I want to see how far Fabric can take the idea of 'human-readable'.

Recently, I've seen too many homogenized posts, and I've started to focus on a point that fewer people discuss: is this system really 'human-readable'? Once the robot network becomes complex, the biggest fear is that the rules only make sense to machines, leaving humans with a black box. The black box may look good in the short term, but in the long run, once an accident occurs, no one dares to use it because no one can explain the boundaries, and no one can audit the responsibilities. For us ordinary users, what can best differentiate the maturity of a project is not how hard the terminology is piled up, but whether it dares to write the rules in a readable and verifiable way, even putting the 'ugly truths' upfront.

When I looked at the public materials of @Fabric Foundation , one point in its favor was that it does not shy away from risks; instead, it is willing to write the mechanisms, assumptions, and pathways more like engineering documents, not just a PPT slide. You can read from it that it's trying to turn machine cooperation into an understandable system: who can participate, how costs are incurred, how rules are adjusted, and what happens if the system is attacked. Even if you don't write code, you can grasp that it emphasizes 'publicly readable order', rather than just stressing that 'machines will solve it automatically'.

I also casually checked the price; ROBO is currently around 0.04045 USD, with considerable volatility, circulating about 2.231 billion, a cap of 10 billion, and a market value of around 90 million USD. During active periods, it's easy for people to focus on the K-line, but I prefer to think of it as an exam question: when it releases updates, can outsiders understand what rules are changing, whether the changes are explained, and if the rule changes can be reviewed? If it can achieve these, I'm willing to consider it a worthwhile long-term order experiment. If not, then no matter how lively it is, it’s just noise. Do you think the 'readability' of a project is important, or is it enough as long as it can rise?

@Fabric Foundation $ROBO #ROBO