52-week high.

Peers on Argus

VEEA was down 1.84% while several peers like GLE, JDZG, TDTH, CYCU, and ARBB app...
5 Up

VEEA was down 1.84% while several peers like GLE, JDZG, TDTH, CYCU, and ARBB appeared in momentum scans with moves to the upside, indicating this AI edge launch looked more stock-specific than sector-driven.

Previous AI Reports

1 past event · Latest: Aug 19 (Positive)
Same Type Pattern 1 events
Date Event Sentiment Move Catalyst
Aug 19 AI edge deployment Positive +8.6% Launched edge-based AI safety and asset intelligence platform with partner.
Pattern Detected

Limited AI-tagged history shows prior AI news coincided with a positive move of 8.61% over 24 hours.

Recent Company History

Recent history for VEEA shows a focus on edge-based AI and intelligent platforms. On Aug 19, 2025, an AI-powered safety and asset intelligence deployment on VeeaONE delivered real-time monitoring entirely at the edge and the stock moved +8.61% over 24 hours. Separately, on Dec 10, 2025, Veea announced a collaboration with Viasat Mexico to extend edge connectivity and applications across underserved regions, supporting a broader strategy around managed edge services.

Historical Comparison

+8.6% avg move · In the past year, VEEA reported one AI-tagged edge deployment, which saw a +8.61% 24-hour move, fram...
AI
+8.6%
Average Historical Move AI

In the past year, VEEA reported one AI-tagged edge deployment, which saw a +8.61% 24-hour move, framing TerraFabric as a continuation of its AI-at-the-edge roadmap.

VEEA’s AI news flow progressed from an edge AI deployment for construction safety in 2025 toward a broader control plane, TerraFabric, aimed at orchestrating AI and autonomous workloads across heterogeneous edge environments.

Market Pulse Summary

This announcement introduces TerraFabric, a control plane designed to coordinate AI and autonomous w...
Analysis

This announcement introduces TerraFabric, a control plane designed to coordinate AI and autonomous workloads across heterogeneous edge environments. It builds on earlier edge AI deployments, such as the Aug 19, 2025 construction safety platform, and leverages prpl LCM, already used on over 12 million gateways. Investors may watch for pilot adoption, integration into VeeaONE, balance-sheet developments, and ongoing Nasdaq compliance milestones as the TerraFabric strategy unfolds.

Key Terms

control plane, edge computing, kubernetes, open-source, +2 more
6 terms
control plane technical
"demonstrating a groundbreaking control plane for distributed edge environments"
The control plane is the part of a computer network or cloud system that makes and enforces decisions about where data goes, how services are configured, and which security rules apply—think of it as the system’s air-traffic control. It matters to investors because a reliable, secure and scalable control plane determines how well a company’s digital services perform, how easily they grow, and how costly or risky operations and compliance can be, affecting revenue and valuation.
edge computing technical
"Veea’s edge computing platform"
Edge computing is a technology that processes data close to where it is generated, such as sensors or devices, rather than sending it all to a distant central location. This allows for faster decision-making and reduces delays, much like having a local office handle urgent matters instead of waiting for instructions from a main headquarters. For investors, it signifies improved efficiency and real-time insights, which can enhance the performance of technology-dependent industries.
kubernetes technical
"It does not replace Kubernetes, operating systems, or hardware."
Kubernetes is an open-source system that automates running and managing many pieces of software across groups of computers, like a conductor coordinating musicians so each piece plays at the right time and place. For investors, it matters because companies that use it can deploy updates faster, scale services up or down automatically, and cut infrastructure costs — factors that influence growth, reliability and operating margins.
open-source technical
"prpl LCM, the open-source lifecycle management engine developed by the prpl Foundation."
Open-source describes software, tools, or designs whose underlying code or blueprint is made publicly available so anyone can inspect, modify, and share it. For investors it matters because open-source can accelerate innovation and lower costs by tapping a community of contributors—like a shared recipe improving over time—but it also changes how a company earns money, creates potential licensing or support risks, and affects competitive advantage and security through transparency.
federated learning technical
"roll out AI model updates, whether via cloud distribution or federated learning"
A method of building artificial intelligence where many devices or locations train the same model using their own private data and only share the model updates, not the raw data—like many cooks each stirring their own pot and sending a note about what worked. It matters to investors because it lets companies improve products and personalization while lowering data-transfer costs and privacy risk, affecting regulatory compliance, customer trust, and the scalability and competitive value of AI-based offerings.
carrier-grade technical
"TerraFabric brings that same carrier-grade lifecycle management to every edge environment"
Carrier-grade describes hardware, software or services built to the high reliability, capacity and security standards required by major telecommunications providers. Think of it like industrial-strength equipment meant to run continuously without failure—similar to a commercial airplane compared with a consumer vehicle—and important to investors because carrier-grade products signal lower operational risk, larger contract opportunities and steadier revenue prospects from institutional customers.

AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

At Mobile World Congress 2026 in Barcelona, March 2-4, Veea will be demonstrating a groundbreaking control plane for distributed edge environments organizations with multiple deployments can automate management of AI workloads, network-wide across fleets of devices, with policy enforcement, and software lifecycle management powered by prpl LCM

NEW YORK, Feb. 26, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Veea Inc. (NASDAQ: VEEA) today announced TerraFabric, a transformative control plane that enables organizations to automate distributed edge environments composed of multi-vendor heterogeneous networks as highly coordinated systems rather than collections of individual devices or networks. TerraFabric brings together fleet orchestration, policy enforcement, and software lifecycle management to give operators the visibility and control they need to run AI workloads at the edge safely and at scale.

TerraFabric is available for early deployments now, both as a standalone platform and as an integrated capability within VeeaONE, Veea’s edge computing platform.

The Gap Between Deploying Edge Infrastructure and Actually Operating It

The edge computing industry has become proficient at deploying hardware in the field. Organizations can register devices, push containers, and monitor basic health across dozens or hundreds of locations. However, a growing gap remains between deploying edge infrastructure and operating it efficiently with minimal overhead.

The challenges are familiar to anyone managing a multi-site enterprise. One service may require GPU resources, while another must provide guest Wi-Fi with a captive portal. Security policies must apply consistently across every location. A software update at one site should not disrupt the entire fleet. When each location is managed independently, every change introduces risk, and teams end up performing work that could otherwise be automated.

“We have spent the last decade making multiaccess edge computing easier to deploy,” said Allen Salmasi, co-founder and CEO of Veea. “We believe TerraFabric is about what comes next. Our customers are telling us that deployment is no longer the hard part. The challenge is coordinating dozens to hundreds of sites, keeping policies consistent, and maintaining uniform application of cybersecurity while rolling out changes without disruption. We built TerraFabric to address exactly that.”

What TerraFabric Does

TerraFabric sits above existing infrastructure. It does not replace Kubernetes, operating systems, or hardware. Instead, it provides a coordination layer that understands the full structure of an edge deployment — from fleet to region to site to device, and makes that structure actionable, instantly customizable, and verifiable.

Operators define policies that are enforced consistently at every level. Workloads are optimally placed based on use case requirements and constraints, rather than guesswork. Software rollouts follow controlled sequences with health checks at each stage and one-click rollback if issues arise. Every action is logged, auditable, and tied to a clear chain of accountability.

Instead of asking, “Which device should run this container?”, operators define where a system should run, under what constraints, and within what policy boundaries. TerraFabric is designed to handles the rest. Its implementation also offers the ability to continuously enhance the automation from edge to cloud in dynamic, resource constrained edge environments through machine learning and AI,

Carrier-Grade Lifecycle Management with prpl LCM

For software lifecycle management, TerraFabric incorporates prpl LCM, the open-source lifecycle management engine developed by the prpl Foundation. prpl LCM has been proven at scale, managing containerized applications across more than 12 million AT&T gateways. It enables operators to remotely deploy, update, pause, restart, and remove individual containerized applications without affecting the underlying system firmware.

By building on prpl LCM, TerraFabric inherits a lifecycle management layer that has been battle-tested across some of the largest device fleets in the world. Applications can be managed independently, updated on their own schedules, and rolled back individually if a problem is detected. Based on large scale deployments to date, we believe this allows organizations to accelerate updates and deploy new capabilities without compromising overall system stability.

“We chose prpl LCM because it is the most proven open-source lifecycle management engine available,” Mr. Salmasi said. “TerraFabric brings that same carrier-grade lifecycle management to every edge environment, whether you are operating ten sites or ten thousand.”

Governed Autonomy for AI at the Edge

As AI agents and automated workflows become standard edge workloads, governance becomes increasingly critical. These systems make decisions, take actions, and interact with physical environments. Granting them access without clear boundaries creates risk.

TerraFabric introduces a principle Veea calls “governed autonomy.” AI agents and automation run as workloads under explicit identity, scope, and policy controls. They operate within defined boundaries, enforced by the TerraFabric control plane, rather than relying on manual oversight at each site.

This matters because the promise of edge AI depends on trust. Organizations deploying these systems must be confident that autonomous workloads operate within defined and enforceable limits. TerraFabric makes that confidence possible by design.

What Operators Can Do on Day One

TerraFabric is designed to deliver immediate value. On day one, operators can roll out AI model updates, whether via cloud distribution or federated learning, by region with automated health checks and failover. TerraFabric can publish network policies across entire fleets in controlled batches with immediate rollback capability. It can coordinate sensor-triggered workflows across sites without manual integration. And it can version, stage, and promote workloads with full change history and accountability.

These are the challenges that typically emerge when edge deployments transition from pilot to production. TerraFabric was built to address them from the outset.

