Two projects are quietly building the infrastructure for autonomous agents, but they're attacking the problem from completely different angles.
One side is tackling the hardware layer—think of it as building the nervous system. Their OS handles everything from spatial awareness to physical movement, basically teaching robots how to see and interact with the real world. No more custom code for every single device.
The other? They're constructing the economic brain. Picture a bazaar where AI agents don't just exist—they hustle. These entities can strike deals, map out strategies, sync up with each other, and actually move value around. Not just executing pre-programmed tasks, but making decisions in real-time based on market conditions.
What's wild is how complementary this could get. Hardware that can perceive and act, powered by economic agents that know when and why to act. You're looking at the potential birth of truly autonomous systems that don't need humans babysitting every transaction or movement.
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WhaleShadow
· 12-12 20:47
The combination of hardware + economic system... This is the true form of the agent, much more powerful than simply speculating on concepts.
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BearMarketHustler
· 12-10 18:54
ngl, combining these two directions really has some potential — one focusing on perception hardware and the other on economic decision-making... feels like the true agent era might be approaching.
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BetterLuckyThanSmart
· 12-10 18:49
The combination of hardware + economic brains is true independence, not some crippled version of an agent toy.
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IfIWereOnChain
· 12-10 18:40
Hardware plus economic brain, this combination is truly awesome... But on the other hand, who will regulate this group's "decisions"?
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UnluckyLemur
· 12-10 18:29
ngl these two directions are really a perfect match, combining hardware perception with economic intelligence, autonomous agents are truly about to take off.
Two projects are quietly building the infrastructure for autonomous agents, but they're attacking the problem from completely different angles.
One side is tackling the hardware layer—think of it as building the nervous system. Their OS handles everything from spatial awareness to physical movement, basically teaching robots how to see and interact with the real world. No more custom code for every single device.
The other? They're constructing the economic brain. Picture a bazaar where AI agents don't just exist—they hustle. These entities can strike deals, map out strategies, sync up with each other, and actually move value around. Not just executing pre-programmed tasks, but making decisions in real-time based on market conditions.
What's wild is how complementary this could get. Hardware that can perceive and act, powered by economic agents that know when and why to act. You're looking at the potential birth of truly autonomous systems that don't need humans babysitting every transaction or movement.