In the past couple of days, I've seen many people discussing the robotics track, but I didn't rush to follow the sentiment right away.
What truly made me pause and think is the topic that Fabric Foundation wants to discuss:
If in the future, the entities executing tasks are not just humans, but autonomous agents and robots that can cooperate, call resources,
and make decisions, then should the on-chain world also prepare a new set of rules for them?
I think the most interesting aspect of this direction is not how new the concept is, but how it connects the digital world with real actions. In the past, many narratives occurred on screens, with assets, information, and attention flowing continuously;
However, if the robot economy truly takes shape, it will impact logistics, services, manufacturing, and even the ways in which humans and machines collaborate.
#ROBO
So when I look at the narrative of ROBO,
I don't just treat it as a hot topic tag. What concerns me more is whether it is attempting to answer a longer-term question: When machines start participating in value creation,
@Fabric Foundation
how should on-chain incentives, task allocation, and boundaries of responsibility be redefined?
This kind of direction may not be understood by everyone in the short term because it requires technical implementation and time for validation. But it is precisely this stage of growth that is most worth observing seriously. For me, the appeal of Fabric Foundation and ROBO is not short-term stimulation, but that they are gradually sketching out the outline of the future robot economy.
$ROBO
What truly made me pause and think is the topic that Fabric Foundation wants to discuss:
If in the future, the entities executing tasks are not just humans, but autonomous agents and robots that can cooperate, call resources,
and make decisions, then should the on-chain world also prepare a new set of rules for them?
I think the most interesting aspect of this direction is not how new the concept is, but how it connects the digital world with real actions. In the past, many narratives occurred on screens, with assets, information, and attention flowing continuously;
However, if the robot economy truly takes shape, it will impact logistics, services, manufacturing, and even the ways in which humans and machines collaborate.
#ROBO
So when I look at the narrative of ROBO,
I don't just treat it as a hot topic tag. What concerns me more is whether it is attempting to answer a longer-term question: When machines start participating in value creation,
@Fabric Foundation
how should on-chain incentives, task allocation, and boundaries of responsibility be redefined?
This kind of direction may not be understood by everyone in the short term because it requires technical implementation and time for validation. But it is precisely this stage of growth that is most worth observing seriously. For me, the appeal of Fabric Foundation and ROBO is not short-term stimulation, but that they are gradually sketching out the outline of the future robot economy.
$ROBO