@Fabric Foundation #robo $ROBO

Wow, have you ever thought about how much data is sent from space telescopes to Earth every night? The answer is: Petabytes. Imagine trying to find a small planet among such a massive pile of data manually. Impossible, right?

This is where AI and decentralized networks like Fabric Foundation start to change the game. We no longer rely on a single supercomputer in one location, but leverage global computing power.

Not Just Data, But Mass Discoveries

By breaking down astronomical data into small fragments and sending them to the Fabric node network, the process of identifying black holes or new exoplanets becomes much faster. Interestingly, anyone who lends their computing power can receive incentives in the form of ROBO. This is a tangible form of citizen science—where the public is not just a spectator but actively helps map the universe.

Autonomous Robotics on Mars

The main issue of exploration on Mars is the communication time delay. Robots cannot wait for instructions from Earth for every small step. The future of space robotics lies in autonomy.

The AI model trained on the Fabric network enables robots to make instant decisions on the spot. Here, ROBO acts as a transparent software license management system between organizations. Thus, collaboration between space agencies can run more smoothly without complicated bureaucracy in the vacuum of space.

Core

The universe is vast, but our technology is starting to catch up. Through a combination of decentralized AI and Fabric infrastructure, space exploration becomes cheaper, faster, and most importantly: belongs to all of us.