"Digging through Fabric Foundation’s recent notes, I’m struck by how they frame robotics coordination as a public-utility problem rather than another walled garden. The idea is simple: let autonomous agents publish capabilities, negotiate tasks, and settle verification steps without a central operator. That’s where $ROBO O starts to make sense—not as a speculative asset but as a unit that meters contributions when agents exchange proofs or data. I’ve been imagining a warehouse scenario where mobile pickers and fixed scanners bid for sub-tasks, then pay each other in $ROBO once a handoff passes local checks. It’s a small slice of what Fabric sketches, but it turns coordination into something auditable and composable. What matters now is whether their SDKs and testnets make this cheap enough for real pilots. If developers can plug in a verification module and see token flows in logs, experimentation gets concrete. I’m skeptical of grand claims, but the emphasis on open rails over proprietary stacks feels durable. I’ll keep trying tiny demos and posting findings—the path from papers to pallets is long, but the starting points are clearer than before. @Fabric Foundation _foundation #ROBO