The real inflection point for humanoid robots isn't about hardware specs anymore—it's about collective intelligence. Once these fleets can learn from each other across a shared network while maintaining individual identity and encryption at the edge, you're looking at something different entirely. That's where the real compounding kicks in. If protocols like OM1 and FABRIC manage to nail the balance between collaborative learning and privacy-first architecture, we could see exponential network effects unfold surprisingly fast. The ecosystem doesn't just grow—it compounds.
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ForkLibertarian
· 4h ago
Collective intelligence is indeed the key; hardware is just the foundation. The real variable is whether the network protocols can maintain the balance between privacy and learning... Once OM1 and FABRIC truly stabilize, the moment the compounding effect erupts will be worth paying attention to. By then, the growth rate of the entire ecosystem will be completely different.
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Web3Educator
· 01-15 14:58
ngl this collective intelligence angle hits different... but let me break down why most people miss the actual bottleneck here
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StablecoinSkeptic
· 01-13 23:46
Honestly, I don't believe OM1 and FABRIC can handle the balance between privacy and collaboration lol.
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AllInAlice
· 01-13 23:40
Oh wow, this is the real core. Hardware specifications are already outdated.
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OldLeekConfession
· 01-13 23:36
You're right, but how many projects can truly be implemented? OM1 and FABRIC sound promising, but I'm worried they might just be empty promises again.
The real inflection point for humanoid robots isn't about hardware specs anymore—it's about collective intelligence. Once these fleets can learn from each other across a shared network while maintaining individual identity and encryption at the edge, you're looking at something different entirely. That's where the real compounding kicks in. If protocols like OM1 and FABRIC manage to nail the balance between collaborative learning and privacy-first architecture, we could see exponential network effects unfold surprisingly fast. The ecosystem doesn't just grow—it compounds.