In the past week, I repeatedly tested the developer documentation of Fabric, trying to understand the underlying logic they provide to robots for granting 'on-chain identity'. This is not a simple wallet generation, but a complete DID (Decentralized Identity) protocol that allows each machine to have an immutable 'history' on the blockchain. Imagine a warehouse robot, after completing 100,000 precise movements, its credibility score will directly affect its qualification and remuneration for bidding on the next high-end logistics task — this is no longer science fiction. I have compared many AI Agent projects; they excel in making decisions in the digital world, but they fail when it comes to physical execution. Fabric's breakthrough is that it directly integrates 'identity' and 'payment' into the robot's operating system. Last week, when I saw the details of their collaboration with Circle, where the robot can autonomously pay for charging fees using USDC, I realized that this closed loop has been established. $ROBO here is not just a settlement tool, but also the valuation unit and incentive medium for the entire robot labor market. Of course, early integration still has thresholds. Hardware manufacturers need to adapt to the new protocol, and the compliance boundaries in the real world are also blurred. But when I saw a cleaning robot equipped with the Fabric protocol automatically bidding, fulfilling contracts, and settling in a simulated environment, the prototype of an 'autonomous economy' excited me greatly. We are not creating smarter tools, but designing a set of rules that allow machines to become 'colleagues'. @Fabric Foundation $ROBO {alpha}(560x475cbf5919608e0c6af00e7bf87fab83bf3ef6e2) #ROBO
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