Jan. 14 at 1:33 PM
$TEMT Algorhythm Holdings Inc isn’t leaning on flashy words here, it’s leaning on demanding counterparties with measurable economics. Apollo Tyres is framed at
$5B+ annual sales, and the expansion is described with a clear operational footprint: 20 high-density lanes and up to
$2.5M annual revenue capacity. That is the type of commercial framing that tends to show up when a solution is being used in real routing and delivery workflows, not just tested. High-density lanes are where optimization has the most leverage because frequency and repeat cycles are high, so improvements compound. When a large operator scales on dense corridors and the company is comfortable attaching an annual revenue capacity number to it, the narrative shifts from “interest” to “embedded utilization”