Three Ways to Deploy

TerraFabric runs as a standalone control plane across any mix of data centers, edge clusters, and Kubernetes environments — no rip-and-replace required. With VeeaONE, it is available directly within the Veea Control Center, where operators can enroll VeeaHubs and additional nodes and activate orchestration, policy, and lifecycle controls across the mesh. In hybrid mode, TerraFabric bridges VeeaONE and non-Veea environments under a unified control plane, enabling organizations to automate diverse infrastructure as a single coordinated system.

Availability

TerraFabric is currently available for pilot deployments. Organizations interested in evaluating TerraFabric can request early access, schedule a pilot discussion, or explore partner and licensing opportunities at veea.com.

About Veea Inc.

Veea Inc. (NASDAQ: VEEA) is a global leader in AI-driven edge infrastructure. Founded in 2014 and headquartered in New York City, Veea’s platform integrates connectivity, computing, cybersecurity, storage and AI in a unified solution for edge deployments ranging from SMBs to enterprise campuses, smart industries and remote communities. With more than 123 patents in related technology domains, Veea has been recognized by Gartner for its edge computing innovation. For more information, visit veea.com.

About the prpl Foundation

The prpl Foundation is a collaborative open-source community dedicated to open APIs and open industry standards for carrier-grade software. Its members include leading service providers, equipment manufacturers, and chip vendors working together to advance open-source infrastructure for broadband and edge devices. For more information, visit prplfoundation.org.

Media Contact:

Thomas Latiolais
thomas.latiolais@veeasystems.com

Forward-Looking Statements

Certain statements in this press release constitute “forward-looking statements.” Such forward-looking statements are often identified by words such as “believe,” “may,” “will,” “estimate,” “continue,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “expect,” “should,” “would,” “plan,” “predict,” “forecasted,” “projected,” “potential,” “seem,” “future,” “outlook,” and similar expressions that predict or indicate future events or trends or otherwise indicate statements that are not of historical matters, but the absence of these words does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. Forward-looking statements include, among other things, statements relating to the intended use of proceeds from our future offerings. These forward-looking statements and factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from current expectations include, but are not limited to: the ability of Veea to grow and manage growth profitably, maintain key relationships and retain its management and key employees; risks related to the uncertainty of the projected financial information with respect to Veea; risks related to the price of Veea’s securities, including volatility resulting from changes in the competitive and highly regulated industries in which Veea plans to operate, variations in performance across competitors, changes in laws and regulations affecting Veea’s business and changes in the combined capital structure; and risks related to the ability to implement business plans, forecasts, and other expectations and identify and realize additional opportunities. The foregoing list of factors is not exhaustive.

All statements other than statements of historical facts included in this press release regarding the Company's strategies, prospects, financial condition, operations, costs, plans and objectives are forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause the Company's actual results and financial condition to differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, risks and uncertainties including those regarding: the Company's business strategies, and the risk and uncertainties described in "Risk Factors," "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations," "Cautionary Note on Forward-Looking Statements" and the additional risk described in Veea’s annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, registration statements on Form S-1, and any other filings which Veea makes with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. You should not rely upon forward-looking statements as predictions of future events. The forward-looking statements made in the press release relate only to events or information as of the date on which the statements are made in the press release. We undertake no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, after the date on which the statements are made or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events except as required by law. You should read this press release with the understanding that our actual future results may be materially different from what we expect.

Stockholders and prospective investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which only speak as of the date made, are not a guarantee of future performance and are subject to a number of uncertainties, risks, assumptions and other factors, many of which are outside the control of Veea. Veea expressly disclaims any obligations or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward-looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in the expectations of Veea with respect thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any statement is based.


FAQ

What is TerraFabric from Veea (VEEA) and what does it do?

TerraFabric is a control plane that automates distributed edge operations and enforces policies across fleets. According to the company, it provides orchestration, policy enforcement, and lifecycle management to run AI workloads at the edge safely and at scale.

How does TerraFabric use prpl LCM for lifecycle management?

TerraFabric incorporates prpl LCM to manage containerized applications independently across fleets. According to the company, prpl LCM has been proven at scale, managing containerized apps across more than 12 million AT&T gateways.

How can organizations deploy TerraFabric with VeeaONE and non-Veea environments?

TerraFabric runs standalone, inside VeeaONE, or in hybrid mode to unify diverse infrastructure under one control plane. According to the company, hybrid mode bridges VeeaONE and non-Veea environments for coordinated automation.

What immediate capabilities does TerraFabric provide on day one for operators?

On day one, operators can roll out AI model updates, publish fleet-wide policies, and perform staged software rollouts with health checks and rollback. According to the company, TerraFabric supports region-based updates, failover, and change-history for accountability.

Is TerraFabric generally available and how can enterprises get access?

TerraFabric is currently available for pilot deployments and early access requests. According to the company, organizations can request early access, schedule pilots, or explore partner and licensing opportunities via veea.com.
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