"Reading Fabric Foundation’s latest drafts, I keep returning to the way they treat coordination as infrastructure: agents advertise abilities, peers check results, and small payments in $ROBO settle who did which verification step. It sounds abstract, but I tried a modest simulation—a set of delivery bots passing parcels across zones, each handoff confirmed by a lightweight proof. When zones dispute a scan, the protocol deducts a tiny $ROBO BO fee and reroutes for a second opinion. Nothing glamorous, yet it demonstrates how trust can be budgeted instead of assumed. What separates Fabric’s notes from generic robotics pitches is the attention to boring details—message formats, timeouts, reputation decays—that decide whether labs become fieldwork. I’m skeptical of timelines, but not of the direction: open coordination beats another silo. If their next testnet keeps fees readable and SDKs copy-paste friendly, small teams could embed $ROBO flows in real chores without a research department. I’ll keep posting little experiments, because seeing receipts on-chain for mundane handoffs tells me more than whitepaper diagrams. @Fabric Foundation _foundation #ROBO