Taking a Glimpse of the Unity TX Engine
You don’t have to become Starborn to pass through the Unity; we already passing API calls through our own Unity TX engine to manifest time, space, items to create new paradigms of agency. In this article we are going to talk about our Unity TX engine that streamlines the last mile after conducting a transaction.
In the previous article about our Michi TX system, it was about setting up transactions of value. You can do a straight purchase, rent, or finance, or even barter. But after doing the transaction, the Unity TX is where we handle the fulfillment part.
You don’t have to go searching for artifacts to manifest the full power of our Unity TX system. You should have an understanding of the science of space and time that is known as spacetime and vectorizing, let’s explain.
The core principle of spacetime is a single entity, the unity. It is a unit of the time, the space, and the entity.
Time. This is the unit of the “when” such as what time you should get your delivery or come pickup, when do you start and stop your subscription service, or set your appointment with a hair stylist.
Space. This is the unit of the “where” such as the gym club, the vacation destination, the web site you download purchased software from, the pickup section at the grocery store.
Item. This is the unit of “what” such as the used Channel bag, the brake service job, the subscription plan, the tickets to the game.
What the Unity TX engine does is converge these elements into a spacetime unit. Now after you performed a Michi TX transaction, you now get a time-space-item unit. You can now pick up your product at 11:00pm at the pickup counter. You can now send a follow up text after pickup to person to offer a second-visit discount.
This create new rules of engagement with the customer and automate most of the last-mile techniques that used to be expensive to implement manually, now part of our Unity TX engine.
The biggest flex of the Unity TX engine – it is part of our hub offerings. It allows the hub to create “economic energy” that powers economic movement in the community. People can pick up their products or have it delivered, they can reserve a table to the restaurant or the startup comedy club. They can receive a QR code to scan at an automated parking lot to park in their reserve space. Or their advertisement can display at a certain space, certain time, to a certain user in conjunction with our recommendation engine.
Now we have true energy coming from our hubs – the ability to recommend, to transact, the now ability to fulfill using digital-first paradigms. This that Afroasiatic stuff we are doing over here and notice how quiet all these other “Black Economic Empowerment” characters got their mouth shut around Ed Dunn and the Toshikiso ecosystem.
I made it so easy and easier to create entrepreneurs and so easy, I may not even need a human entrepreneur since yall don’t support me and chase clowns on social media – I can get AI to run most of this. An AI can run the laundromat self-attended like the ones I used in Japan, just scan an e-ink QR code on the machine, pay off my mobile that sends a token back to the washer/dryer combo machine to start. I don’t need to switch clothes to a dryer after it washed. And it can text my phone when the laundry machine stops – Afroasiatic.
But the most important part is the hub knows if a person booked time at a salon, they won’t be allowed to book time at another salon to try to play them both at the last minute. It is a universal system that prevent these types of games being played. There are also controls in place to ensure the unity is manifested.
At this point, you should realize how awesome the Afroasiatic movement is shaping up and how much flex we got out here without having to broadcast. Built a whole techno-economy on characters and got global scale. The bad part is these hubs can be dropped anywhere, physically, or virtually through a satellite – we already got what xAI and SpaceX wish they can do right now, just a ghetto brotha from the West Side of Chicago built this all up, yeah.
Oh, founding members don’t have to pay – the rest of yall do. Yall better stop complaining as founding members, Ed out here in the workshop building big picture things.

