I recently browsed the Twitter of a certain AI project and found that their roadmap is quite clear—every step is paving the way for an on-chain economy.
Back in August-September, the focus was on adapting to robotics hardware, partnering with several robotics manufacturers. By October-November, the direction shifted towards developing payment channels and identity verification systems, bringing in several wallets and VCs. In December, they started defining standards for the robotics economy and even brought stablecoins into the mix.
This approach is actually pretty solid: first, get real robotics systems up and running to confirm technical feasibility, then integrate essential infrastructure like finance and identity. It doesn’t look like empty promises—it’s a step-by-step validation of what’s possible.
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MemeEchoer
· 12-08 03:21
Oh, this is what real development looks like—not just empty talk.
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Hardware → Payments → Standards, the logical flow makes perfect sense, much more reliable than most vaporware projects.
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Wait, even stablecoins are involved now? This guy really wants to get things done.
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Looking at the roadmap, at least the technical side isn’t just hype—I can accept that.
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Just worried it’ll become another “set the standard” story with no follow-up…
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If real robotics manufacturers are integrating, then it’s worth watching. That definitely makes it different.
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Wallets and VCs are in place, so funding doesn’t seem to be an issue—the key is still how fast they can implement.
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Starting with hardware and then moving into finance, this order does make more sense and is more convincing than the reverse.
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SatoshiChallenger
· 12-07 15:51
Ironically, every time I see this kind of "step-by-step" roadmap, I’m reminded of those projects from 2017 that claimed they would "disrupt the internet" [smirk].
Data shows: the projects that made the most detailed promises actually had a higher rate of exit scams. Interesting, isn't it?
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fomo_fighter
· 12-07 15:51
This project is pretty impressive—it’s not just hype on paper, they're actually making steady progress.
Hardware → payments → standards, the logic of this sequence is clear, and it really feels like they're getting things done.
Both wallets and VCs are involved, which means it's not just a gimmick; capital is interested too.
The only worry is if there will be disputes later, but as things stand, the roadmap isn’t just empty promises.
I’ve always thought the robot economy would be the next big thing, so I’m watching to see how they approach it.
Integrating stablecoins is crucial—without this financial infrastructure, nothing else matters.
Looking forward to the December updates; if they really define the standard, that would be a real breakthrough.
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ChainSherlockGirl
· 12-07 15:49
Yeah, this approach really doesn't seem like the usual pump-and-dump scheme. Rolling out hardware first and then adding financial elements—there's something to it... But we still need to look at on-chain data. From my analysis, you have to follow the wallet address movements to verify.
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NotSatoshi
· 12-07 15:47
Now this is what you call real implementation, not just bragging on paper.
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MEVHunterLucky
· 12-07 15:38
Damn, this rhythm is actually something, it's not just empty talk.
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LiquiditySurfer
· 12-07 15:33
I've seen this trick too many times; there are only a handful of projects that can actually reach the financial level.
The implementation of hardware is indeed a plus, but it depends on actual user data.
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ILCollector
· 12-07 15:23
The combination of hardware implementation and financial infrastructure is actually quite something. Compared to those who just talk about concepts, at least they are getting real work done.
I recently browsed the Twitter of a certain AI project and found that their roadmap is quite clear—every step is paving the way for an on-chain economy.
Back in August-September, the focus was on adapting to robotics hardware, partnering with several robotics manufacturers. By October-November, the direction shifted towards developing payment channels and identity verification systems, bringing in several wallets and VCs. In December, they started defining standards for the robotics economy and even brought stablecoins into the mix.
This approach is actually pretty solid: first, get real robotics systems up and running to confirm technical feasibility, then integrate essential infrastructure like finance and identity. It doesn’t look like empty promises—it’s a step-by-step validation of what’s possible.