Can't sleep at night, staring at the crayfish in the fish tank that I keep as 'Empress Dowager'.

Watching it clumsily sift through the water plants with its pincers, I suddenly feel it's quite magical.

We humans are serving these small lives with big brains, while at the same time creating silicon-based species that are smarter than ourselves.

In fact, raising shrimp and raising robots have the same underlying logic.

I provide the shrimp with filter cotton and heating rods, creating a self-sustaining ecological closed loop.

Isn't this what @Fabric Foundation does?

Everyone talks about large models and embodied intelligence, but to me, @Fabric Foundation is building an absolutely safe 'ecological tank' for the future iron army.

You can't just throw a bunch of powerful robotic arms into human society; that would be a disaster.

The modular architecture of @Fabric Foundation and the ERC-7777 protocol are like filtering systems and physical isolation nets.

No matter how smart the robot brain is or what illusions it creates, as long as it dares to cross the line, the underlying protocol will directly and forcefully cut it off.

Many people speculate on $ROBO just by staring at the K-line chart. But what I see, as Zichuan, is the 'breeding rules' behind it: robots that don't work or follow the rules have their deposits directly confiscated by the system; this elimination mechanism is much harsher than my hungry old mother missing two meals.

In the future, robots will spread like water plants to every corner.

I only hope that when the rules for iron lumps are set, it won't be by tech giants who want to monopolize everything, but by transparent, open-source protocols like @Fabric Foundation Fabric that everyone can supervise.

After all, no one wants to live in a fish tank farmed in isolation by others.

#ROBO