When I first started reading about Fabric Foundation, I did not feel the usual hype energy that surrounds many crypto projects. Instead, I felt something more grounded. They are not trying to build another digital trend that lives only on screens. They are focusing on robots, real machines that move in warehouses, deliver goods, operate in factories, and slowly become part of daily life. That immediately made me pause and think more seriously about what they are building.



Right now, most robot systems are controlled by private companies. A company raises money, buys hardware, manages operations, collects the data, and keeps everything inside its own ecosystem. These systems rarely connect with each other. If one company builds delivery robots and another builds warehouse robots, they operate separately. There is no shared identity layer, no shared payment rail, and no open coordination system. It becomes a collection of isolated systems instead of a connected robot economy.



Fabric Foundation is trying to change that structure. They are building an open network where robots can have identity, wallets, coordination rules, and programmable economic participation. When I think about this, it feels like


@Fabric Foundation $ROBO #ROBO