What does it take for autonomous agents to actually participate in economic activities? They need both a "brain" with decision-making ability and "hands" to execute those decisions simultaneously.
The Talus project is building infrastructure that covers exactly these two key elements. Recent analysis from Messari has also highlighted the project's approach, emphasizing that an integrated layer like this is essential for the agent economy to function properly.
A system that only thinks but can't act, or that acts blindly without thinking, is incomplete. A structure that encompasses both sides will be the core of autonomous economic infrastructure going forward.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
7 Likes
Reward
7
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
MEVHunterNoLoss
· 12-05 05:53
That's right, having brains alone isn't enough—you also need to take action, otherwise it's just empty talk.
View OriginalReply0
MindsetExpander
· 12-05 05:52
To be honest, I’ve seen plenty of projects that only have brains but no hands, and they all ended up failing... Talus has a decent concept, but it depends on whether they can actually connect the two parts together. Otherwise, it’ll just be another “PPT coin.”
View OriginalReply0
OnChainDetective
· 12-05 05:47
ngl this "brain + hands" framework is giving me serious flashbacks to every failed autonomous system i've audited. messari's report tracks, but lemme check the actual transaction flows first before declaring victory here
Reply0
LiquidityHunter
· 12-05 05:42
I only saw this at 3 a.m.... To be honest, I spent quite a while studying Talus’ “brain + hand” framework. On the data level, it does fill a 0.7 version liquidity gap, but how much can the slippage control on the execution layer actually be reduced to? That’s the real determining factor for arbitrage opportunities.
What does it take for autonomous agents to actually participate in economic activities? They need both a "brain" with decision-making ability and "hands" to execute those decisions simultaneously.
The Talus project is building infrastructure that covers exactly these two key elements. Recent analysis from Messari has also highlighted the project's approach, emphasizing that an integrated layer like this is essential for the agent economy to function properly.
A system that only thinks but can't act, or that acts blindly without thinking, is incomplete. A structure that encompasses both sides will be the core of autonomous economic infrastructure going forward.