The robotics industry has historically functioned on a single-transaction model: build a machine, sell it, and move on. AIxCrypto is attempting to shift this paradigm by focusing on the 'Robot Second Life Cycle,' a framework designed to keep hardware generating revenue long after its first delivery. By facilitating rentals and establishing standardized performance tracking, the company envisions a model where machines remain active, redeployable, and economically viable throughout their entire operational life.
RoboShare, which debuts in Los Angeles before a planned national rollout, serves as a matchmaking engine for these assets. It allows businesses to rent robotic capacity on demand rather than purchasing equipment outright, while giving owners a way to monetize idle machinery. To underpin these transactions, the company introduced AIXC01. This infrastructure layer provides verifiable digital identities and tamper-proof performance records for robots and AI agents. According to President Jay Sheng, the goal is to create a 'Silicon Economy' where autonomous systems can coordinate, settle payments, and participate in broader economic networks, eventually bridging the gap between ground-based robotics and the low-altitude drone economy.

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