The question was never whether KeedMartin could dock. The question is what happens now that they have.
Two KeedMartin modules are now docked to LSI 1. RESTLESS — a habitation module with enlarged crew quarters, hitchhiker storage, a KerbalNet high-speed uplink, and a survey scanner pending integration with the station's science stack — arrived first, delivered by KerbalX's SH-4B on the LSI-RESTLESS manifest. OBSERVE, an observation cupola and engineer utility station carrying spare solar panels, batteries, EVA repair kits, and jetpack stores, followed. The station now holds five docked modules and is rated for a maximum of eight crew on extended stays.
Until LSI-RESTLESS, KeedMartin was a company defined by a spec review that wouldn't close. Their docking hub had been under re-verification since Basic Station's port failure rendered the original standard moot. The question in flight circles was not whether KeedMartin's hardware was capable — it was whether the bureaucratic overhang would outlast the contract window. RESTLESS answered that by docking with an adapter that bridges legacy port geometry to the corrected standard. The spec question is now an on-orbit fact.
The program doesn't hold press events for module integrations. This is a fact pattern that rewards noticing: in the space of one flight window, KeedMartin went from waiting on a review outcome to being the company that physically changed the shape of a crewed station.