It’s funny what keeps you up at night.

A few years ago, I used to worry about AI taking my work. Every time a new model came out, I’d think, “That’s it… another part of my job gone.”

I guess a lot of us felt the same, watching all this tech grow and wondering where we fit in.👀

But recently, my thinking changed a bit.

Now I’m not just thinking about AI taking jobs… I’m thinking about the jobs AI and robots might actually have.

Sounds weird??? I know. But hear me out.

We always talk about a future full of machines, delivery drones, warehouse robots and farming bots.

But there’s one simple question nobody really asks:

How do these machines pay for anything with $ROBO ?

Think about it.🤔

If a delivery drone needs to charge at a station owned by another company, what does it do?

  • It can’t pull out a credit card.

  • It doesn’t have a bank account.

So even if the tech is ready… the system isn’t.

Machines today can work. But they can’t:

  • Pay for services

  • Prove their activity

  • Or act independently in an economy

And that’s a big gap.

Where It Gets Interesting

While thinking about this, I came across @Fabric Foundation

What caught my attention wasn’t hype. It was the idea behind it.

Instead of building robots, they’re trying to build the system that lets machines interact economically.

You can think of it like infrastructure, the backend that allows machines to:

  • Have an identity

  • Hold value

  • And make transactions

How It Actually Works

Now imagine that same drone again.

But this time, it has:

  • A digital identity

  • A wallet

  • A record of what it has done

When it reaches a charging station:

  • It connects

  • Proves who it is

  • Pays for the service

  • Gets charged and moves on

  • No human involved.

That’s where $ROBO comes in, helping machines handle these small transactions between each other.

It’s not just about a token. It’s about enabling machines to actually function in a system.

Why This Matters

This changes how we see machines.

Right now, they’re just tools.

But if they can:

  • Pay

  • Verify

  • And interact independently

Then they become participants in an economy. That’s a big shift.

I was talking to my cousin who runs a small farm, and we started imagining things.

What if his machines could:

  • Pay for energy directly

  • Access services when needed

  • Work with other machines automatically

  • Or imagine cities where robots compete for space, paying for access in real time.

It sounds futuristic but also kind of logical.

Being Real About It

That said, I’m still a bit skeptical.

This kind of system is early.

There are challenges.

And honestly, a full machine economy isn’t happening overnight.

But the idea itself makes sense.

We’ve spent years asking:

“Will machines replace us?”

Maybe the better question is:

“What happens when machines start working and paying on their own?”

Because at that point, we’re not just competing with them.

We might actually have to interact and negotiate with them too. 👀

#ROBO #AI #blockchain #Binance #crypto $ROBO

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