Last week I was at a testing ground and saw two robots of different brands standing face to face, ignoring each other. The scene was reminiscent of two socially anxious youths at a blind date meeting—clearly suitable for each other, yet too afraid to speak up.

I couldn't help but ask the engineer: Why aren't they chatting?

The engineer smiled wryly: They can't chat, one speaks in Chinese protocol and the other in English protocol, with ten translators in between.

This is what I find most down-to-earth about Fabric Foundation—it equips robots with a "translation software." No matter which brand you're from, as long as you connect to the OM1 operating system, you can instantly add friends, create group chats, and take on tasks. That day, I personally clicked "pair" in the backend, and the two robots paused for a second before simultaneously turning to me and nodding.

At that moment, I suddenly understood that true intelligence isn't about how fast you can run, but whether you can communicate with others. What Fabric Foundation is doing is organizing a "blind date meeting" for these lonely robots—first getting to know each other, then collaborating, and ultimately working together to make money.

By that day, robots are no longer islands but the most active bunch in the group chat.
#robo $ROBO @Fabric Foundation