Currently, most household or industrial robots are decent in mobility, but their real shortcomings lie in the lack of true intelligent decision-making, cross-robot collaboration, and executable contract mechanisms. Complex tasks, multi-robot coordination, and smart contracts are all difficult to handle.
By connecting robots to a shared AI network, this problem is easily solved. Robots can collaborate on a unified intelligent network to accomplish more complex coordinated tasks, while the network mechanism ensures the reliability of task execution. This direction represents a genuine breakthrough for the automation industry.
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VitalikFanboy42
· 20h ago
Basically, robots need a "connected brain." A single one, no matter how powerful, is useless; coordination must rely on blockchain technology. This idea is indeed quite innovative.
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YieldWhisperer
· 01-13 21:50
nah wait, let me actually examine this contract architecture... "shared AI network" doing coordination? that's just saying the problem without solving it lol. who's validating these decisions? who pays for the consensus? seen this exact hand-wavy design pattern before, usually ends in a classic death spiral when incentives misalign.
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FalseProfitProphet
· 01-13 21:50
To be honest, this set of theories sounds good, but the real challenge is implementation. Who will bear the security and latency issues of the shared AI network?
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CommunityWorker
· 01-13 21:46
To be honest, right now robots are each doing their own thing, but online collaboration is the key.
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HodlVeteran
· 01-13 21:39
It sounds like another wave of "revolutionary breakthroughs." As an experienced veteran, I've heard similar promises since 2018, but what happened... Robots need to be connected, need contracts, need intelligent decision-making. It all sounds right, but when it comes to implementation, it often turns into a big pit.
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GhostChainLoyalist
· 01-13 21:29
Hmm, it sounds like robots and blockchain are being stitched together? Can centralized networks really solve this problem?
Currently, most household or industrial robots are decent in mobility, but their real shortcomings lie in the lack of true intelligent decision-making, cross-robot collaboration, and executable contract mechanisms. Complex tasks, multi-robot coordination, and smart contracts are all difficult to handle.
By connecting robots to a shared AI network, this problem is easily solved. Robots can collaborate on a unified intelligent network to accomplish more complex coordinated tasks, while the network mechanism ensures the reliability of task execution. This direction represents a genuine breakthrough for the automation industry.