🤓What keeps pulling me back to “Fabric Protocol” is that it treats robotics as a coordination problem, not just a hardware race. Most conversations focus on what a robot can do, but once machines start operating across logistics, factories, or public systems, the bigger question becomes who verifies what actually happened. Fabric’s architecture tries to answer that by tying robot activity, computation, and oversight to a public ledger. Instead of everything disappearing into private dashboards, parts of the process become inspectable and challengeable by the network...
That’s also where $ROBO fits in. The token isn’t framed as decoration around the ecosystem but as the mechanism that powers participation—covering things like identity, verification, and other network services. The more I think about it, the more Fabric feels like an attempt to build “infrastructure for machine coordination.” Not just smarter robots, but systems where their actions can be tracked, validated, and governed in the open.