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When @openmind_agi integrated with Virtuals Protocol, the point wasn’t robots or agents on their own. It was about closing the gap between deciding and doing.
Before this, agents could plan.
Robots could move.
But they didn’t belong to the same economic system.
That’s what changed.
Now, a single agent can coordinate tasks, allocate capital, and trigger actions across physical robots. In return, robots send back real-time state, location, and sensor data.
No human approvals. No manual steps. Just a clean loop from intent to execution.
That’s the difference between automation and real autonomy.
Most “agent economy” conversations stop at software talking to software.
OpenMind pushed it into the physical world, where coordination is harder and trust actually matters.
What makes this integration important, even now, is that it tackled the hard questions early: How do machines coordinate without supervision? How do they pay, verify, and act without breaking the system?
OpenMind didn’t wait for those problems to slow things down.
It built the rails first. And as agents move out of the cloud and into real environments, this moment looks less like an old update and more like the starting point for embodied autonomy at scale.