@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO
I’ve been checking back on Fabric Protocol lately, trying to see if the recent updates actually change anything meaningful. At this stage, I’m less interested in big promises and more focused on whether the system is getting closer to real-world use.
Some of the progress looks promising. The push toward verifiable computing and agent-native infrastructure could eventually make collaboration between humans and machines more transparent and reliable.
If actions and decisions can actually be verified on a public ledger, that would be a big step for accountability in autonomous systems.
But right now it still feels like the foundation is being built rather than a network under real pressure.
The real test will come when more developers start building on it and more autonomous agents begin interacting through the system.
That’s when we’ll see whether the architecture truly works or if it struggles once complexity increases.
For now, my view is simple: the direction looks thoughtful, but the proof still needs to come from real usage.
