But the more I looked into it, the more I realized the real idea behind Fabric is much bigger than just connecting robots.
What Fabric is actually trying to build is an infrastructure where machine actions themselves become valuable.
Right now most robots work in isolated systems. A robot performs a task, the job gets done, and thatâs it. The action disappears into the system that used it. Other machines usually canât verify it or reuse it easily.
Fabric is trying to change this model.
Through something called OM1, the goal is to make machine behavior portable. In simple words, if one machine completes a task, that action can be verified, recorded, and reused by another machine later.
So instead of every robot starting from zero, machines can build on top of actions that were already performed before.
This creates a completely new idea: physical actions becoming economic units.
In the future, value might not come from just owning robots. Instead, the real value could come from verified actions, trusted datasets, and machine activity that other systems can reuse.
Think about it like this.
A robot delivering something, assembling a part, scanning an environment, or performing any task could generate data that becomes part of a shared machine economy. Once that action is verified, it can be referenced again and again.
That means productivity itself becomes something composable.
A task done once doesnât just disappear. It becomes something that other machines can learn from, reuse, or build on top of.
If this kind of system actually works at scale, it could completely change how we think about robotics.
Because in that world, the real asset will not just be the robot.
The real asset will be the verified actions it produces.