The part of Fabric that keeps pulling me back is that it treats robotics less like a hardware story and more like a coordination problem. The interesting layer is how it tries to connect robot identity, payments, data, and compute into one open system, so machines can access resources, settle work, and improve through shared infrastructure instead of closed silos. $ROBO sits in that loop as the fee, staking, and governance asset, while the broader design leans on verified tasks, modular skills, and markets for data and compute. The open question is whether this stays efficient once real robots, real latency, and real operators show up at scale. I’ll be watching repeat usage, developer participation, and whether the economics hold up beyond the first wave of curiosity.
@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO
@Fabric Foundation #ROBO $ROBO
