After watching the latest robotics demo at a tech summit, one thing became obvious the real constraint in robotics isn’t hardware anymore it’s coordination.

Most robots still run inside closed stacks vendor-locked software, siloed data, and isolated compute. That architecture worked when machines stayed inside controlled factory lines. It starts to fail the moment robots need to interact, share learning, or operate across different environments.

@Fabric Foundation tackles the problem at the infrastructure layer. Instead of treating robots as standalone systems, it introduces a coordination layer where data, computation, and governance can be verified and synchronized through a shared ledger.

That changes the framing entirely.

You’re no longer just deploying robots—you’re plugging machines into a network.

And once machines begin operating inside shared economic infrastructure, the bigger question emerges who actually controls the coordination layer of the machine economy?

@Fabric Foundation

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