#robo $ROBO @Fabric Foundation #ROBO

Here’s something I keep thinking about when it comes to robotics.

Everyone is focused on the machines.

Better movement.

Better AI models.

More impressive demos.

But what happens when thousands or even millions of robots start operating in the real world?

Who coordinates them?

Robots won’t live in isolation. They’ll exist in warehouses, factories, cities, and supply chains where they constantly interact with other machines, systems, and data.

Without coordination, everything becomes fragmented.

That’s why projects like ROBO / Fabric are interesting to watch.

Instead of focusing only on the robots themselves, the idea is to build the network layer behind them infrastructure that allows machines to coordinate, verify actions, and interact within a shared system.

Think about it like this:

The internet didn’t become powerful because of individual websites.

It became powerful because of the protocols connecting everything together.

Robotics might need the same thing.

Not just smarter machines but systems that allow them to work together.

And if the next decade really brings millions of autonomous machines into the real world, the coordination layer might matter even more than the robots themselves.

Sometimes the biggest shifts don’t come from the hardware.

They come from the infrastructure quietly forming underneath it.

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